EDUCATION

Project

Social Norms Project

Social Norms Project

Investigating the extent to which educational entertainment (edutainment) that is aimed at changing social norms about child marriage and girl education changes attitudes, beliefs, norms, and behaviour with respect to child marriage and girl education in men, women, and adolescent children.

Project

Tracking Hope in Karachi (THINK) Project

Tracking Hope in Karachi (THINK) Project

The project’s objective is to understand access to tertiary education among youth in Karachi and its relationship to their hopes and future aspirations.

Project

Learning and Educational Achievements in Pakistan Schools (LEAPS) Program

Learning and Educational Achievements in Pakistan Schools (LEAPS) Program

A longitudinal study aimed at exploring the educational landscape of Pakistan and providing a framework for an evidence-based debate about education performance and policy in Pakistan

Project

Targeted Instruction Program (TIP)

Targeted Instruction Program (TIP)

“A tech-enabled, teacher-led remedial foundational program for Pakistani primary schools

Project

Technology to Empower Actors Across the Learning Ecosystem

Technology to Empower Actors Across the Learning Ecosystem

While technology has massively increased productivity in other sectors and government services in the developed world, it has not done the same for education. This study uses a randomized control trial to understand how using technology to empower various actors in a child’s education ecosystem can help improve learning outcomes.

Project

Learning Beyond School: Another Chance for Out of School Adolescent Girls in Pakistan

Learning Beyond School: Another Chance for Out of School Adolescent Girls in Pakistan

CERP tests the effect of a remedial learning and functional literacy program aimed at adolescent girls. Specifically testing for the program’s effects on female learning, future enrollment, educational aspirations, empowerment, and the broader values and perceptions of female roles of both participants and their household and village members.

Project

RISE

RISE

The Pakistan Country Research Team’s research took a comprehensive systems approach that examines the full schooling environment and the constraints that prohibit students, parents, schools, and other education actors from fulfilling their own objectives.

Project

Education Financing and Support Services Project

Education Financing and Support Services Project

Following from the findings of the LEAPS project, this project aims to provide support to the private education sector in Punjab with an aim to make it more sustainable in the long run.

Project

Political Engagement Project

Political Engagement Project

Pilot study on the political economy of parent involvement in student learning and the platforms offered by the public education system.

Project

Teacher's Expectations

Teacher's Expectations

This is a study on the impact of teacher expectation on student performance in BSS networks through online intervention and data collection

Project

Khyber Pakhtunkhwa School Census

Khyber Pakhtunkhwa School Census

CERP’s Survey conducted a census of private schools across 10 districts of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province in Pakistan to determine characteristics of private schools in the area.

Project

Ilm Exchange

Ilm Exchange

A digital education platform that connects schools, teachers and students with affordable resources to enable quality teaching and learning across Pakistan.

Social Norms Project

Pakistan is the third most dangerous place for women and girls, with 90% of women facing domestic violence (Thomson Reuters 2011). 50% of Pakistani women are married off at the average age of 19 years, with 13% married by the time they are 15 and 40% by age 18 (Population Council). A little is known about the mechanisms that lead to VAWG and child marriage, and less so about the most effective pathways to curb these mechanisms. In particular, there is little evidence on the effectiveness of interventions targeting men and boys, in addition to women and girls.

The prevention of early marriages and VAWG is crucial, not only because girls who marry as children are particularly at risk of premature childbearing and violence from their partners, but also because it negatively affects economic growth and perpetuates intergenerational transmission of poverty. An important mechanism driving this effect is the interaction between VAWG and low cooperation between spouses, resulting in poor health, education, and economic outcomes for women and their children. This research therefore consisted of a cluster randomized control trial (RCT) of a social norms intervention implemented by Bedari in South Punjab and Indus Resource Center in Sindh that addresses women’s empowerment and VAWG.

