Ethiopia : Education in Ethiopia, Strengthening the Foundation for Sustainable Progress

Despite daunting difficulties in Ethiopia, the optimism today about the country's future is palpable. The government has made poverty reduction the centerpiece of its development strategy, and it has continued to advance the reform of governmental structure, functions, and finances. These conte...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Education Sector Review
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/02/5646832/ethiopia-education-ethiopia-strengthening-foundation-sustainable-progress
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/8507
id okr-10986-8507
recordtype oai_dc
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic ADULT EDUCATION
ADULT LITERACY
ADULTS
AGED
BASIC EDUCATION
CHILD MALNUTRITION
COMPOSITION
DECENTRALIZATION
DISTANCE EDUCATION
DRAWING
DROPOUT RATES
EDUCATION EXPENDITURES
EDUCATION SECTOR
EMPLOYMENT
ENROLLMENT
FAMILIES
GENDER PARITY
GER
GIRLS
GOVERNMENT PRIMARY SCHOOLS
GROSS ENROLLMENT
GROSS ENROLLMENT RATIO
GROSS ENROLLMENT RATIOS
HEALTH INDICATORS
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
IMMUNODEFICIENCY
INSTRUCTION
INSTRUCTIONAL MANAGEMENT
MANAGERS
NEW ENTRANTS
NONFORMAL EDUCATION
PARENTS
PARITY
PARTICIPATION RATES
PRIMARY EDUCATION
PRIMARY SCHOOL
PRIMARY SCHOOL ENROLLMENTS
PRIMARY SCHOOLING
PRIMARY SCHOOLS
PRIVATE SECTOR
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
PUPILS
RATES OF RETURN
REPEATERS
REPETITION
REPETITION RATES
RURAL AREAS
RURAL SCHOOLS
SCHOOL CONSTRUCTION
SCHOOLING
SCHOOLS
SECONDARY EDUCATION
SECONDARY SCHOOLS
SECONDARY STUDENTS
STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
TEACHER
TEACHER CERTIFICATION
TEACHER DEPLOYMENT
TEACHER TRAINING
TEACHERS
TEACHING
TERTIARY STUDENTS
UNEMPLOYMENT
WORKERS
spellingShingle ADULT EDUCATION
ADULT LITERACY
ADULTS
AGED
BASIC EDUCATION
CHILD MALNUTRITION
COMPOSITION
DECENTRALIZATION
DISTANCE EDUCATION
DRAWING
DROPOUT RATES
EDUCATION EXPENDITURES
EDUCATION SECTOR
EMPLOYMENT
ENROLLMENT
FAMILIES
GENDER PARITY
GER
GIRLS
GOVERNMENT PRIMARY SCHOOLS
GROSS ENROLLMENT
GROSS ENROLLMENT RATIO
GROSS ENROLLMENT RATIOS
HEALTH INDICATORS
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
IMMUNODEFICIENCY
INSTRUCTION
INSTRUCTIONAL MANAGEMENT
MANAGERS
NEW ENTRANTS
NONFORMAL EDUCATION
PARENTS
PARITY
PARTICIPATION RATES
PRIMARY EDUCATION
PRIMARY SCHOOL
PRIMARY SCHOOL ENROLLMENTS
PRIMARY SCHOOLING
PRIMARY SCHOOLS
PRIVATE SECTOR
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
PUPILS
RATES OF RETURN
REPEATERS
REPETITION
REPETITION RATES
RURAL AREAS
RURAL SCHOOLS
SCHOOL CONSTRUCTION
SCHOOLING
SCHOOLS
SECONDARY EDUCATION
SECONDARY SCHOOLS
SECONDARY STUDENTS
STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
TEACHER
TEACHER CERTIFICATION
TEACHER DEPLOYMENT
TEACHER TRAINING
TEACHERS
TEACHING
TERTIARY STUDENTS
UNEMPLOYMENT
WORKERS
World Bank
Ethiopia : Education in Ethiopia, Strengthening the Foundation for Sustainable Progress
geographic_facet Africa
East Africa
Sub-Saharan Africa
Ethiopia
description Despite daunting difficulties in Ethiopia, the optimism today about the country's future is palpable. The government has made poverty reduction the centerpiece of its development strategy, and it has continued to advance the reform of governmental structure, functions, and finances. These contextual factors are highly pertinent for education. The Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (PRSP) envisions a key role for the sector, placing on it the following expectations: progress toward universal primary education; improvement in the quality of services throughout the system; and, the production of a trained workforce, responsive in quantity and skills mix, to the demand for educated labor in the country's modernizing economy. For the education sector, these features in the country's political and economic landscape prompt a host of questions: Is the current education policy framework adequate for fulfilling the expectations placed on the sector? What resources are available to achieve the stated goals? Are these sufficient to meet the requirements? If not, how will the gap between resource availability and need be closed? What changes in the financing of education, in resource allocation across sub-sectors and schooling inputs, and in the arrangements for service delivery will help ensure that the education system develops over the long run in a fiscally viable and pedagogically sound manner? This report serves as a contribution to the continuing dialogue on these strategic questions regarding the goals of, and means for education sector development. The report provides a snapshot of the education sector up to 2001-02 (and, on some dimensions, up to 2002-03). Its intent is to portray selected aspects accurately, to discover potentially important areas for policy development. The report is thus deliberately diagnostic in orientation. The analysis in this report yields findings that are relevant for discussing the potential scope for improvement; below some of these findings suggest to: Universalize four years of schooling as an immediate priority; Adapt the goals for coverage, to conditions in urban and rural areas; Allow labor market conditions to guide the pace of expansion beyond wade 4; Improve the education system's responsiveness to labor market signals; Prioritize education, especially primary education, in the allocation of public spending; Choose fiscally sustainable standards that benefit the system as a whole; Support alternative basic education centers as an option for service delivery; Accept flexible standards in order to lower costs in the formal school system; Keep the set of indicators for primary education small and relevant; Improve the availability and accessibility of schools in rural areas; Deploy teachers across schools in relation to the size of enrollments; and, Encourage schools to progressively offer complete instructional programs.
