Solutions To Learning Poverty

2019 Nobel Prize winning economist, Professor Michael Kremer and co-author's ground-breaking study into NewGlobe’s methodology in Kenya reveals learning gains among the largest ever measured in international education.

Overview

“This study shows that attending schools delivering highly standardized education has the potential to produce dramatic learning gains at scale, suggesting that policymakers may wish to explore the incorporation of standardization, including standardized lesson plans and teacher feedback and monitoring, in their own systems.”

Professor Kremer and his co-authors found that primary students, through Grade 8 in NewGlobe’s Kenya program gain almost an additional year of learning (0.89) under the NewGlobe integrated methodology, learning in two years what their peers learn in nearly three.

For early childhood development (ECD) students the gains were even bigger. Those students supported by NewGlobe gained almost an additional year and half of learning (1.48), learning in two years what students in other schools learn in three and a half years.

At a glance

Key Takeaway

NewGlobe’s methods increased learning by 1.35 standard deviations for Early Childhood Development students and 0.81 standard deviations for primary students, up through Grade 8.

To put these into context, these effect sizes far exceed the 99th percentile and represent learning gains in the top 1% among large, rigorous studies in emerging markets.

EdoBEST
Effect

EKOEXCEL
Effect

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