The intervention consisted of regular group meetings, theater plays, and other community activities that address social norms targeting either men and boys, women and girls, or both, dependent on the experimental arm. The baseline survey was conducted among husbands, wives, and their children of marriageable age. Data was also collected through personal interviews as well as behavioural games. An end-line survey will be conducted 6 months after the interventions, to allow us to measure impact and cost-effectiveness, as well as how impact and the route to changing social norms differs across provinces. The project is expected to answer following research questions:

  • What is the impact on early/forced marriage and education for girls of edutainment interventions that aim to change attitudes/beliefs/norms/social sanctions surrounding marriage and education for girls?
  • To what extent are norm changes among men/boys versus women/girls effective in terms of changing actual behavior?
  • What are the mechanisms for this impact?
  • How do these mechanisms work through intra-household bargaining?
  • What is the effect of these same edutainment interventions on attitudes/beliefs/norms about and actual prevalence of domestic and sexual violence?

Through this thorough piece of research, we will be able to draw broader insights (beyond just edutainment interventions) about how policy makers can best change norms in communities, especially where women hold low bargaining power. Furthermore, through evidence-based identification of underlying mechanisms of impact, we will be able to draw insights for other regions within and outside of Pakistan.

Date:

2018 – completed

Funding Partners:

Oxford University, Indus Resource Centre (IRC), Bedari

Implementing Partners:

Bedari, Oxfam Novib, Oxfam Pakistan, the Amsterdam Institute for Global Health and Development

Publications
Tags

Gender, Education, Human Rights, Child Marriage, Edutainment, RCTs

TRACKING HOPE IN KARACHI (THINK) PROJECT

Principal Investigators:

Over half of Pakistan’s population is under 30 years old. Globally, large youth populations present both enormous potential and significant policy challenges. In response, many countries, governments, and international aid agencies dedicate significant resources to education programmes. Despite the emphasis placed on education, scant empirical research investigates the causal relationship between access to education and positive or negative attitudes and behaviours among youth in developing countries.

Date:

2017 – ongoing

Funding Partners:

NYU

Tags

Youth Empowerement

Learning and Educational Achievements in Pakistan Schools (LEAPS) Program

Principal Investigators:

Principal Investigator:

,

,

The LEAPS project is a large-scale longitudinal study exploring how to improve learning outcomes in Pakistan. It is aimed at exploring the educational landscape of Pakistan and providing a framework for an evidence-based debate about education performance and policy in Pakistan. LEAPS is experimenting with offering schools innovative financial products that can help them meet the needs of their students and evaluating if it has an impact on student test scores.

The LEAPS team has been pursuing transformational research with the aim of improving educational attainment among Pakistan’s children. In this regard, the team has identified and is working on four areas with system-level failure, which include: (1) labor market failures, (2) information asymmetries, (3) lack of access to finance and (4) innovation failures.

In the context of improving educational quality, the LEAPS project expands the research focus beyond teacher training and textbooks, taking a more comprehensive approach of examining the education ecosystem, especially the demand and supply side barriers impeding educational attainment for children in Pakistan. A large-scale data collection exercise was carried out, spanning across 112 villages throughout Punjab and data was collected on 850 schools, 12,000 children, 5500 teachers and 800 head teachers. CERP oversees the implementation of randomized controlled trials under the LEAPS project in Pakistan. The project’s research agenda has now been expanded to include experiments focused on catalyzing innovation in education to achieve improved learning outcomes.

The LEAPS team is seeking ways to improve educational outcomes by testing the impact of:

  • Providing all players in a closed educational ecosystem equal access to information regarding the quality of education provided by schools.
  • Giving schools access to the financial resources necessary to enable quality enhancements.
  • Addressing knowledge and innovation failures by facilitating the growth of a robust market for educational support services.
  • Alleviating frictions in the labor market in order to support the recruitment, training, and retention of the highest performing teachers in both public and private school settings.

We address our questions with three large scale randomized controlled trials.

1. Increasing Funds to Public Schools:

The first evaluates the effects of a government reform that led to a large increase in the funds available to locally run public school management committees. Work on this is ongoing.

2. Unconditional Cash Grants to Low Cost Private Schools:

Our second study examines the impact of unconditional cash grants to low cost private schools (LCPS). In collaboration with the Aman Foundation and Tameer MicroFinance Bank (TMFB), we offered cash grants worth roughly 500 USD each to 855 schools in rural Punjab. This grant value was equivalent to about two months’ worth of revenues and half a year worth of profits for the median school. The grants were offered in two forms: “low saturation”, where only one (randomly selected) school in a selected village was offered the grant, and “high saturation,” where all LCPS in the village were offered the grants. We find that when all schools in a village receive financing (as opposed to just one school) they begin to invest in quality of education rather than fixed investments, to remain competitive in the village’s educational marketplace.

