Report icon

Report

Educational inequalities among children and young people in Ethiopia

Abstract:

Designed constitutionally, the Ethiopian education sector has been one of the most important pro-poor sectors over recent years, with a percentage of public education spending to total government spending of 21 per cent, and to GDP 4 per cent in 2012/13. As the result of this, school enrolment (Grades 1-12) doubled from about 10 million students in 2002/3 to over 20 million in 2013/14. Coupled with the public educational expenditure, the government has also made a number of policy changes in different areas of the sector. Examples include the introduction of the “O” class programme and non-formal preschool service called the Child‐to‐Child delivery system aiming to address marginalised children who have little or no access to preschool education. Additionally, targeting better access, equity, efficiency and quality, some other reforms were introduced in line with the latest two Education Sector Development Programmes (2005/6-2009/10 and 2010/11- 2014/15). Of note is the General Education Quality Improvement Program, designed to support quality improvements for all primary and secondary schools, and the expansion of higher education, particularly at university level, where the number of public universities increased from eight in 2008/9 to 31, with more than 0.62 million students, in 2013/14.


Yet, in spite of the unprecedented enrolment at all levels, the education sector still resembles a pyramid, with varying degrees of access for different groups, where nine out of ten children of appropriate age are enrolled in primary education, two out of ten in secondary education and only one out of ten at university. There could be several reasons that explain the pyramid shape of the sector, and the disparity among various groups of individuals in particular. This paper analyses the educational inequalities that may exist among different groups of children and young people in Ethiopia using Young Lives longitudinal data collected over four rounds of surveys, for two cohorts of children born in 2001-02 (the ‘Younger Cohort’) and in 1994-95 (‘Older Cohort’).

Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

Actions


Access Document


Authors


More by this author
Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
SSD
Department:
International Development
Role:
Author

Contributors

Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
SSD
Department:
International Development
Role:
Contributor


Publisher:
Young Lives*
Journal:
Young Lives Country Reports More from this journal
Series:
Young Lives Country Reports
Publication date:
2016-11-01
Acceptance date:
2016-11-01
ISBN:
9781909403819


Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:666613
UUID:
uuid:12bce8a1-6be8-49eb-a104-82756b3530e9
Local pid:
pubs:666613
Source identifiers:
666613
Deposit date:
2016-12-19

Terms of use



Views and Downloads






If you are the owner of this record, you can report an update to it here: Report update to this record

TO TOP