format Economic & Sector Work :: Education Sector Review
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Ethiopia : Education in Ethiopia, Strengthening the Foundation for Sustainable Progress
title_short Ethiopia : Education in Ethiopia, Strengthening the Foundation for Sustainable Progress
title_full Ethiopia : Education in Ethiopia, Strengthening the Foundation for Sustainable Progress
title_fullStr Ethiopia : Education in Ethiopia, Strengthening the Foundation for Sustainable Progress
title_full_unstemmed Ethiopia : Education in Ethiopia, Strengthening the Foundation for Sustainable Progress
title_sort ethiopia : education in ethiopia, strengthening the foundation for sustainable progress
publisher Washington, DC
publishDate 2012
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/02/5646832/ethiopia-education-ethiopia-strengthening-foundation-sustainable-progress
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/8507
_version_ 1764404828245590016
spelling okr-10986-85072021-04-23T14:02:38Z Ethiopia : Education in Ethiopia, Strengthening the Foundation for Sustainable Progress World Bank ADULT EDUCATION ADULT LITERACY ADULTS AGED BASIC EDUCATION CHILD MALNUTRITION COMPOSITION DECENTRALIZATION DISTANCE EDUCATION DRAWING DROPOUT RATES EDUCATION EXPENDITURES EDUCATION SECTOR EMPLOYMENT ENROLLMENT FAMILIES GENDER PARITY GER GIRLS GOVERNMENT PRIMARY SCHOOLS GROSS ENROLLMENT GROSS ENROLLMENT RATIO GROSS ENROLLMENT RATIOS HEALTH INDICATORS HUMAN DEVELOPMENT IMMUNODEFICIENCY INSTRUCTION INSTRUCTIONAL MANAGEMENT MANAGERS NEW ENTRANTS NONFORMAL EDUCATION PARENTS PARITY PARTICIPATION RATES PRIMARY EDUCATION PRIMARY SCHOOL PRIMARY SCHOOL ENROLLMENTS PRIMARY SCHOOLING PRIMARY SCHOOLS PRIVATE SECTOR PUBLIC EXPENDITURE PUPILS RATES OF RETURN REPEATERS REPETITION REPETITION RATES RURAL AREAS RURAL SCHOOLS SCHOOL CONSTRUCTION SCHOOLING SCHOOLS SECONDARY EDUCATION SECONDARY SCHOOLS SECONDARY STUDENTS STUDENT ACHIEVEMENT SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT TEACHER TEACHER CERTIFICATION TEACHER DEPLOYMENT TEACHER TRAINING TEACHERS TEACHING TERTIARY STUDENTS UNEMPLOYMENT WORKERS Despite daunting difficulties in Ethiopia, the optimism today about the country's future is palpable. The government has made poverty reduction the centerpiece of its development strategy, and it has continued to advance the reform of governmental structure, functions, and finances. These contextual factors are highly pertinent for education. The Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (PRSP) envisions a key role for the sector, placing on it the following expectations: progress toward universal primary education; improvement in the quality of services throughout the system; and, the production of a trained workforce, responsive in quantity and skills mix, to the demand for educated labor in the country's modernizing economy. For the education sector, these features in the country's political and economic landscape prompt a host of questions: Is the current education policy framework adequate for fulfilling the expectations placed on the sector? What resources are available to achieve the stated goals? Are these sufficient to meet the requirements? If not, how will the gap between resource availability and need be closed? What changes in the financing of education, in resource allocation across sub-sectors and schooling inputs, and in the arrangements for service delivery will help ensure that the education system develops over the long run in a fiscally viable and pedagogically sound manner? This report serves as a contribution to the continuing dialogue on these strategic questions regarding the goals of, and means for education sector development. The report provides a snapshot of the education sector up to 2001-02 (and, on some dimensions, up to 2002-03). Its intent is to portray selected aspects accurately, to discover potentially important areas for policy development. The report is thus deliberately diagnostic in orientation. The analysis in this report yields findings that are relevant for discussing the potential scope for improvement; below some of these findings suggest to: Universalize four years of schooling as an immediate priority; Adapt the goals for coverage, to conditions in urban and rural areas; Allow labor market conditions to guide the pace of expansion beyond wade 4; Improve the education system's responsiveness to labor market signals; Prioritize education, especially primary education, in the allocation of public spending; Choose fiscally sustainable standards that benefit the system as a whole; Support alternative basic education centers as an option for service delivery; Accept flexible standards in order to lower costs in the formal school system; Keep the set of indicators for primary education small and relevant; Improve the availability and accessibility of schools in rural areas; Deploy teachers across schools in relation to the size of enrollments; and, Encourage schools to progressively offer complete instructional programs. 2012-06-20T14:35:52Z 2012-06-20T14:35:52Z 2005-02 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/02/5646832/ethiopia-education-ethiopia-strengthening-foundation-sustainable-progress http://hdl.handle.net/10986/8507 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Education Sector Review Economic & Sector Work Africa East Africa Sub-Saharan Africa Ethiopia