3. Financial Products for Low Cost Private Schools:

For our third study in education financing, we partnered with Telenor Bank (previously Tameer Microfinance Bank) to design and evaluate promising financial products for low cost private schools, ultimately the only sustainable way to make financial resources accessible to schools at scale in Pakistan. We piloted a loan product and a micro-equity product, both specifically tailored to the needs of low cost schools. We aim to examine the effect of school financing on test scores, enrollment and financial metrics. This study is ongoing. Key outcomes to be examined include increased investment, increased enrollment, hiring of additional teachers and staff and/or improvements in quality of education.
Findings
LEAPS is a longitudinal large-scale study, possibly the first of its kind in Pakistan, that tracks 10,000 students over 15 years. It seeks to look at the impact of schooling on early adult labour force outcomes, occupational choice, and family formation stratified by gender and access to schooling heterogeneity by tracking a large sample of individuals from childhood into young adulthood in the context of a low-income country.

Tests of over 22,000 children in grades 3, 4, and 5 (ages 8–10) in Urdu, English, and Mathematics collected between 2003 and 2007 identified substantial deficits. LEAPS surveys in rural Punjab showed that by the end of grade 3, many children had not mastered grade 1 curriculum, and the majority had not mastered grade 2 curriculum. 

  • There is a learning crisis: Even as per-child spending has increased, test scores remain low.
  • Distance matters: Distance is a key factor that impacts school attendance, particularly for girls.
  • Low-cost private schools are pervasive: Today, 42% of all children in Pakistan are enrolled in a private school.
  • Education is an active marketplace: In a typical village in Punjab, parents can choose between 7–8 schools.
  • Debunking the madrassa myth: Religious education is small and not growing.

Learning Levels

  • While research shows that private schools have consistently out-performed public schools in terms of student test scores, absolute learning levels in Pakistan remain shockingly low.
  • When data on third grade test scores in Urdu, English, and Math from the LEAPS study in 2008 is compared to the nationwide ASER survey conducted in 2016, it becomes evident that student performance has not budged in nearly a decade. Both tests indicate that a student who drops out in Grade 3 is very likely to be functionally illiterate.
  • 73% Grade 3 students cannot read a simple sentence. 78% Grade 3 students cannot do a simple arithmetic sum.

Access to Finance and Modality of Distribution

We conducted an experiment in which we offered 342 private schools in 189 villages an unconditional grant of $500 to explore whether schools react differently when other schools also receive the grant. We gave the grant to only one school in some villages (one-financed/ low saturation) while in other villages we gave grants to all private schools (all-financed/ high saturation).

  • The method of financing matters just as much as the grant money itself. The all-financed model leads to larger total social returns for the entire village compared to the one financed model, where school owners benefit most. 
  • All-financed schools were more likely to pay their teachers more and spent on a variety of things while one-financed schools spent more on fixed items and were less likely to increase teacher pay.
  • While enrollment (thus revenue) increased by 12% in one-financed villages as opposed to 5% in all-financed schools, tuition fee and test scores only increased in all-financed villages.
  • Tuition increased in all-financed schools because schools signalled to parents that their quality had improved and were able to charge on average 7.9% higher tuition fees the next year.
  • Revenue and quality of education both increase when all schools have more resources
  • Intensity of financing in a given village matters – revenue and quality both increase when all private schools receive grants as opposed to only one private school

Information Asymmetry

LEAPS conducted a randomised controlled trial in 112 villages across Punjab province. Students were tested and village families were provided report cards with information about their child’s test scores as well as a comparison of the average test scores in the school their child attends versus those in all the different schools in their village. Our groundbreaking report cards study has proven to be one of the most cost-effective and impactful interventions according to the “Smart Buys” report.

Village education markets are a very tight knit community. Information flows fast and competitive parents demand better quality. Even public-school outcomes improve.

