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The effect of private schooling on learning outcomes in South Asia and East Africa: a within-family approach

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Abstract

By looking at the effect of private schooling in four lower and lower-middle income countries the study addresses three main questions: 1) How does access to private schooling in India, Pakistan, Kenya and Uganda differ by socio-economic background? 2) What is the effect of private schooling on learning outcomes? 3) Does this effect differ by socio-economic background? The authors found that access to private schools is highly stratified by parental wealth, although even some of the poorest children attended private schools. There is no indication that the effect of private schooling differs by parental background.

Author
Gruijters, Rob J.
Alcott, Benjamin
Rose, Pauline
Corporate Author
University of Cambridge (UK). Research for Equitable Access and Learning Centre
Year of publication
2020
Pages
29
Series
Research and policy paper
Country (Geographical area)
Level of education
Source database
library
Language