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Private schools --- Private school trustees --- Administration --- Handbooks, manuals, etc
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Private schooling is an important feature of the educational landscape in Pakistan and is increasingly a topic of public and government discourse. This study uses multiple rounds of national household sample surveys to examine the extent and nature of private school participation at the primary and secondary levels in Pakistan. Today, one-fifth of children-or one-third of all students-go to private school in Pakistan. Private school students tend to come from urban, wealthier, and more educated households than do government school students and especially out-of-school children. Important differences exist across Pakistan's four provinces with respect to the characteristics of private school students relative to government school students, as well as in the composition of private school students. Private schooling is highly concentrated, with a few districts (situated mainly in northern Punjab province) accounting for most of the private school students. Private school participation among children varies largely from one household to another, rather than within households, and to a greater extent than does government school participation. The spatial patterns of private school supply are often strongly correlated with the spatial patterns of private school participation. In the 2000s, private school participation rates grew in Punjab, Sindh, and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa provinces and across socioeconomic subgroups, contributing in particular to the growth in overall school participation rates for boys, children from urban households, and children from households in the highest wealth quintile. Nevertheless, the composition of private school students has become less unequal over time. This trend has been driven mainly by Punjab province, which has seen declines in the shares of private school students from urban households and households in the highest wealth quintile.
Disability --- Education --- Education for All --- Education Policy --- Government School Students --- Primary Education --- Private Education --- Private School Participation --- Secondary Education --- Social Protections and Labor --- Tertiary Education --- Urban Households
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"Presenting lively images, oral testimonies, and material gleaned from the school's archives, No Ordinary School explores the evolution of The Study through world wars, the Great Depression, the Quiet Revolution, and many stages of feminism, from its predominantly English Montreal origins into the bilingual and multicultural community that it is today. Always at the forefront of the most progressive educational developments, The Study has encouraged generations of women to transcend the boundaries of their times. Influential alumni include the physicist and Canadian Department of External Affairs civil servant Dorothy Osborne Xanthaky, avant garde artist Marian Dale Scott, former chief curator and director of the McCord Museum of Canadian History Isabel Barclay Dobell, world-renowned architect Phyllis Lambert, internationally acclaimed pianist Janina Fialkowska, Olympic rowing medalist Andrâeanne Morin, and tennis star Eugenie Bouchard."--
Girls' schools --- Private schools --- Girls --- Children --- Females --- Young women --- Academies (Private schools) --- Independent schools --- Schools --- Single-sex schools --- History. --- Education --- Gascoigne, Margaret. --- Study (Private school) --- All-girls schools --- Girls-only schools
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Low student learning is a common finding in much of the developing world. This paper uses a relatively unique dataset of five semiannual rounds of standardized test data to characterize and explain the short-term changes in student learning. The data are collected as part of the quality assurance system for a public-private partnership program that offers public subsidies conditional on minimum learning levels to low-cost private schools in Pakistan. Apart from a large positive distributional shift in learning between the first two test rounds, the learning distributions over test rounds show little progress. Schools are ejected from the program if they fail to achieve a minimum pass rate in the test in two consecutive attempts, making the test high stakes. Sharp regression discontinuity estimates show that the threat of program exit on schools that barely failed the test for the first time induces large learning gains. The large change in learning between the first two test rounds is likely attributable to this accountability pressure given that a large share of new program entrants failed in the first test round. Schools also qualify for substantial annual teacher bonuses if they achieve a minimum score in a composite measure of student test participation and mean test score. Sharp regression discontinuity estimates do not show that the prospect of future teacher bonus rewards induces learning gains for schools that barely did not qualify for the bonus.
Education --- Education For All --- Learning --- Learning levels --- Learning outcomes --- Pass rate --- Primary Education --- Private school --- Quality assurance --- Quality standards --- Secondary Education --- Standardized tests --- Student learning --- Teaching and Learning --- Tertiary Education --- Test scores
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Low student learning is a common finding in much of the developing world. This paper uses a relatively unique dataset of five semiannual rounds of standardized test data to characterize and explain the short-term changes in student learning. The data are collected as part of the quality assurance system for a public-private partnership program that offers public subsidies conditional on minimum learning levels to low-cost private schools in Pakistan. Apart from a large positive distributional shift in learning between the first two test rounds, the learning distributions over test rounds show little progress. Schools are ejected from the program if they fail to achieve a minimum pass rate in the test in two consecutive attempts, making the test high stakes. Sharp regression discontinuity estimates show that the threat of program exit on schools that barely failed the test for the first time induces large learning gains. The large change in learning between the first two test rounds is likely attributable to this accountability pressure given that a large share of new program entrants failed in the first test round. Schools also qualify for substantial annual teacher bonuses if they achieve a minimum score in a composite measure of student test participation and mean test score. Sharp regression discontinuity estimates do not show that the prospect of future teacher bonus rewards induces learning gains for schools that barely did not qualify for the bonus.
