Pular para o conteúdo principal

Language of instruction in schools in low- and middle-income countries: a systematic review

Enviado por admin em
Abstract

To address the evidence gap in making effective language of instruction (LOI) decisions, we propose a systematic review of the role of LOI choices in education programs and policies on literacy outcomes in multilingual educational contexts in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Grounded in a multidisciplinary theory of change (ToC) describing what factors link LOI choices and literacy outcomes, we will gather, organize, and synthesize the evidence on the specific role of the three LOI choices described in the ToC (teaching in mother tongue [MT] with later transition, teaching in a non-MT language, or teaching in two or more languages at one time) and its impact on literacy and biliteracy outcomes. We will focus our systematic review and meta-analysis only on quantitative and qualitative intervention studies from LMICs as these have the highest relevance for decision making in multilingual LMIC contexts. We will also only include languages that are relevant and commonly spoken in LMICs. For example, we will likely include studies that examine Arabic to English transfer, but not Arabic to Swedish transfer.

Author
Nakamura, Pooja
Leyew, Zelealem
Molotsky, Adria
Ranjit, Varsha
Kamto, Kevin
Castro Zarzur, Rosa
Haddad, Yasmina
De Hoop, Thomas
Year of publication
2023
Pages
0
Series
Campbell Systematic Reviews
Source database
library
Language