Improving Attendance and Enrolment at School for Children Living in Poverty
Abstract
This paper summarises the findings of a large-scale structured review of 73 studies to identify promising interventions to increase school enrolment and attendance, particularly in less developed countries where school attendance is not mandatory. Evidence from the stronger studies suggests that for children living in poverty, provision of easy access to schools, making schools free at point of delivery and incentivising attendance/enrolment with cash offers are the most promising interventions. Incentives with conditions attached are more effective than non-conditional incentives. Paying cash to parents is more effective for young children, while cash incentives are more effective for older children if given directly. Providing easy access to free schools seems most promising in improving school attendance and enrolment in low and middle-income countries.
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school attendance and enrolment, disadvantaged, low- and middle-income countries, systematic review
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Copyright (c) 2023 Beng H. See, Stephen Gorard, Nadia Siddiqui, Nada El Soufi, Loraine Hitt, Binwei Lu
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.