This book explores questions related to the recent establishment in Africa of community schools similar to those supported by Save the Children. The book addresses the serious doubts about realizing the Education for All and Millennium Development Goals. It draws on Save the Childrens experience with community-based schooling in four countries: Ethiopia, Malawi, Mali, and Uganda.
Over the past decade, community schools similar to those supported by Save the Children have been established in many developing countries, and especially in sub-Saharan Africa. As large numbers of children attend schools started and managed by their own communities and/or by nongovernmental organizations, questions have come up about the impact of such schools at large scale: Can village-based or community schools have a national impact on access to education, spur improved long-term development strategies and education policy, or achieve or influence Education for All? This book explores these and related questions, drawing on Save the Childrens experience with community-based schooling in four countries: Ethiopia, Malawi, Mali, and Uganda.
The literature on community schools in Africa tends to be sparse, repetitive and highly descriptive with little or no sustained critique of practice. This book fills a substantial gap in the education literature and is particularly timely, given the current emphasis on decentralization and community involvement in education.
Community Schools: The Solution to Local Needs.- Mali, 19922003: The First Experiment.- Malawi, 19942003: Training on a National Scale.- Ethiopia, 19922001: Helping Communities Fill the Education Gap.- Uganda, 19992005: Transferring to Government Control.- USAID and Community Schools in Africa: The Vision, the Strategy, the Commitment.- Supply-Side Education: Africa's Home-grown Schools.- What's Next for Community Schools?.
Over the past decade, community schoolcd