1 / 11

RECOUP Theme 3: Partnerships and Outcomes

RECOUP Theme 3: Partnerships and Outcomes . Public-Private Partnerships Using an expanded exit-voice-loyalty framework.

xander
Télécharger la présentation

RECOUP Theme 3: Partnerships and Outcomes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. RECOUP Theme 3: Partnerships and Outcomes

  2. Public-Private PartnershipsUsing an expanded exit-voice-loyalty framework • exit relates to the decision to leave a provider on account of dissatisfaction while voice is used to denote activity by an individual while remaining within an organisation to ensure the continued provision of a good. • If exit indicates choice in a market context while voice is evidence of political responsiveness then we have two important tools to understand the relationship between consumers, the school and the providers • The degree of loyalty to a school affects the manner and extent to which both exit and voice work through • the self-identification of individuals with the provider • the brand image created by the provider.

  3. What are the educational outcomes? • Where exitis present it indicates choice by the consumer with regard to the quality of education that is being provided by current providers • Where voice is exercised by parents and pupils there is evidence of political activity (ranging from complaints to campaigns) to obtain a higher quality and wider coverage of education • the demand for education is a combination of exit and voice taking full account of the extent of loyalty that the individual had towards the educational provider. • The supply response can be ascertained in the financial and non-financial changes that an educational provider makes in relation to changing enrolment and parental actions.

  4. Outputs • Site selection and training complete in Pakistan. Field study begun. • Fennell, S., 2007. ‘Educating the Poor: Deceptions of private schooling’, paper presented at VIII International Conference on Asian Youth and Childhoods, International Sociological Association (ISA) in Lucknow (India) from November 22nd to 24th, 2007. • Fennell, S., 2008. ‘Decentralisation and the Implications for Indian Education’, draft, Presented paper at British South Asian Studies on 26-28th April 2008 • Fennell, S, 2008. ‘Contested Gender Frameworks: Economic Models and Provider Perspectives on Education’, in Fennell, S. and M. Arnot, 2008. ed., Gender Education & Equality in a Global Context: Conceptual Frameworks and Policy Perspectives. Routledge.

  5. Does higher teacher pay raise student achievement in both private and public schools? • Output: Does performance related pay for teachers improve student achievement? Kingdon & Teal, Economics of Education Review, 2007 • Uses student/school survey data from India; finds : • in private schools • teacher pay is related to student achievement (there’s an element of performance related pay), and • performance related pay raises student achievement (after controlling pupil ability, home background) • In government schools • There is little dispersion of teacher pay • pay is not related to student achievement (in a T pay equation, student ach. Is insignificant) • pay is also not a significant determinant of student achievement • Conclusion: Findings suggest that higher pay is an effort-motivating device only when the threat of dismissal is credible (which it is not in govt. schools in India where teachers have a job for life). Thus the findings support efficiency wage theory.

  6. How do teacher characteristics affect student achievement in private and public schools Output: Aslam, M. and G. Kingdon. ‘What can Teachers do to Raise Pupil Achievement?’, RECOUP Working Paper #19, University of Cambridge, 2008. • Student achievement in Pakistan is improved much more by process variables (time on different tasks in class) than by their own qualifications, training, experience etc • Yet, teacher reward structures are based mainly on qualifications, training, experience • Suggests ways to improve student achievement  Output: Kingdon, G. and F. Teal. “Teacher unions, teacher pay and student achievement in India”, IOE mimeo, Sept 2008. Under review atJournal of Development Economics • Uses data on a sample of 180 Indian private schools • Regresses the difference in student score across subjects on the difference in the characteristics of teachers that teach those subjects • Finds that union membership of teacher reduces student achievement, also raises costs

  7. Private & public schooling; and the effect of class size Output: Kingdon. G. “Private and Public Schooling: The Indian Experience”, Forthcoming Chakrabarti, R. and P. Peterson (eds.) School Choice International, MIT Press • The general progress of school education in India is assessed • inter alia, examines the role and growth of private schooling, surveying evidence on the relative effectiveness and unit costs of private and public schools. Output: Altinok, N. and G. Kingdon. “New Evidence on Class Size Effects: A Pupil Fixed Effects Approach”, mimeo, Institute of Education, May 2008. • The effectiveness of reductions in class size, as a means of improving student learning, remains an unresolved question for policy-makers.  • In this cross-country study using TIMSS data (on 45 countries), class size emerges as a significant predictor of achievement in many countries; But the effects are small.  • Authors conclude that class-size reductions do not seem to present a cost-effective strategy for raising student achievement levels