Providing report cards to parents improves average test scores in all schools. Families make the majority of a child’s schooling choices. The composition and dynamics of a household can have large impacts on educational choices.

Treatment villages saw average student test scores increase by about 42% (0.11 Standard Deviations) more than control villages at a cost of $1 per child. Even public schools improved due to parental pressure.

Easily understandable Information about school quality is a cost-effective and sustainable way of improving quality through parental involvement.

Teacher Pay and Performance

We know that teacher quality matters to student learning and that teachers should ideally be compensated on the basis of their ‘value-add’. We analysed a dataset on teachers in Punjab from 2003-2007 to calculate a Teacher Value Added (TVA) score – an estimate of the increase in test score points a student would receive if assigned to a particular teacher. Teacher productivity (value-add) impacts student test scores but is not currently always linked to their pay, especially in the public sector.

  • Teacher quality matters – a 1 Standard Deviation increase in a teacher’s TVA score led to a 0.21 Standard Deviation increase in their students’ test scores. This implies that moving a student from a low-performing teacher to a high-performing teacher can lead to a massive gain, nearly equivalent to one full year of schooling, in learning outcomes.
  • The conventional public-school teacher pay system (that pays based on qualification and number of years of teaching) does not necessarily reward the value a teacher adds.
    • Only 5% of TVA is accounted for by observable characteristics, i.e., teacher content knowledge and experience. Other characteristics such as teacher training or having a bachelor’s degree do not impact TVA significantly.
    • Similarly, lower wages do not necessarily lead to poor teaching. This is evident from the performance of contract teachers (paid 35% less than permanent teachers) hired in the public sector, and from data that shows that private school teachers, who are paid significantly less (about one-fourth) than their public-school peers, perform better.

Past Findings

Labour Market Failures:

  • The adequate supply of quality teachers is a critical input for high-quality education.

Since teachers in low-cost private schools are almost entirely women, as a result in villages with secondary schools for girls there are twice as many educated women and private schools are three times as likely to open.

  • We find that student test scores improve by 0.64 standard deviations when teacher quality improves. We also find that there is no correlation between pay and productivity.

Information Asymmetries:

  • Spending $1 per child on information can massively increase test scores
  • We carried out an RCT across 112 villages where we provided treatment village families with report cards that not only gave information about their child’s test scores, but also let parents know how that school was performing compared to other schools in their village. We found:
    • Learning improved
    • The worst schools closed
    • Enrollment increased
    • School became more affordable

Lack of Access to Finance:

  • The intensity of financing provided in a given village matters.
  • Our team studied the effects of unconditional cash grants transferred to private schools across more than 250 villages in 850 schools in rural Pakistan. Our findings suggest that when all schools in a village receive financing (as opposed to just one school) they begin to invest in education quality rather than physical infrastructure in order to remain competitive in the village’s education marketplace.

Innovation Failures:

  • While low-cost schools have access to markets for “hard” investments (such as desks and chairs), they have limited access to markets for “soft” investments (such as curriculum development and teacher training)

FIndings have been summarised from the LEAPS Brochure.

Key Findings from 2008

The fallacy of measuring by enrollment:

While enrollment in Pakistan primary schools has increased dramatically since 2000, especially for girls and the poor, LEAPS research showed that access does not guarantee sufficient learning to participate in a swiftly globalising world. Our surveys in rural Punjab showed that by the end of grade 3 (around 8 years old), many children had not mastered grade 1 curriculum (6-year-old level), and the majority had not mastered grade 2.

The rise of low cost private schools:
Secular, low cost private schools have become widespread in both urban and rural areas across Pakistan. The LEAPS survey found that by the end of 2005, one in every three enrolled children at the primary level was in a private school. LEAPS research showed that within the same village, children in private schools have significantly better learning outcomes than those in government schools. The learning gap between a child in a private school and one in a public school was 8 to 18 times wider than the gap between a child who is relatively rich and one who is relatively poor.

Distance matters:

Distance is a key factor that impacts school attendance, particularly for girls. Every additional 500 metres increase in distance to the closest school results in a large drop in enrollment. Girls living 500 metres away from a school were 15 percentage points less likely to attend than those living next door.

