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Stemming Learning Loss During the Pandemic: A Rapid Randomized Trial of a Low-Tech Intervention in Botswana

Noam Angrist, Peter Bergman, Caton Brewster and Moitshepi Matsheng

No 2020-13, CSAE Working Paper Series from Centre for the Study of African Economies, University of Oxford

Abstract: The COVID-19 pandemic has closed schools for over 1.6 billion children, with potentially long¬term consequences. This paper provides some of the first experimental evidence on strategies to minimize the fallout of the pandemic on education outcomes. We evaluate two low-technology interventions to substitute schooling during this period: SMS text messages and direct phone calls. We conduct a rapid trial in Botswana to inform real-time policy responses collecting data at four-to six-week intervals. We present results from the first wave. We find early evidence that both interventions result in cost-effective learning gains of 0.16 to 0.29 standard deviations. This trans¬lates to a reduction in innumeracy of up to 52 percent. We show these results broadly hold with a series of robustness tests that account for differential attrition. We find increased parental en¬gagement in their child’s education and more accurate parent perceptions of their child’s learning. In a second wave of the trial, we provide targeted instruction, customizing text messages to the child's learning level using data from the first wave. The low-tech interventions tested have im¬mediate policy relevance and could have long-run implications for the role of technology and parents as substitutes or complements to the traditional education system.

Date: 2020
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-exp and nep-ure
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