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"school access"
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Challenges of Access to WASH in Schools in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: Case Study from Rural Central Kazakhstan
by
Tussupova, Kamshat
,
Bolatova, Zhanerke
,
Sharapatova, Kulyash
in
Adaptation
,
Coronaviruses
,
COVID-19
2021
Safe water and sanitation, which give rise to appropriate hygiene, are fundamental determinants of individual and social health and well-being. Thereby, assessing and widening access to sustainable, durable water and sanitation infrastructure remains a global health issue. Rural areas are already at a disadvantage. Poor access to water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) can have a major negative effect on students in rural schools. Thus, the paper aims to assess the current condition and the challenge to access WASH in rural Kazakh schools. The study was conducted in three rural schools in Central Kazakhstan. Data were gathered through a survey among pupils, observations of the WASH infrastructure and maintenance, and a face-to-face interview with school administrators. The mean survey response rate was 65% across schools. Results indicated there was no alternative drinking-water source in schools, and 15% of students said they had access to water only occasionally. Half of the students reported that the water was unsafe to drink because of a poor odor, taste, or color. The toilet in school 3 was locked with a key, and a quarter of the students reported there was no access to a key. Moreover, not having gender-separated toilet facilities was a challenge because of the traditional gender norms. Despite the effective regulations and measures of handwashing taken during COVID-19, 27.7% of the students answered that soap was not offered daily in classrooms. Additionally, warm water was only provided in school 2. About 75% of students did not have access to drying materials continuously. The study shows that having the schools’ infrastructure is not enough when characteristics, such as availability, accessibility, maintenance, operation, quality of services, education, and practices, are ignored. Cooperation between local education authorities, school administration, and parents should be encouraged to the achievement of the sustainable development goals (SDGs) by 2030.
Journal Article
School choice and post hoc family preference in Spain: Do they match up?
by
Andrés-Candelas, Mario
,
Rogero-García, Jesús
in
Families & family life
,
Preferences
,
School choice
2020
The process of school choice depends on a wide range of circumstances including those related to the accessibility to schools and parental preferences. This paper has three goals: (1) Identify whether the preferences for the different kinds of schools (public, publicly-funded private, or private) vary according to the family’s traits; (2) estimate the degree of concurrence between the kind of school their children attend and the kind of school the parents prefer a posteriori; and (3) identify which social groups demonstrate lower levels of concurrence. We used a sub-sample of people with children registered in compulsory grades or post-compulsory grades up to university from representative national survey (2012). Results show that post hoc school preferences differ by educational level, economic status, religious orientation, and size of town. Likewise, we find divergences between the school parents prefer and the school their children attend, something that occurs more frequently among those with less economic resources.
Journal Article
Social Exclusion and the Hidden Curriculum: The Schooling Experiences of Chinese Rural Migrant Children in an Urban Public School
2016
Since 2001, the Chinese government had passed a series of policies known as 'the two primary responsibilities' to allow the rural migrant children to attend urban public schools. However, what the migrant children actually experienced in and after negotiating access to these schools deserves serious attention from educators, scholars and policymakers. Based on prolonged ethnographic fieldwork in a Beijing public school, this study demonstrated three key aspects of exclusions in migrant children's schooling experiences, namely, (1) access to school, (2) in-class participations and (3) peer interactions, and examined the 'hidden curriculum' in the existing school practices that prevented migrant children from integrating successfully in the urban school settings. We found that academic performance lay at the root of social exclusions, but the local educators' perceptions of migrant children as outsiders, the urban-oriented school curricular and urban children's involvement (vis-à-vis migrant children's little involvement) in the extracurricular activities at school as well as the paid supplementary trainings outside school together formed the 'hidden curriculum' that led to the marginalization of migrant students in the urban school system.
Journal Article
Estimating school provision, access and costs from local pupil counts under decentralised governance
by
Jacobs-Crisioni, Chris
,
Moreno-Monroy, Ana I.
,
Kompil, Mert
in
Catchment areas
,
Computer Appl. in Social and Behavioral Sciences
,
Costs
2024
This study proposes a sequence of methods to obtain geolocated estimates of primary school provision, costs, and access. This sequence entails: (1) location-allocation, an approach that mimics school location patterns in case of decentralised governance, such as exists in the EU and UK; (2) balanced floating catchment areas, an approach to assign pupils to schools assuming free school choice; and (3) school costs estimates, which are induced from pupil counts and the distributional properties of observed school costs. The method is fine-tuned using observed school locations and school-level costs data. It is developed to assess how much local population densities and demography affects school access and schooling costs across Europe. Its results can be aggregated by degree of urbanisation to quantify the differences across human settlements ranging from mostly uninhabited areas to densely populated cities.
Journal Article
The short-run impact of using lotteries for school admissions: early results from Brighton and Hove's reforms
by
Allen, Rebecca
,
McKenna, Leigh
,
Burgess, Simon
in
Academic achievement
,
Admissions policies
,
Attainment
2013
We analyse the initial impact of a major school admission reform in Brighton and Hove. The new system incorporated a lottery for oversubscribed places and new catchment areas. We examine the post-reform changes in school composition. We locate the major winners and losers in terms of the quality of school attended. We match similar cities and conduct a difference-in-difference analysis of the policy change. The results are complex: we see an increase in student sorting but we also see a significant weakening of the dependence of school attended on student's prior attainment.