Education is an active marketplace:

Pakistani parents are highly motivated to invest in their children’s education. Government investment in education has also increased substantially. The new educational landscape in Pakistan – both rural and urban – is best described as an active marketplace. A typical village in the LEAPS sample has 7-8 schools for parents to choose from.

Findings Extracted from LEAPS website

Findings from original LEAPS report

The findings shed light on the relative strengths and weaknesses of private and government schooling. Driven by higher teacher salaries, government schools require twice the resources to educate a child compared to private schools. Furthermore, children studying in private schools report higher test-scores in all subjects—partly because their teachers exert greater effort. Private schooling alone, however, cannot be the solution. Access to private schools is not universal. Private schools choose to locate in richer villages and richer settlements within villages, limiting access for poor households. In contrast, a laudable feature of the government school system is that it ensures equal geographical access to schools for all. Since children who receive less attention and educational investments at home are also more likely to be enrolled in government schools (if they are enrolled at all), government school reform could ensure that no child is left behind. 

Findings have been extracted from the LEAPS Landmark World Bank Report

Date:

2003 – ongoing

Funding Partners:

World Bank

Implementing Partners:

Ministry of Education

Publications & Other Resources

Recently Published Media and Policy Notes

Recent Research Outputs

  • Tahir Andrabi, and Christina Brown. 2021. “Inducing Positive Sorting through Performance Pay: Experimental Evidence from Pakistani Schools.” RISE Working Paper Series (forthcoming)
  • Tahir Andrabi, and Christina Brown. 2021. “Subjective versus Objective Incentives and Teacher Productivity.” RISE Working Paper Series (forthcoming)
  • Tahir Andrabi, Natalie Bau, Jishnu Das, and Asim I. Khwaja. 2020. “Private Schooling, Learning, and Civic Values in a Low-Income Country”. Working Paper.
Tags

Education

Targeted Instruction Program

Despite a rise in school enrollments, a learning crisis plagues the Pakistani education system in which most students lack foundational skills even after a number of years of schooling. Low average learning and high learning inequality in Pakistan, especially at the primary level, is expected to worsen because of COVID-induced household shocks and school closures. If these losses are not mitigated, they will compound over time causing children, particularly from lower socioeconomic backgrounds, to perform poorly, disengage and even drop out. 

The specially designed Targeted Instruction Program (TIP) aims to help primary-level students catch up to their grade level by mastering foundational skills in Urdu, Math and English. Acquisition of these foundational skills will support students’ mastery of other subjects.

This technology supported, teacher-led program is formally evaluated in 1250 primary-level public schools in the two largest districts of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa – Peshawar and Mardan – targeting 250,000 students and approximately 7000 teachers and head teachers. Out of these, 250 are pure control schools where the program is not administered. 

The programme is administered by existing school teachers using specially designed assessments and teaching learning materials as well as training resources. A software that can be easily accessed on a smartphone / tablet / computer and even offline (after the initial login) has been developed, which is a fast grading tool and integrates the above-mentioned components to support teachers and reduce the administrative burden on them. 

Findings

This is a first ever classroom-invasive, technology enabled COVID recovery large scale pilot program aimed at helping public primary students catch up to their grade levels and build foundational skills in Urdu, Math and English. 

Curriculum-aligned version of Targeted Instruction that is administered through existing teachers who are provided training, ready to use tools, and post-training support. 

  • Study is currently underway in 1250 public schools in Mardan and Peshawar
  • Buy-in from political and bureaucratic leadership at federal and KP provincial levels. Interest in scaling the program across Pakistan as part of a donor-supported government program
    • Regular curriculum of Math, English and Urdu suspended for 40 days during school hours to allow TIP classes
    • Revised curriculum notified and school-level monitoring by external field officers (from govt. department) to be conducted on that
    • Materials approved for use in schools
  • Initial (post-COVID) needs assessment in ICT with 1292 students in formal and non formal public schools shows:
    • 99% of grades 1-5 students in formal and non formal schools in ICT cannot form basic sentences in English even if they can recognise words
    • 81% of Grade 5 students need remediation in Math while 10% have not mastered level 1 Math content
    • can read and write paragraphs in Urdu while 5% still cannot read words and 25% cannot form sentences
  • Initial (post-COVID) needs assessment in KP with ~960 students in formal public schools shows:
    • Most students’ mastery levels are behind their actual grades
    • Over a quarter of the students tested are one level behind their actual grades in all three subjects. Just under one quarter of students tested are 2 levels behind their actual grades in all 3 subjects
    • 9 out of every 10 children tested need remediation in English
    • 8 out of every 10 children tested need remediation in Urdu
    • 8 out of every 10 children tested need remediation in Math
  • 250,000 students tested; 7300 teachers surveyed; 6000 teachers, head teachers and government officials trained; and 144 Master Trainers trained

