PublicationsPopulation Briefs > Transitions to Adulthood: Schooling

Population Briefs June 2004

Transitions to Adulthood
Schooling 

2006

  • Poverty, Gender, and Youth
    Illuminating the Status of Mayan Girls in Guatemala
    Guatemala’s population is among the poorest, least educated, youngest, and fastest growing in Latin America. Indigenous (Mayan) girls are among the most disadvantaged, vulnerable members of the population. The Population Council has conducted research to better understand the status of Mayan girls. The results of these studies have been used to design programs to improve Mayan girls’ lives and health and to address the educational inequities they face.

  • Schooling
    Poverty and School Dropout in Pakistan
    What elements of schooling and home environments in rural Pakistan have the greatest influence on whether girls and boys start and remain in school? Is there a link between investments in children’s schooling and a mother’s reproductive behavior? Recent Population Council research provides unique longitudinal data that give insights into these questions. The analysis is based on two waves of panel data, collected in rural Punjab and North West Frontier Province in December 1997 and January 2004. A noteworthy feature of the study is the availability of data on the arrival of “unwanted” births between the two surveys—a shock to the household whose effects have rarely been investigated.

  • Transitions to Adulthood
    Ishraq Expands Horizons for Girls in Rural Upper Egypt
    The transition from childhood to adulthood is often considered a time of growth in opportunities, self-awareness, and knowledge about the world. For girls in rural Egypt, however, these changes often do not occur. As girls reach adolescence, their lives becomes increasingly confined to the home, their opportunities limited to household chores, and their future prospects restricted to early marriage and childbearing. A comprehensive program in rural Upper Egypt, known as Ishraq (“enlightenment”), has succeeded in expanding the horizons of adolescent girls, increasing their knowledge and self-confidence and promoting their civic engagement.

2005
  • Transitions to Adulthood
    Globalization Is Transforming Adolescence in the Developing World
    More than three years ago, the US National Academies asked Cynthia B. Lloyd, Population Council director of social science research, to lead an expert panel in examining transitions to adulthood in developing countries and outlining the policy implications of its findings. In 2005, the panel’s investigations culminated in the publication of Growing Up Global: The Changing Transitions to Adulthood in Developing Countries. The panel found that despite widespread progress in certain areas, many young people still lack good health and adequate schooling—both of which are essential for ensuring their productivity and well-being. The lives of many of these young men and women are profoundly different from those of their parents. While change itself is not new, the speed of globalization has accelerated and its scale has widened.

2004

  • Education
    Schooling Trends in Africa: New Assessment Methods Needed
    At least 37 million young people aged 10–14 in sub-Saharan Africa will not complete primary school, according to a recent analysis conducted by Population Council demographers Cynthia B. Lloyd and Paul C. Hewett. Moreover, nearly 21 million children in this age range in sub-Saharan Africa have never attended school. In April 2000, at the World Education Forum in Dakar, Senegal, sub-Saharan African governments, along with others from around the world, recommitted themselves to achieving “Education for All” by 2015. The Population Council assessment suggests that meeting this target will be difficult. Much needed are an international commitment to a greater level of resources, better tools for monitoring educational progress at the country level, and a focus on reaching the poorest families.

2003

  • Transitions to Adulthood
    Broad Survey of Pakistani Youth Completed
    Pakistan has one of the largest cohorts of young people in its history, with approximately 25 million people between the ages of 15 and 24. Through the decisions they make and the opportunities they are offered, this group will play a crucial role in the social, political, and economic development and stability of the country. Until recently little was known about the details of the lives of Pakistani youth. Population Council investigators sought to fill this knowledge gap by conducting the largest nationally representative survey ever to focus on this age group of Pakistanis. The investigation yielded information about the state of education, work, and marriage and childbearing, among other insights.



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This page updated
11 October 2007