Synopses & Reviews
Although many countries in sub-Saharan Africa have proclaimed it their goal to achieve free universal primary schooling to all children, few have come close to achieving it. The authors of this study describe the implementation of a major primary school reform in five countries (Benin, Ethiopia, Guinea, Malawi, and Uganda).
The authors of this volume describe the efforts made in the last decade of the 20th century to reform African education, the goal of which was to achieve education for all. In a series of five case studies, the politics surrounding the planning and implementation of these reforms are considered, and their outcomes analyzed. The countries considered are Benin, Ethiopia, Guinea, Malawi, and Uganda. Although the reforms are still underway, the book covers at least their first five years, bringing together facts and judgments into coherent stories.
The authors present some conclusions about the implementation of basic education reforms that deserve serious consideration by policymakers, planners, and program managers. Have our assumptions about the process of reform been correct? Have we selected the policy instruments most suitable for use in implementing various policies and programs? What should we do to change the course of reform as we continue?
Review
[P]rovides a good background and analysis of policy reform and implementation in the countries studied. Practitioners who wish to gain greater understanding of the educational systems of Benin, Ethiopia, Guinea, Malawi, and Uganda could use it for university courses as well.Comparative Education Review
Review
[B]rings empirical evidence from five country case studies-in Malawi, Uganda, Berlin, Guinea, and Ethiopia-to examine how an emergent paradigm of education reform has been designed, debated and implemented across sub-Saharan countries....The book examines in what way has the paradigm proven useful, and what are it's shortcomings.Oxfam's Development Resource Review
Synopsis
Looks at the new educational reform movement that began in the late 1980s in sub-Saharan Africa, after a World Bank policy study documented that African educational systems had entered a period of severe decline as a result of intensifying economic and political instability.
Synopsis
Although many countries in sub-Saharan Africa have proclaimed it their goal to achieve free universal primary schooling to all children, few have come close to achieving it. The authors of this study describe the implementation of a major primary school reform in five countries (Benin, Ethiopia, Guinea, Malawi, and Uganda).
Synopsis
Includes bibliographical references (p. [213]-224) and index.
About the Author
JEANNE MOULTON is a consultant in international education in Palo Alto, California.KAREN MUNDY is Assistant Professor, Social Sciences, Policy, and Educational Practice, Stanford University School of Education.MICHEL WELMOND is Research Educational Analyst, Center for International Development, Research Triangle Institute in North Carolina.JAMES H. WILLIAMS is Assistant Professor of International Education, Department of Educational Leadership, George Washington University.