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Cheaper by the Dozen(s)? Quality vs. Quantity in achieving Universal Primary Education By Emily Bishop and David Emery

Cheaper by the Dozen(s)? Quality vs. Quantity in achieving Universal Primary Education By Emily Bishop and David Emery

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Page 1: Cheaper by the Dozen(s)? Quality vs. Quantity in achieving Universal Primary Education By Emily Bishop and David Emery

Cheaper by the Dozen(s)?

Quality vs. Quantity in achieving Universal Primary EducationBy Emily Bishop and David Emery

Page 2: Cheaper by the Dozen(s)? Quality vs. Quantity in achieving Universal Primary Education By Emily Bishop and David Emery

115 Million Children Worldwide,

Nearly 1 in 2 Children in West and Central Africa,

Out of School.

UNICEF/UNESCO,

Children Out of School, 2006

Page 3: Cheaper by the Dozen(s)? Quality vs. Quantity in achieving Universal Primary Education By Emily Bishop and David Emery

“Achieve Universal Primary Education: Ensure that, by 2015, children everywhere, boys and girls alike, will be able to complete a full course of primary schooling.”

Second United Nations Millennium Development Goal

Page 4: Cheaper by the Dozen(s)? Quality vs. Quantity in achieving Universal Primary Education By Emily Bishop and David Emery

“47 Countries will not attain the goal of universal school enrollment before almost the middle of the next century.”

V. Muñoz Villalobos

Special Rapporteur to ECOSOC on the Right to Education, 2006

Page 5: Cheaper by the Dozen(s)? Quality vs. Quantity in achieving Universal Primary Education By Emily Bishop and David Emery

In Kenya in 2003, the new government announced on a Friday that as of the following Monday, schools would be free. In Nairobi this led to an average pupil-teacher ratio of 80-1.

Policy Workshop Report, Free to Learn: A Rights Based Approach to Universal Primary Education in Kenya

Princeton University, 2006

Page 6: Cheaper by the Dozen(s)? Quality vs. Quantity in achieving Universal Primary Education By Emily Bishop and David Emery

“Putting more kids into an impoverished empty environment does not advance education. In that instance, increasing quality and holding access constant is the only reasonable alternative.”

Dr Steve Heyneman,

Vanderbilt University and the World Bank

Page 7: Cheaper by the Dozen(s)? Quality vs. Quantity in achieving Universal Primary Education By Emily Bishop and David Emery

“Access has priority. Always.”

Dr Gita Steiner-Khamsi,

Teachers’ College, Columbia University

“It’s better to have children in school than out of school, even if you can’t guarantee high

quality education right away.”Patrick Fine

Academy for Educational Development

Page 8: Cheaper by the Dozen(s)? Quality vs. Quantity in achieving Universal Primary Education By Emily Bishop and David Emery

The elimination of school fees has raised expectations as parents demand more and better opportunities for their children.

Kathleen Kennedy Manzo

Education Week, 2006

Page 9: Cheaper by the Dozen(s)? Quality vs. Quantity in achieving Universal Primary Education By Emily Bishop and David Emery