From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Mitayo Potosi
Sent: Friday, July 19, 2013 5:20 PM
To: The First Virtual Network for friends of Uganda
Subject: [Ugnet] Only 35 per cent of teachers showed mastery of the subjects
they taught.

 

Among public teachers, only 35 per cent showed mastery of the subjects they
taught.

Re: World Bank survey shows how teachers abscond class

Dear President Museveni, instead of giving a pay-rise to teachers be bold
enough and, like Finland, raise the minimun standard for one to be a
teacher. 

For Primary or Secondary school, make it six years of University Education.

For example, with an MSc in Biology you are made a HM of, say,  Bugiri
Primary School, where you will build a Laboratory,  plan with other teachers
to write text books and then you will get a salary of 45,   50 or $60,000.

Just raising wages and continuing to import, sometimes irrelevant books,
keeps us backwards

Mitayo Potosi.

World Bank survey shows how teachers abscond class

Updated Friday, July 19th 2013 at 23:38 GMT +3 

GLANCE FACTS:  SCHOOLS SURVEYED 300

By Standard on Saturday Team

KENYA: Children in Kenya are being cheated out of an education
<http://www.standardmedia.co.ke/?searchtext=education&searchbutton=SEARCH>
because teachers stay away from class for more than half of the school day. 

This is the shocking claim made in a new World Bank
<http://www.standardmedia.co.ke/?searchtext=World%20Bank&searchbutton=SEARCH
>  survey whose findings were released just days before the end of the
23-day strike by public school teachers to demand more money.

The report concludes that what schools need most is better human resource
management.

According to a survey of Service Delivery Indicators
<http://www.standardmedia.co.ke/?searchtext=Service%20Delivery%20Indicators&;
searchbutton=SEARCH>  (SDI) for Kenya, children in public primary schools
are taught for only two hours 40 minutes a day, not even half the official
teaching day of five hours 40 minutes.

This is because teachers either do not go to work at all or spend most of
the day in the school compound doing other things.

"While teachers at public and private schools were likely to show up for
work, public school teachers were 50 per cent less likely to be in class
teaching," the report says. "Children in public schools receive an average
of 20 days less teaching a term than those in private schools."

Even when teachers go into the classroom, the survey found, only about one
third of them give students value for money.

Quality of lessons

Among public teachers, only 35 per cent showed mastery of the subjects they
taught.

"Seniority and years of training did not correlate with higher levels of
knowledge."

This low level of service delivery is expected to have a major effect on the
achievement of the country's development objectives. Other surveys show that
most pupils do not learn to read or do basic math at the right age.

The same SDI survey also found only 58 per cent of providers in public
health facilities could diagnose four out of five basic conditions (see
related story). Up to a third of them were regularly absent from their place
of work.

"Although getting children into school and building and equipping clinics is
a big step, it is not enough," says Gayle Martin, who leads the SDI
programme across sub-Saharan Africa. "What ultimately matters. is how well
students are learning and whether patients get the right treatment." 

There are 10 million children of primary school age in Kenya.

This number is set to rise as thousands more babies are surviving past
infancy. This growing population could greatly expand the country's
prosperity. But this is not likely to happen without improvements in the
quality of education
<http://www.standardmedia.co.ke/?searchtext=education&searchbutton=SEARCH>
and health care to turn them into productive citizens.

Weaknesses

New SDI data has highlighted the main service delivery weaknesses in schools
and clinics.

The findings show Kenya is doing better on the availability of 'hardware'
like textbooks, equipment and infrastructure than it is on the 'software',
that is, the level of effort and knowledge among teachers and health
providers.

Nearly all health facilities have sanitation, 80 per cent of schools have
enough light to read and textbooks per pupils exceeds Kenya's target of
three per pupil.

On the medicines front, drugs for mothers remain a problem with only 58 per
cent of these available in public facilities.

"The modest level of effort by teachers and health providers seen in the SDI
reflects room for improvement in the management of human resources," the
World Bank
<http://www.standardmedia.co.ke/?searchtext=World%20Bank&searchbutton=SEARCH
>  researchers say. They point out that over 29 per cent of public health
providers, for example, were regularly absent from work.

Vision 2030, the country's blueprint for economic and human development,
makes particular reference to good education
<http://www.standardmedia.co.ke/?searchtext=education&searchbutton=SEARCH>
and to healthcare for all. World Bank
<http://www.standardmedia.co.ke/?searchtext=World%20Bank&searchbutton=SEARCH
>  experts say the quality of education
<http://www.standardmedia.co.ke/?searchtext=education&searchbutton=SEARCH>
and health services will determine whether everybody will share the promise
of Vision 2030.

"Education and health services are always hot button issues, with a wide
range of views and opinions," Martin says. "But everyone agrees that public
money must deliver good results. And that is what these indicators are for,
to help inform the public debate and contribute to better results for
everyone."

Mr Mwangi Kimenyi, Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institute and Director of
the Africa Growth Initiative is upbeat about improved prospects for Kenya in
the decade ahead in an age of greater transparency and open data.

"Education and health service delivery indicators reveal that citizens are
not getting value for money," Kimenyi says.

"This is powerful information that civil society and taxpayers can use to
demand action on the part of the service providers and officials of the line
ministries. Armed with such information, citizens are better able to hold
Government and providers to account."

The main objective of the new SDI initiative, which is an Africa-wide
programme, is to generate data on quality service delivery that can then
help citizens to hold their government and service providers accountable,
and push for change that delivers better results for them.

"Increasing accountability for education
<http://www.standardmedia.co.ke/?searchtext=education&searchbutton=SEARCH>
and health services is at the heart of the Service Delivery Indicators
<http://www.standardmedia.co.ke/?searchtext=Service%20Delivery%20Indicators&;
searchbutton=SEARCH> ," says Ritva Reinikka, Director of Human Development
for Africa at the World Bank
<http://www.standardmedia.co.ke/?searchtext=World%20Bank&searchbutton=SEARCH
> .

"The data will help governments and service providers take specific actions
to deliver better services and to track the impact of reforms across time as
the surveys are repeated."

SDI can also help governments achieve greater efficiency of public spending.
"Unless you know where exactly the problem is, you can't fix it," Reinikka
notes.

"Governments today are often operating within tight budgets that already
devote a large share of resources to health and education
<http://www.standardmedia.co.ke/?searchtext=education&searchbutton=SEARCH>
- so honing in on the issues and spending money more smartly is really
critical."

 

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