Type | Report |
Title | Mid-Term Evaluation of the EFA Fast Track Initiative - Country Case Study: Mozambique |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2009 |
URL | http://mokoro.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/FTI_FullCCSMozambiqueEnglish_Feb2010x.pdf |
Abstract | Introduction S1 This is one of nine country studies being carried out as part of the mid-term evaluation of the Education for All (EFA) Fast Track Initiative (FTI). The FTI was launched in 2002 by a partnership of donors and recipient countries to "accelerate progress towards the core EFA goal of universal primary school completion (UPC), for boys and girls alike, by 2015". The FTI has now been running for half its expected lifetime. The FTI partnership has commissioned an independent evaluation to see whether it is achieving the goals it has set itself. S2 The evaluation is taking place between November 2008 and December 2009. A Preliminary Report was made available for the FTI Partnership Meetings in Copenhagen in April 2009, and the full draft report will be submitted in October 2009. A full explanation of the evaluation, its methodology and its timetable is provided in the Evaluation Framework, available from the study website at www.camb-ed.com/fasttrackinitiative. The Context for FTI in Mozambique S3 Since independence in 1975, Mozambique has faced various challenges in education. The initial challenges of an increasing demand for education, without the necessary capacity to respond to these demands, gave way to the need to continuously provide education during 16 years of war. Today, the challenges are of a different nature, particularly regarding quality of primary education and provision of education at secondary level. S4 A series of education plans have been developed, the first Education Sector Strategic Plan (ESSP) covered the period 1999–2005, while the second Strategic Plan for Education and Culture (PEEC) is from 2006–2010/11. The first plan focused on three key strategic areas which were a) access; b) quality; and c) capacity building. The second plan was more comprehensive, covering the entire education sector, although it prioritised primary education for all. It sought to address a) extending access to all school age children; b) providing educational opportunities for out of school youth and adults; and c) improving quality and relevance to ensure that increasing numbers of children have access to post-primary levels. Higher education and culture were also included in the second strategic plan as result of their merging with the Ministry of Education. S5 Between 1999 and 2005, the period of implementation of ESSP I, the primary gross school enrolment ratio has increased from 70% to 105%, with the primary grade one intake ratio increasing by 17% in 2005. This was due to the growing demand for education and was supported by the abolition of school fees by the government in 2005 and the introduction of a new curriculum with free textbooks and school supplies. Gender disparities have also fallen with girls’ access to the first grade of primary school increasing in relation to boys. S6 More children are also completing primary school and repetition rates are falling. There was a primary completion rate of 42% in 2006 which is a significant improvement over 1999 when it was 14%. Until 2004 the number of repeaters at primary level was 25%, which fell to 10% and 5% in 2005 and 2006 respectively. This was the result of a semi-automatic promotion policy in basic education which was introduced in 2004, within the framework of a new curriculum for primary education. |
» | Mozambique - Southern and Eastern Africa Consortium for Monitoring Educational Quality 2000 |