Type | Working Paper |
Title | Reading Skill Transfer across Languages: Outcomes from Longitudinal Bilingual Randomized Control Trials in Kenya and Haiti. |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2015 |
URL | http://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED562423.pdf |
Abstract | Within developing world contexts, education initiatives exist in environments that both pose challenges and offer opportunities for innovations. In Kenya, school fees were abolished in 2003, and since then, gross primary enrollment rates have risen to above 100% (World Bank, 2011). This dramatic increase in enrollment over a short period put considerable strain on the government school system. In 1998, the national student–teacher ratio was 28 to 1. In 2011, it was 47 to 1 (World Bank, 2011). In addition to handling large classes, Kenyan teachers often deal with space and materials shortages that impair their ability to teach effectively (Sifuna, 2007; UNESCO, 2005). Haiti is a historically bilingual nation, with both Haitian Creole and French as official languages. However, although all Haitians speak Haitian Creole, some estimates place the percentage of Haitians who speak French around 10%.1 Because French is not spoken in many Haitian homes, however, French is necessarily taught as a second language, with students in the first year of elementary school exposed to French oral language development. In addition, decades of political turmoil and natural disasters have decimated the education system. Perhaps unsurprisingly, given the high student–teacher ratios, limited teacher training, and lack of sufficient text materials, reading outcomes for students attending Kenyan and Haitian primary schools are generally poor, across languages (Bulat; 2014; Piper, 2010). The results of a series of assessments conducted over recent years converge on a common finding: children in these countries are not meeting the Ministry of Education’s benchmarks and on average read far below grade level (Bulat, 2014; Mugo et al., 2011; National Assessment Centre, 2010; Onsomu et al., 2005; Piper, 2010; Piper & Mugenda, 2012; Wasanga, Ogle, & Wambua, 2010). For example, in Kenya, the 2011 national Uwezo study found that just 57% of thirdgraders could read basic sentences, and only 30% a second-grade-level story (Mugo et al., 2011), whereas in Haiti a 2014 assessment of Haitian Creole and French literacy found that Grade 2 students read on average fewer than 30 words per minute and had very little comprehension of what was read (Bulat, 2014). |
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