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Ensuring All Children Learn: Lessons from the South on What Works
in Equity and Inclusion brings together a rich tapestry of cases
from three southern continents focusing on issues germane to the
access, learning, and retention in basic education in the context
of Education for All (EFA). It is a narrative of both the
disappointment that the implementation of EFA did not go as
envisaged and of policy alternatives and hopes for a brighter
future. The focus on Africa, Asia, and Latin America permits the
reader to appreciate both the diversity of issues central to EFA
and the physical spread of the challenges. The book confirms that
whereas southern countries have adopted EFA as an overall policy
goal, empirical evidence from the case studies uncovers critical
lapses in policies and strategies. Four key issues inform the
thematic analysis in the book: the overall experience in
implementing EFA, the specific challenges faced, the lessons
learned, and prospects for the future. The solutions to these
challenges provide avenues for the attainment of basic education
for all school-eligible children in tandem with the UN Sustainable
Development Goal 4 on education.
Using the Education for All (EFA) global movement as the setting,
this book surveys the complex labyrinths of international education
policy making, the design and implementation of system-wide
educational reform, and the assessment of learning outcomes in the
African context. It addresses the following questions: what does it
mean for African states to reform their educational systems to meet
the global agenda of Education for All and the Millennium
Development Goals? Under what structural conditions have African
governments implemented universal primary education programs, and
with what outcomes? What are the lessons learned and how do these
inform the post-2015 agenda for universal primary education in
Africa and other developing countries? This book provides answers
to these questions and opens the possibilities for new approaches
to Education for All in the context of constrained resources,
unstable political climates, and the agency of local communities.
It is undeniable that African governments responded to the
educational goals espoused in EFA and MDG paradigms through their
own "education for all" plans and expended vast resources to
realize these objectives. However, there remains a serious gap in
knowledge about the design of these plans, the influence of local
and international forces in their development, the challenges
inherent in executing comprehensive and multifaceted reforms to
achieve these goals, and the success of the reform measures as
evident in student learning outcomes. This book addresses this
knowledge gap in three ways. First, it utilizes empirical data
collected over a five-year period from six African countries-Kenya,
Mali, Senegal, Nigeria, Tanzania, and Uganda-to illuminate how the
global agenda on education has been debated, designed, and
implemented across the continent, and with what outcomes. Second,
it frames the six nation case studies within the wider logic of
international educational policy agenda and the continent-wide
search for education quality. Finally, the analysis of universal
primary education strategies is undertaken from an
interdisciplinary perspective thereby allowing a more comprehensive
view of the educational reform.
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