PER_2011_YLSSS-R1_v01_M
Young Lives: School Survey 2011
Round 1
Name | Country code |
---|---|
Peru | PER |
Other Household Survey [hh/oth]
Time Dimensions: Longitudinal/panel/cohort
This is a sub-study of our main Young Lives cohort study.
The Young Lives survey is an innovative long-term project investigating the changing nature of childhood poverty in four developing countries. The purpose of the project is to improve understanding of the causes and consequences of childhood poverty and examine how policies affect children's well-being, in order to inform the development of future policy and to target child welfare interventions more effectively.
The objectives of the study are to provide good quality long-term data about the lives of children living in poverty, trace linkages between key policy changes and child welfare, and inform and respond to the needs of policymakers, planners and other stakeholders. Research activities of the project include the collection of data on a set of child welfare outcomes and their determinants and the monitoring of changes in policy, in order to explore the links between the policy environment and outcomes for children.
The study is being conducted in Ethiopia, India (in Andhra Pradesh), Peru and Vietnam. These countries were selected because they reflect a range of cultural, geographical and social contexts and experience differing issues facing the developing world; high debt burden, emergence from conflict, and vulnerability to environmental conditions such as drought and flood.
The Young Lives study aims to track the lives of 12,000 children over a 15-year period. This is the time-frame set by the UN to assess progress towards the Millennium Development Goals. Round 1 of the study followed 2,000 children (aged between 6 and 18 months in 2002) and their households, from both urban and rural communities, in each of the four countries (8,000 children in total). Data were also collected on an older cohort of 1,000 children aged 7 to 8 years in each country, in order to provide a basis for comparison with the younger children when they reach that age. Round 2 of the study returned to the same children who were aged 1-year-old in Round 1 when they were aged approximately 5-years-old, and to the children aged 8-years-old in Round 1 when they were approximately 12-years-old. Round 3 of the study returned to the same children again when they were aged 7 to 8 years (the same as the older cohort in Round 1) and 14 to 15 years. It is envisaged that subsequent survey waves will take place in 2013 and 2016. Thus the younger children are being tracked from infancy to their mid-teens and the older children through into adulthood, when some will become parents themselves.
Further information about the survey, including publications, can be downloaded from the <a href='http://www.younglives.org.uk/'>Young Lives</a> website.
School Survey:
A school survey was introduced into Young Lives in 2010, following the third round of the household survey, in order to capture detailed information about children’s experiences of schooling. It addressed two main research questions:
• how do the relationships between poverty and child development manifest themselves and impact upon children's educational experiences and outcomes?
• to what extent does children’s experience of school reinforce or compensate for disadvantage in terms of child development and poverty?
The survey allows researchers to link longitudinal information on household and child characteristics from the household survey with data on the schools attended by the Young Lives children and children's achievements inside and outside the school. A wide range of stakeholders, including government representatives at national and sub-national levels, NGOs and donor organisations were involved in the design of the school survey, so the researchers could be sure that the ‘right questions’ were being asked to address major policy concerns. This consultation process means that policymakers already understand the context and potential of the Young Lives research and are interested to utilise the data and analysis to inform their policy decisions. The survey provides policy-relevant information on the relationship between child development (and its determinants) and children’s experience of school, including access, quality and progression. This combination of household, child and school-level data over time constitutes the comparative advantage of the Young Lives study.
School Survey data are currently only available for India and Peru. The India data are available from the UK Data Archive under SN 7478.
Further information is available from the Young Lives <a href='http://www.younglives.org.uk/what-we-do/school-survey'>School Survey</a> webpages.
Sample survey data [ssd]
Individuals; Institutions/organisations
Date of First Release: 10 April 2014
File last updated: 19 May 2014
Main Topics:
The purpose of the survey was to study inequality of opportunities and outcomes among schoolchildren in Peru, particularly their learning experience in school; the degree to which school quality varies in the different contexts and types of school attended by the Young Lives children; and the extent to which the children’s experience of school influences their learning outcomes.
Topic |
---|
General - Education |
Literacy - Education |
Youth - Social stratification and groupings |
Primary, pre-primary and secondary - Education |
Research - Education |
National
Young Lives Younger Cohort children, the school they attend, their peers, their head teachers and class teachers, in Peru, 2011.