  8. Papers by RECOUP staff On student learning outcomes in private and public schools • Kingdon. G. “Private and Public Schooling: The Indian Experience”, Forthcoming Chakrabarti, R. and P. Peterson (eds.) School Choice International, MIT Press • Kingdon, G. and F. Teal. “Does Performance Related Pay for Teachers Improve Student Achievement? Some Evidence from India”, Economics of Education Review. 26, No. 4: 473-86. August 2007. • Aslam, M. and G. Kingdon. ‘What can Teachers do to Raise Pupil Achievement?’, RECOUP Working Paper #19, University of Cambridge, 2008. • Altinok, N. and G. Kingdon. “New Evidence on Class Size Effects: A Pupil Fixed Effects Approach”, mimeo, Institute of Education, May 2008. • Kingdon, G. and F. Teal. “Teacher unions, teacher pay and student achievement in India”, mimeo, Institute of Education, September 2008. Under review at JHR

  9. Aid partnerships • Main research question: What has been the impact of aid on education policy and outcomes in partner countries? • Country papers on educational expenditures and financing in the four countries (two published, two in penultimate draft form) • Only limited evidence for direct relationship between increased expenditures and increased access to education • Only limited evidence at macro level on the impact of aid on educational outcomes

  10. Mixed Methods studies • Interviews amongst international aid community informing short framework paper • Interviews amongst the aid community in four partner states • First round of interviews completed in Pakistan, India and Ghana • Further interviews amongst domestic policy-makers to be conducted • Quantitative data on aid trends, sources and modalities to be integrated • In India, evidence of strong policy ownership, mirroring the priorities of the MDGs. Aid large in absolute terms, but small relative to total education expenditures. Complex issues for policy arise as Indian growth continues. • Paper in preparation for India December Conference • Paper in preparation for Ghana March 09 Conference • Pakistan paper to be ready for Oxcon 2009 • Kenya fieldwork to begin November 08

  11. Outputs Articles and Book Chapters • Colclough, C. (2007). Aid Agency Support for Education: Gaps between Intention and Action. Southern African Review of Education, 13(2), 27-39. • Colclough, C. (2008). Global gender goals and the construction of equality: conceptual dilemmas and policy practice. In Fennell, S. and Arnot, M. (eds), Gender Education and Equality in a Global Context: conceptual frameworks and policy perspectives (pp. 51-66). London: Routledge. Also issued as RECOUP Working Paper No 2, Cambridge • RECOUP Working Paper series • De, A. & Endow, T. (2008). Public expenditure on education in India: Recent trends and outcomes. (RECOUP Working Paper 18). Cambridge: Faculty of Education, University of Cambridge. • Thompson, N.M. & Casely-Hayford, L. (2008). The financing and outcomes of education in Ghana. (RECOUP Working Paper 16). Cambridge: Faculty of Education, University of Cambridge. • Malik, R. (2007). Aid Effectiveness and the Role of Donor Intervention in the Education Sector in Pakistan – a Review of Issues and Literature. RECOUP Working Paper No. 6, University of Cambridge • Other papers • King, K., and R. Malik, (2008) ‘Donor coordination in an uncoordinated development environment: the case of education in Pakistan’ (mimeo). • Casely-Hayford, L & Palmer, R with Ayamdoo and Thompson (2007) ’Aid and donor partnerships’ in Ghana’s education sector, 1987-2007: a critical review of the literature and progress. Mimeo. Accra, Ghana: Associates for Change. • King, K. and Casely-Hayford, L. (2008). Aid partnerships in Ghana: the impact of the new aid architecture. Mimeo. Accra, Ghana: Associates for Change (mimeo). • The Impact of Donor Partnerships in Ghana: A look at history”Literature Review and Annotated Bibliography • Otieno, W., (2008) The Role and Importance of Aid to the Education sector in Kenya (draft mimeo), September.

More Related