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What difference do schools make?: a mixed methods study in secondary schools in Peru

Juan León (jleon@grade.org.pe), Gabriela Guerrero (gguerrero@grade.org.pe), Santiago Cueto and Paul Glewwe
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Juan León: http://www.grade.org.pe/investigadores/personal/jleon/
Gabriela Guerrero: http://www.grade.org.pe/investigadores/personal/gguerrero/

Documentos de Investigación from Grupo de Análisis para el Desarrollo (GRADE)

Abstract: This study contributes to filling the existing gap in the scarce literature on school effectiveness in secondary education in Peru by addressing the following questions: i) which educational processes within schools are most influential in math and reading comprehension? and in the case of the most effective schools, ii) what is the importance that principals, teachers, and students place on school processes variables in explaining educational outcomes? We use a mixed-method design that follows a sequential explanatory design. First, using the Young Lives secondary school survey in Peru (2017), we estimate a random effects model to explore the effect of teacher and school level variables on math and reading comprehension. Then, we conduct a qualitative case study in two schools identified as high-performance schools (HPS) by the survey, with the aim of explaining the role of school processes variables on educational results. The multivariate analysis shows that among teacher and classroom level variables, feedback provided to students and the satisfaction with his/her relationship with the educational actors were statistically significant. Among school level variables, school principal´s experience, average level of school wealth index, students per classroom and the infrastructure were statistically significant. The analysis of in-depth interviews and focus groups with vice-principals, teachers, and students from the two HPS shows that these two effective schools promote higher student achievement through different policies. At the school level, they have monitoring and constant teacher training policies to improve the quality of teaching. They also have student discipline and teacher collaboration policies to promote a conducive school learning environment. Correspondingly, at the classroom level, these schools are characterized by the quality of their teaching strategies regarding peer-mentoring, feedback and use of materials, and by their positive classroom learning environments based on teachers’ monitoring of students’ progress and teacher-student relations of care and trust. Our results point out the importance of the pedagogical work of the different educational actors inside the school. Educational programs carried out by local and national governments should pay more attention to the dynamics within the school to mitigate the educational inequalities, equalizing upwards the opportunities for children in impoverished public schools.

Keywords: Educación secundaria; Escuela secundaria; Logros académicos; Rendimiento escolar; Secondary education; Secondary school; Academic achievement; Perú; Peru (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: I21 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 96 pages
Date: 2021
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-dev, nep-edu, nep-isf and nep-ure
Note: Documentos de Investigación, 114
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:gad:doctra:dt114

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