Key Numbers & Impact
2 cycles of the program pre-pilot in 8 NGO schools show drastic improvement in student test scores, with the caveat that there was no control group. Initial results show significant improvement in student test scores of ~0.5 standard deviations in scores for students assigned level after completion of the first cycle, despite intermittent school closures. 

Date:

2020 – ongoing

Funding Partners:

JICA, Marshall Foundation, RISE (FCDO), SIEF (World Bank), RRREP (WB), PREP (WB)

Implementing Partners:

KPE&SED, KP D&ESE, KP DPD, KPDCTE, MoFE&PT

Tags

Teacher Training

TECHNOLOGY TO EMPOWER ACTORS ACROSS THE LEARNING ECOSYSTEM

School closures due to the COVID-19 pandemic have highlighted the need for different actors, including those outside of the school, to play a role in children’s education. This study examines whether a technology-aided intervention can empower actors to better guide children’s learning.

While school enrolment in low- and middle-income countries such as Pakistan has risen over the last few decades, learning outcomes remain low. COVID-19 induced school closures have further worsened learning outcomes and undoubtedly increased learning inequality as well. Technology, widely used during the pandemic, has potential to help children to both recover lost learning and learn more effectively in general. However, thus far, while technology has massively increased productivity in other sectors and government services in the developed world, it has not done the same for education.

This study uses a randomised control trial to understand how using technology to empower various actors in a child’s education ecosystem can help improve learning outcomes.

 Specifically, we use a systems thinking model to consider the constraints faced by both home-based and school-based actors, and examine whether information, guidance, and a change in monitoring structures can empower these actors to help provide children with more personalised learning and overall improved learning outcomes.

Our treatment population includes children in grades 2-4 in public schools in the Islamabad Capital Territory (ICT). These include formal public schools as well as non-formal community schools under the supervision of the Federal Directorate of Education (FDE) and the Basic Education Community Schools (BECS), respectively, which are affiliated with the Federal Ministry of Education. We work with all estimated 568 schools, among which 327 are formal public schools and 241 are non-formal schools that cater to students from the lowest socioeconomic backgrounds in the region.

Additionally, in ICT, both schools and parents are well equipped to benefit from this study. They have adequate access to technology (e.g. schools and households have access to at least one device), and parents are willing to use technology (text and Whatsapp messages) to hear about their children’s progress in school and how to help them improve.

Date:

2022 – ongoing

Funding Partners:

EdTech Hub (R4D/FCDO), RISE (FCDO), WB (RRREP), Marshall Foundation

Funding & Implementing Partners:

MoFEPT, FDE, BECS

Tags

Education, EdTech

LEARNING BEYOND SCHOOL: ANOTHER CHANCE FOR OUT OF SCHOOL ADOLESCENT GIRLS IN PAKISTAN

Principal Investigators:

Despite substantial increase in primary school enrollment in Pakistan, 59% of girls do not complete primary school. Scant research exists on improving learning and later life outcomes for out of school female adolescents.

CERP is conducting a Randomised Controlled Trial to test the effect of a remedial learning and functional literacy programme aimed at females aged 9 to 19, in Pakistan’s Southern Punjab region, who have never attended school or have dropped out. This ongoing research spans 300 villages and tests the program’s effects on female learning, future enrollment, and educational aspirations, empowerment, and the broader values and perceptions of female roles of both participants and their household and village members. The research will answer questions crucial to the welfare of some of the most marginalised and disadvantaged members of low income countries. Moreover, improving the position of young females can have strong spillovers through their roles as siblings and mothers.

