Type | Book Section - Does Students’ Gender Matter? Parents’ Educational Expectations, Their Determinants, and Consequences in Explaining Students’ Dropout in an Area in Cambodia |
Title | The Political Economy of Schooling in Cambodia |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2016 |
Publisher | Springer |
URL | http://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1057/9781137456007_7 |
Abstract | Cambodia has experienced remarkable educational expansion at all levels since the fall of the Khmer Rouge in 1979 (Ayres 2000), yet provision of basic education 1 to all children remains challenging (Chhinh and Dy 2009). Two major obstacles hamper the provision of basic education to all children: (a) low transition rates from primary to lower secondary school, 2 and (b) high dropout rates 3 in grades 7–9. According to Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports (MoEYS) statistics, 76.8 percent of all promoted 6th graders in 2012/13 transferred to lower secondary school; 21.2 percent of lower secondary students dropped out each grade (MoEYS 2014). Parents’ expectations have received considerable attention in educational research to explain students’ educational success in school (Yamamoto and Holloway 2010). Many studies have found that high parental expectations are positively related with students’ academic achievement (Fan and Chen 2001; Jeynes 2005, 2007), retention (Rumberger and Lim 2008; Hannum, Kong, and Zhang 2009; Yamamoto and Holloway 2010), and other outcomes such as student educational aspirations (Williams 1972; Hossler and Stage 1992). |
» | Cambodia - Socio-Economic Survey 2010 |