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Paul C. Hewett, Barbara S. Mensch, Joseph Chimombo, and Richard Gregory. "Gender differences in schooling experiences among adolescents in Malawi."

ABSTRACT

In developing countries, the school is the main learning and socializing institution outside the family. Investments in schooling are increasingly extolled as critical for poverty alleviation, the achievement of gender equity and empowerment, and economic growth. This paper uses the first wave of a longitudinal study on primary school quality and its effect on adolescents aged 14–16 in two districts in Malawi to (1) investigate gender differences in schooling experiences; (2) explore whether such differences are associated with variability across schools in rates of both attendance and performance as measured by results on the Primary School Leaving Exam (PSLE); and (3) determine whether girls who attend schools that have participated in interventions to improve teacher quality and reduce gender-based violence have more positive experiences than girls who attend schools that have not been exposed to such interventions.

Topic 5: Schooling and Employment

Session 20: Evaluations of Interventions to Improve Schooling Outcomes
Tuesday, 11 December 2007, 10:45 am–12:45 pm

 



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This page updated
24 October 2007