Date:

2019 – ongoing

Funding & Implementing Partners:

MIT / J PAL (PPE)

Tags

Female Empowerment

Education Program [RISE]

The Pakistan Country Research Team’s research took a comprehensive systems approach that examines the full schooling environment and the constraints that prohibit students, parents, schools, and other education actors from fulfilling their own objectives. Despite rising enrolment levels and a significant increase in spending by its government, Pakistan, like other low income countries, faces a persistent student learning crisis. However, Pakistan’s education ecosystem is unlike those of many other countries: over forty percent of primary-age students attend low-cost private schools, which have proliferated throughout the country, creating a dynamic marketplace of education and presenting parents and children with significant public and private school choice.

This provides a valuable context for studying education systems through economic tools of market analysis. This research takes a comprehensive systems approach that examines the full schooling environment and the constraints that prohibit students, parents, schools, and other education actors from fulfilling their own objectives.

The team’s approach will focus on three distinct components:

  1. A system diagnosis
  2. The core work programme with research and transformational analytical work
  3. The building of a community of practice by helping inform the development of the LUMS School of Education.

Within the core work programme (component 2), the team divides research studies into five dimensions of system frictions faced by the education ecosystem of Pakistan:

  • Returns to education: What is the impact of schooling on early adult labor force outcomes, occupational choice, migration and family formation?
  • The market for quality teachers: How does teacher compensation, job training, and review policy affect teacher supply and quality, and student learning outcomes in the public and private sectors?
  • Access to information about school quality: Do school report cards lead parents to choose high-quality schools and help those schools to thrive? Do the effects on students’ learning continue into adulthood, when men and women enter the labor force, marry, and start families?
  • Financial constraints: Do grants and loans tailored to the needs of schools lead them to make the kinds of investments that will enhance learning?
  • Educational support services: Can products targeted toward Pakistan’s low-cost private schools lead them to adopt innovative learning tools and materials?

Date:

2016 – 2022

Funding Partners:

FCDO

Implementing Partners:

BSS, MicroFinance Banks, LUMS SOE, IDEAS

Education Program [Education Financing and Support Services Project]

Based on findings of the LEAPS project, this project aims to provide support to the private education sector in Punjab with an aim to make it more sustainable in the long run.

The Education Financing and Support Services project has three main objectives. First, to design, implement and evaluate a model to support private education entrepreneurs. Second, assessing the impact of different financial products on private school performance and to increase loan uptake and the financing opportunities available to private schools. Third, assessing the impact of the accessibility of Education Support Services on the performance of private schools and to increase the adoption of quality-based services.

CERP has partnered with Tameer Microfinance Bank and Aman Foundation to provide support to the private education sector in Punjab with an aim to make it more sustainable in the long run. The project is based on the findings from the LEAPS report that examined the educational landscape of Punjab through panel data spanning over 4 years (2003-2007).

The first intervention has been completed while the other two are on-going. CERP plans to use the results from these interventions to estimate the impact of grants, loans and equities on school revenues, in order to make an evidence-based decision for designing viable financial products for the private school markets. In addition, it plans to analyse the impact and take up of accessible Education Support Services and Products and develop a market apparatus for the low-cost private school market.

Date:

2012 – 2019

Funding Partners:

World Bank, Oxford University Press, Adult Basic Education Society, National Science Foundation, John Templeton Foundation, Pomona College

Implementing Partners:

Tameer Microfinance Bank, Aman Foundation

Education Program [Political Engagement Project]

This project examines how citizens can hold policy actors accountable for public service delivery outside of election cycles. Using the lens of public schooling, this study will examine the effectiveness of different types of non-electoral participation citizens can leverage to improve educational outcomes in public schools. The project focuses on the public service delivery of education as previous work has shown that in spite of citizens’ concerns about the quality of this public service, learning outcomes in public schools continue to lag behind private school counterparts in Pakistan.

Through a randomised control trial, the project intends to test several interventions based on the community mobilisation of citizens in rural Punjab and the effectiveness of subsequent non-electoral participation in improving educational outcomes in public schools in these areas.