Education --- Education For All --- Learning --- Learning levels --- Learning outcomes --- Pass rate --- Primary Education --- Private school --- Quality assurance --- Quality standards --- Secondary Education --- Standardized tests --- Student learning --- Teaching and Learning --- Tertiary Education --- Test scores
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This volume addresses important issues to do with access to higher education and different models of its financing in the East Asia region. It is enriched by diverse perspectives from vastly different starting points and by the historical and institutional settings in the region. The issues are set out in the context of the value of higher education in economic development and how it contributes to the capacities to adopt and adapt to new technologies and undertake institutional innovation. The established and well-functioning higher education loan and financing systems, such as those in Australia, and the experience of different systems tried—both in East Asia and in the United States—are brought to bear in this volume.
Education --- Social Sciences --- Education, Special Topics --- Education, Higher --- Economic development --- Economic aspects --- Costs. --- Effect of education on. --- College students --- Higher education --- Postsecondary education --- Universities and colleges --- east asia --- economic development --- costs --- education --- Indonesia --- Private school --- Student loan --- Subsidy --- Tertiary education fees in Australia --- Thailand --- Tuition payments
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El libro recoge la ponencia presentada por Hinojosa en el III Congrès international des sciences historiques celebrado en Berlín, en agosto de 1908. En ella, el autor llama la atención sobre “el interés que ofrece el estudio de las fuentes del derecho medioeval español para las investigaciones de historia general del derecho germánico”. Redactada originalmente en francés, fue traducida primero al alemán (1910) y después al castellano (1915), puede considerarse el testamento intelectual de Eduardo de Hinojosa (1852-1919).
Elite (Social sciences) --- École libre des sciences politiques (France) --- Université de Paris. --- Fondation nationale des sciences politiques --- École des sciences politiques (France) --- Private School of Political Studies (France) --- ELSP (École libre des sciences politiques (France)) --- Sciences Po (École libre des sciences politiques (France)) --- Derecho --- Germanismo --- Prenda extrajudicial --- Venganza de la sangre --- Pérdida de la paz
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Conditional cash transfers are being heralded as effective tools against the intergenerational transmission of poverty. There is substantial evidence on the positive effects of these transfers. Analysts are only now beginning to investigate the indirect effects these programs generate. This paper examines the effect of a gender-targeted conditional cash transfer program on the time allocation of mothers in rural program-eligible households. Using a fixed effects difference-in-differences estimator, the author finds that program eligibility is associated with an increase of 120 minutes of housework per typical school day by mothers of eligible children in the stipend district when compared with mothers of eligible children in the non-stipend district. There is a 100-minute reduction in the amount of time mothers report spending on children's needs. The intent-to-treat effect of the program suggests no change in the amount of time spent on paid work or sleep.
Adolescent Health --- Anthropology --- Culture and Development --- Dropout rates --- Education --- Education For All --- Education Sector --- Education systems --- Enrollment --- Enrollment of girls --- Female enrollment --- Female students --- Gender disparity --- Girls --- Governance --- Health --- Learning --- Literacy --- Nutrition and Population --- Primary Education --- Primary School --- Private school --- Private schools --- Public schools --- Rural areas --- Schooling --- Schools --- Schools for girls --- Teachers --- Youth and Governance
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Evaluations of educational programs commonly assume that what children learn persists over time. The authors compare learning in Pakistani public and private schools using dynamic panel methods that account for three key empirical challenges to widely used value-added models: imperfect persistence, unobserved student heterogeneity, and measurement error. Their estimates suggest that only a fifth to a half of learning persists between grades and that private schools increase average achievement by 0.25 standard deviations each year. In contrast, estimates from commonly used value-added models significantly understate the impact of private schools' on student achievement and/or overstate persistence. These results have implications for program evaluation and value-added accountability system design.
Adults --- Basic education --- Cognitive skills --- Education --- Education for All --- Educational interventions --- Educational outcomes --- Effective Schools and Teachers --- First grade --- Learning --- Level of achievement --- Primary data --- Primary Education --- Private school --- Private schools --- Public school --- Public schools --- Quality teachers --- School counterparts --- School education --- Schooling --- Secondary Education --- Student achievement --- Teacher --- Teachers --- Tertiary Education
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This paper looks at the private schooling sector in Pakistan, a country that is seriously behind schedule in achieving the Millennium Development Goals. Using new data, the authors document the phenomenal rise of the private sector in Pakistan and show that an increasing segment of children enrolled in private schools are from rural areas and from middle-class and poorer families. The key element in their rise is their low fees-the average fee of a rural private school in Pakistan is less than a dime a day (Rs.6). They hire predominantly local, female, and moderately educated teachers who have limited alternative opportunities outside the village. Hiring these teachers at low cost allows the savings to be passed on to parents through low fees. This mechanism-the need to hire teachers with a certain demographic profile so that salary costs are minimized-defines the possibility of private schools: where they arise, fees are low. It also defines their limits. Private schools are horizontally constrained in that they arise in villages where there is a pool of secondary educated women. They are also vertically constrained in that they are unlikely to cater to the secondary levels in rural areas, at least until there is an increase in the supply of potential teachers with the required skills and educational levels.
Children --- Education --- Education for All --- Education Reform and Management --- Educational Outcomes --- Effective Schools and Teachers --- Enrollment --- Fees --- Gender --- Gender and Education --- Gender Disparities --- Investment --- Knowledge --- Participation --- Primary Education --- Primary Schools --- Private School --- Private Schooling --- Private Schools --- Rural Areas --- School Construction --- Secondary Education --- Skills --- Teacher Training --- Teachers --- Tertiary Education --- Training Programs --- Women
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