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Are our children learning? Numeracy and literacy in Tanzania 2014

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Abstract

While 100% of children in Standard 3 should be able to read basic English and Kiswahili stories, and do simple mathematics of class two level, a new citizen-led assessment report reveals that very few are able to do so. Kiswahili: Fewer than half of Standard 3 children (45%) can read a Standard 2 Kiswahili story. In Standard 7, 4 out of 5 children (80%) can read a Standard 2 Kiswahili story, meaning that 20% of pupils complete Standard 7 without having mastered basic literacy skills in Kiswahili. English: Just 2 out of 10 pupils (19%) in standard 3 can read a Standard 2 level English story. In Standard 7, fewer than 6 out of 10 pupils (56%) can read a standard 2 English story. Almost half of Standard 7 pupils are not literate in English, which is the language of instruction in secondary school. Numeracy: Just 3 out of 10 pupils in Standard 3 (31%) can solve a Standard 2 multiplication problem. By the time they reach Standard 7, about 3 out of 7 10 (71%) cannot solve Standard 2 multiplication. These findings, released today by Uwezo at Twaweza, are from the Are our children learning? Literacy and Numeracy in Tanzania 2014 – the report of the fourth national learning assessment conducted in 2013. Uwezo partners tested over 100,000 children, aged 7 to 16, from 131 districts in all 25 regions.

Corporate Author
Twaweza East Africa
Year of publication
2015
Pages
54
Linguistic region
Country (Geographical area)
Level of education
Source database
library
Language
Project
Uwezo (Tanzania UR)