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Can Targeted Allocation of Teachers Improve Student Learning Outcomes? Evidence from Malawi

16 Jul 2024

Teachers are one of the most important inputs for learning, but in many low-income countries they are poorly distributed between schools. This paper discusses the case of Malawi, which has introduced new evidence-based policies and procedures to improve the equity and efficiency of the allocation of teachers to schools. The analysis finds that adherence to these policies has been highly variable between the country’s districts, with the most successful deploying 75 percent of teachers according to the rules and the least successful just 22 percent. Using administrative data, the paper identifies the impacts on student repetition rates of reductions in pupil–qualified teacher ratios as a result of the new teachers. The findings show that schools that moved from having more than 90 pupils per qualified teacher to a lower ratio experienced reductions in lower primary school repetition rates of 2–3 percentage points. However, similar impacts on dropout are not observed.
education quality education policy bureaucracy econometrics teacher education::education for all sdg 4 education::educational policy and planning education::effective schools and teachers policy implentation

Authors

Asim, Salman, Gera, Ravinder Casley, Moreno, Martin, Wong, Kerry

Citation
“ Asim, Salman ; Gera, Ravinder Casley ; Moreno, Martin ; Wong, Kerry . 2024 . Can Targeted Allocation of Teachers Improve Student Learning Outcomes? Evidence from Malawi . Policy Research Working Paper; 10844 . © Washington, DC: World Bank . http://hdl.handle.net/10986/41879 License: CC BY 3.0 IGO . ”
Collection(s)
Policy Research Working Papers
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1596/1813-9450-10844
Identifier externaldocumentum
34362915
Identifier internaldocumentum
34362915
Pages
30
Published in
United States of America
Region country
Malawi
RelationisPartofseries
Policy Research Working Paper; 10844
Report
WPS10844
Rights
CC BY 3.0 IGO
Rights Holder
World Bank
Rights URI
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/
UNIT
Education AFR 1 (HAEE1)
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/41879
date disclosure
2024-07-16
region administrative
Africa Eastern and Southern (AFE)
theme
Disaster Risk Management,Disaster Response and Recovery,Disability,Gender,Human Development and Gender,Education Facilities,Social Protection,Social Development and Protection,Access to Education,Education Financing,Urban and Rural Development,Teachers,Education Governance, School-Based Management,Education

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