Journal Article
INTELLECTUAL PROJECT DESIGN CONSIDERATIONS ON ACCESS TO SCHOOL FACILITIES BY LEARNERS WITH PHYSICAL DISABILITIES IN PUBLIC INTEGRATED SCHOOLS IN KENYA
by
Mwandikwa, Joseph Mutemi
,
Kyalo, Dorothy Ndunge
,
Mbugua, John
in
Access to School Facilities
,
Intellectual Design Considerations
,
Learners with Physical Disabilities
2025
Objective: The objective for this study was to investigate the influence of infrastructural project design considerations on the access to school facilities by learners with intellectual disabilities in public integrated schools in Kenya. Theoretical Framework: This study is anchored on the Systems Approach Theory, complemented by Erikson’s Psychosocial Development Theory, Gardner’s Multiple Intelligences Theory, and Bronfenbrenner’s Ecological Systems Theory, to explain how interconnected environmental, psychological, and educational factors influence inclusive learning and the holistic development of learners. Method: The study employed a descriptive cross-sectional survey and correlational design within a pragmatic mixed-method approach. From a population of 767, a sample of 159 participants comprising head teachers, class teachers (grades six and seven), learners with special needs, and BOM chairpersons was selected. Data analysis involved descriptive statistics (mean, standard deviation) and inferential tests, including Pearson’s correlation, simple and multiple regression, stepwise regression (R²), and F-statistics to test hypotheses. Reliability and validity were confirmed through a pilot study. Results and Discussion: Findings showed a weak, statistically insignificant relationship between intellectual design considerations and access to school facilities (r = 0.148, p > 0.05), indicating limited integration of inclusive design principles in school infrastructure. Research Implications: The study emphasizes the need for clear policy frameworks, funding, and enforcement mechanisms to integrate inclusive design principles into school infrastructure for equitable access. Originality/Value: This study provides empirical evidence on the link between intellectual design and accessibility in Kenyan schools, offering new insights that connect educational management with inclusive architectural design.
Journal Article
How Did School Meal Access Change during the COVID-19 Pandemic? A Two-Step Floating Catchment Area Analysis of a Large Metropolitan Area
by
Jabbari, Jason
,
McDermott, Laura
,
Tyler, Frank
in
Coronaviruses
,
COVID-19
,
Families First Coronavirus Response Act 2020-US
2021
SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19) resulted in school closures and contingencies across the U.S. that limited access to school meals for students. While some schools attempted to provide alternative meal access points where students or parents could pick up meals, many students—especially those in low-income households—lacked adequate transportation to these access points. Thus, physical proximity to meal access points was particularly important during the pandemic. In this study, we explore how school meal access changed during the COVID-19 pandemic, especially as it relates to race/ethnicity and socio-economic status. Taking into account both the “supply” (meal access points) and the “demand” (low-income students) for free meals, we employed a two-step floating catchment area analysis to compare meal accessibility in St. Louis, Missouri before and during the pandemic in the spring and summer of 2019 and 2020. Overall, while school meal access decreased during the spring of 2020 during the early months of the pandemic, it increased during the summer of 2020. Moreover, increased access was greatest in low-income areas and areas with a higher proportion of Black residents. Thus, continuing new policies that expanded access to school meals—especially for summer meal programs—could lead to positive long-term impacts on children’s health and well-being.
Journal Article
From schooling access to learning outcomes
This report finds that in developing countries over the past 15 years, high priority was accorded to increasing enrolments in primary schools, but much less attention was directed to the crucial issue of whether children are learning adequately. The report recommends that countries, the World Bank and development partners give the same emphasis to learning outcomes as to access, so that the world's increasing investments in primary education have a far greater impact on poverty reduction and national development. The World Bank is the largest provider of external financial support to education in developing world. Since 1963, it has transferred about US$36.5 billion for education, over $14 billion of which has been for primary education. Its current lending portfolio consists of about 143 operations in 88 countries amounting to US$8.4 billion. (DIPF/Orig.).
'The best school for my child?' Positions, dispositions and inequalities in school choice in the city of Barcelona
2012
This article deals with the discourses and practices employed by families involved in school choice processes in the city of Barcelona (Spain). It draws upon a study conducted by the authors in 2008/09, and it is based on surveys completed by a representative sample made up of 3245 families, as well as 60 in-depth interviews with families with children at the age of commencing universal pre-primary education (three years old). Firstly, the article focuses on the types of concerns and pressures that families experience when choosing a school for their child. Secondly, we analyse the level and type of knowledge that parents have at their disposal about the field of school choice, as well as how they use and benefit from available information channels. Finally, we identify three unequal positions in which families find themselves when negotiating the field of school choice: 'maximising', 'guaranteeing' and 'displaced'. These positions are, in turn, directly related to families' locations in the social structure, which are also unequal.
Journal Article
Just Out of Reach? Unrestrained Supply, Constrained Demand, and Access to Effective Schools in and Around Detroit
2021
Research concerning family preferences for schooling indicates that they value proximity to home as much as academic quality when choosing schools. However, preferences for proximity likely represent inability to access schools farther away from home, especially for disadvantaged students. I test whether distance and district boundaries constrain access to high-performing and effective schools for Detroit students where families choose between intradistrict, interdistrict, and charter schools, as well as an assigned school. I employ a unique data set that includes enrollment records, addresses, and commute times for Detroit residents regardless of where they attend school. Results show that disadvantaged students have little access to the highest quality schools available, specifically those outside Detroit. However, students attend higher performing schools within Detroit.
Journal Article