ABSTRACT
Researchers and policy makers agree that studying the relationship between school quality
and academic achievement will benefit public investment in education. An important turning
point in educational delivery in Africa came during the 1990 World Conference on Education
for All where renewed commitments to quality basic education were made. Against this
background, interest in how African education systems are progressing has increased. This
thesis contributes to this understanding in three important ways. The first and broadest
objective is to assess the role of comparative studies in setting educational standards. The
second relates to how schools within three East African education systems can contribute to
the academic success of students whatever their background. The third is to investigate which
schools most effectively ensure a meaningful educational experience for children who face
economic and social hardships. Data are sourced from the second wave of a cross-national
survey of schools in Southern and Eastern Africa. Hierarchical Linear Modelling is used to
analyse data on schools and students in Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda.
The results demonstrate that, although valuable for establishing general patterns of effects,
comparative studies should be followed by further investigation of the salient issues at work
within individual countries. Contrary to earlier studies in developing countries, an
unambiguous positive relationship between socioeconomic status and student performance
was evident across this region. Compositional, structural and organisational characteristics of
East African primary schools were found to be related to academic achievement. Academically
supportive relationships between students and household members benefited student
performance in Kenya and Tanzania. In line with the school effectiveness theory, resource
availability proved to be consistently related to educational quality and its equitable distribution
in Uganda. An important finding relating to gender was that characteristics of schools that
improved quality did so more effectively for boys than for girls and therefore increased the
male academic advantage. The implication is that the climate for learning in East African
primary schools is better suited to educating boys.
The study recommends that future surveys pay closer attention to how student attitudes to
learning are shaped so that schools can play a more effective role in motivating students. To
tease out exactly how the educational environment influences learning, it is also recommended
that more longitudinal studies be pursued by the educational research community. That the
pace of educational reform is often painfully slow makes the use of longitudinal data to track its
course all the more necessary.
Zuze, T (2021). Equity and Effectiveness in East African Primary Schools. Afribary. Retrieved from https://tracking.afribary.com/works/equity-and-effectiveness-in-east-african-primary-schools
Zuze, Tia "Equity and Effectiveness in East African Primary Schools" Afribary. Afribary, 15 May. 2021, https://tracking.afribary.com/works/equity-and-effectiveness-in-east-african-primary-schools. Accessed 27 Nov. 2024.
Zuze, Tia . "Equity and Effectiveness in East African Primary Schools". Afribary, Afribary, 15 May. 2021. Web. 27 Nov. 2024. < https://tracking.afribary.com/works/equity-and-effectiveness-in-east-african-primary-schools >.
Zuze, Tia . "Equity and Effectiveness in East African Primary Schools" Afribary (2021). Accessed November 27, 2024. https://tracking.afribary.com/works/equity-and-effectiveness-in-east-african-primary-schools