Initial research has highlighted two key dimensions of citizen participation, which this project will focus on: (i) policy actor type – whether citizens approach a political or bureaucratic actor
(ii) citizen gender – whether the citizens participating are (primarily) women or men. The project examines impacts on citizen political awareness and action , policy actor response , and public school /educational outcomes.

Date:

2019-2024

Funding Partners:

JPAL (MIT)

Implementing Partners:

National Rural Support Programme

EDUCATION PROGRAM [TEACHER'S EXPECTATIONS]

Existing research in psychology shows that teacher expectations can influence how much effort students put into their schoolwork, and consequently, their learning outcomes. During the current time period where online learning is likely to have made it harder for students to stay motivated, we hypothesise that conveying teacher expectations to encourage students to engage in their work and improve their performance could be very beneficial, especially for those who may be falling behind academically. Our study aims to shed light, through a randomised control trial, on whether:

(a) expectations of high effort and achievement affect students’ cognitive and non-cognitive outcomes;
(b) they affect student and parental engagement in their child’s education; and
(c) the treatment effect differs according to whether these expectations are conveyed to a student individually, to a pair of students collectively, or to their parent.

Date:

2020 – 2022

Funding Partners:

JPAL, RISE

Implementing Partners:

Beaconhouse School System

Education Program [Khyber Pakhtunkhwa School Census]

Principal Investigators:

,

CERP’s Survey Unit conducted a census of private schools across 10 districts of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province in Pakistan to determine characteristics of private schools in the area. The activity consisted of short surveys designed on SurveyCTO that aimed to capture key data points including geo-locations, school fees, teacher salaries, and enrolment numbers among others. Despite being cut short due to the recent COVID-19 pandemic, CERP completed the project by conducting approximately 6,000 in-person surveys across 6 districts, in addition to regular Computer Assisted Telephone Interviews (CATI) and in-person back-checks.

Date:

2019 – 2020

Funding Partners:

DFID (FCDO)

Tags

Education, EdTech

Education Program [Ilm Exchange]

The Ilm Exchange marketplace platform aims to provide schools easy access to a large marketplace of educational goods and services, including financial services. The objective of the platform is to match schools to the products and services in an affordable manner.

Ilm Exchange is a digital education platform that connects schools, teachers and students with affordable resources to enable quality teaching and learning across Pakistan. CERP’s Education Program developed Ilm Exchange, a digital education platform that connects schools, teachers and students with affordable resources to enable quality teaching and learning across Pakistan. The project was built on findings from rigorous empirical research on improving student learning outcomes in Pakistan’s schools conducted by CERP under LEAPS and RISE. Ilm Exchange’s long-term vision is to become Pakistan’s premier education hub that brings together stakeholders across the education ecosystem, from school leaders to service providers and financers to researchers and policymakers in order to nurture innovation and improve education quality at the system level. 

Ilm Exchange provides the following services: Digital Library (distance learning solution), Teacher training portal and resources, Bazar (marketplace for education service and support materials e.g. textbooks, loans, EdTech), and MISchool (school management information system that helps low-cost private school spread rural and urban areas with administrative tasks including student grading and attendance records and reporting).

This project targeted 6 districts of the Punjab province in Pakistan. Till date, 1,800 schools subscribed to Ilm Exchange purchasing a variety of products and services from vendors. The MISchool’s automatic SMS service to inform parents about their children’s attendance has led to a 10% increase in attendance rates in some participating schools.
Findings
Ilm Exchange Platform:

  • When piloting the Ilm Exchange platform, 56% of expressions of interest resulted in a successful transaction, suggesting school owners are open to the concept.
  • Most transactions took place in three categories of products: stationery & printing, textbooks, and the management information tool.  
  • Schools are interested in actively using the digital marketplace for purchasing education services and products if the platform ensures these three primary elements: better pricing, high quality products, and good customer service.

MISchool Platform:

  • There is a real need and a significant market for a management tool like Mischool. Currently, there are more than two dozen established products in the market.
  • The tool increases school revenues. Mischool provides an effective financial management system that can help in fee recovery and expense management. 
  • Schools use the tool to differentiate itself from other schools in a fairly competitive market

Date:

2019 – ongoing

Funding & Implementing Partners:

Malala Fund, JPAL, Ilm Ideas 2

Tags

Education, EdTech