Name | Affiliation |
---|---|
Boyden, J. | University of Oxford. Department of International Development |
Name | Role |
---|---|
Department for International Development | Funded the study |
Netherlands, Ministry of Foreign Affairs | Funded the study |
Sampling Procedures: Multi-stage stratified random sample
572 of the Younger Cohort children and 1,207 of their peers, in 132 schools.
No weighting used.
The survey instruments included data collection at the school, class and pupil level, and involved the head teacher, class teacher, and pupil. The survey instruments comprises of the following components:
• Headmaster and teacher roster
• List of Young Lives children in the school
• Young Lives children and peer roster
• Class roster
• Student questionnaire
• Student socio-linguistic questionnaire
• Student Maths test, Grade 2
• Student Maths test, Grade 3
• Student Maths test, Grade 4
• Student Maths test, Grade 5
• Student Maths test, Grade 6
• Student language test, Grade 2
• Student language test, Grade 3
• Student language test, Grade 4
• Student language test, Grade 5
• Student language test, Grade 6
• Maths teacher questionnaire
• Language teacher questionnaire
• Teacher socio-linguistic questionnaire
• Teacher content knowledge test (Maths)
• Teachers attendance format
• Teacher's report of his/her students
• Headmaster questionnaire
• Headmaster socio-linguistic questionnaire
• School indicators of educational progress
• Socio-demographic information format
Start | End |
---|---|
2011-10 | 2011-11 |
Name |
---|
Cueto, S., Grupo de Analisis para el Desarollo (Peru) |
Escobal, J., Grupo de Analisis para el Desarollo (Peru) |
Name | Affiliation | URL | |
---|---|---|---|
UK Data Service | University of Essex | http://www.ukdataservice.ac.uk/help/get-in-touch.aspx | help@ukdataservice.ac.uk |
The depositor has specified that registration is required and standard conditions of use apply. The depositor may be informed about usage. See <a href='http://ukdataservice.ac.uk/get-data/how-to-access/conditions.aspx'>terms and conditions</a> for further information.
Bibliographic Citation
All works which use or refer to these materials should acknowledge these sources by means of bibliographic citation. To ensure that such source attributions are captured for bibliographic indexes, citations must appear in footnotes or in the reference section of publications. The bibliographic citation for this data collection is:
Boyden, J., Young Lives: School Survey, Peru, 2011 [computer file]. Colchester, Essex: UK Data Archive [distributor], April 2014. SN: 7479 , http://dx.doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-7479-1
Acknowledgement
Any publication, whether printed, electronic or broadcast, based wholly or in part on these materials, should acknowledge the original data creators, depositors or copyright holders, the funders of the Data Collections (if different) and the UK Data Archive, and to acknowledge Crown Copyright where appropriate.
Any publication, whether printed, electronic or broadcast, based wholly or in part on these materials should carry a statement that the original data creators, depositors or copyright holders, the funders of the Data Collections (if different) and the UK Data Archive bear no responsibility for their further analysis or interpretation.
Although all efforts are made to ensure the quality of the materials, neither the original data creators, depositors or copyright holders, the funders of the Data Collections, nor the UK Data Archive bear any responsibility for the accuracy or comprehensiveness of these materials.
All rights reserved. No part of these materials may be reproduced, stored in, or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise) without the prior written permission of the UK Data Archive.
UK Data Archive
University of Essex
Wivenhoe Park
Colchester
Essex C04 3SQ
United Kingdom
www.data-archive.ac.uk
Crown copyright held jointly with the Grupo de Analisis para el Desarollo (Peru). Crown copyright material is reproduced with the permission of the Controller of HMSO and the Queen’s Printer for Scotland.
Name | Affiliation | URL | |
---|---|---|---|
Anne Solon, Data and Survey Manager | University of Oxford | anne.solon@qeh.ox.ac.uk | http://www.ox.ac.uk |
Young Lives, Oxford Department of International Development (ODID) | University of Oxford | younglives@younglives.org.uk | http://www.younglives.org.uk |
UK Data Service | University of Essex | help@ukdataservice.ac.uk | http://www.ukdataservice.ac.uk/help/get-in-touch.aspx |
DDI_PER_2011_YLSSS-R1_v01_M_WB
Name | Affiliation | Role |
---|---|---|
UK Data Archive | University of Essex, Colchester | Metadata preparation |
2014-08-27
Version 02 (August 2014). Initial version of the DDI (DDI2.5 XML CODEBOOK RECORD FOR STUDY NUMBER 7479) was done by UK Data Service in May, 2014.