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research into the speed school curriculum and pedagogy in ethiopia research monograph 1 october 2016 contents acknowledgements 3 executive summary 3 introduction and background 4 organisation of the report 5 ...

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               RESEARCH INTO THE SPEED SCHOOL 
               CURRICULUM AND PEDAGOGY IN ETHIOPIA 
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                
                 Research Monograph 1 
                  
                 October 2016 
                                                                                                                                                                                                            
    Contents 
     Acknowledgements ....................................................................................................................................................... 3 
     Executive Summary ...................................................................................................................................................... 3 
     Introduction and background ......................................................................................................................................... 4 
     Organisation of the report .............................................................................................................................................. 5 
     Barriers to Educational Access for Out of School Children ............................................................................................ 5 
     Speed School Pedagogy (SSP) – Assumptions, Principles and Structure .................................................................... 5 
      Curriculum, Lesson Planning, and Goals .................................................................................................................. 6 
      Recruitment and training of facilitators ...................................................................................................................... 7 
      Methodology ............................................................................................................................................................. 9 
      Data analysis ............................................................................................................................................................ 9 
     School Contexts .......................................................................................................................................................... 10 
     Speed School teacher identity and the influence on practice ...................................................................................... 10 
     Characteristic features of the Speed School Pedagogy and Practice ......................................................................... 13 
     Classroom management ............................................................................................................................................. 14 
     Structure of lesson delivery ......................................................................................................................................... 14 
      Summarizing at start of lesson ................................................................................................................................ 14 
     Explaining .................................................................................................................................................................... 15 
     Teaching and learning materials ................................................................................................................................. 16 
     Questioning ................................................................................................................................................................. 17 
     Student talk and development of skills ........................................................................................................................ 18 
     Group Work: Practice of new content learned ............................................................................................................. 19 
     The nature and participation of social interaction ........................................................................................................ 20 
     Variations in how students participate and teachers’ responses to students’ difficulties ............................................. 20 
     Class work and teacher assessment ........................................................................................................................... 21 
     Assessment ................................................................................................................................................................. 22 
     What levels are students attaining in relation to the Minimum Level Competences? .................................................. 22 
     Discussion ................................................................................................................................................................... 22 
     Conclusions ................................................................................................................................................................. 23 
     Gaps that arise between the philosophy, documentation and practice ........................................................................ 24 
     Appendix 1  Observation template and interview guide ............................................................................................... 26 
    LESSON OBSERVATION TOOL ..................................................................................................................................... 28 
     
                 
         Acknowledgements 
         Thanks go to the Training Officers and facilitators in training who we observed for a day, but mostly to the four case study teachers 
         and their students involved in this research. 
         Executive Summary 
         An impact evaluation of the Speed School programme has demonstrated that Out of School Children (OOSC) who benefit from it are 
         able to demonstrate superior learning outcomes than a comparable group who have not gone through the programme (Akyeampong 
         et al., 2011). In this report, researchers from the Centre for International Education (CIE) University of Sussex, UK and their partners 
         from Hawassa University, Ethiopia have focused attention on understanding what it is about the pedagogy of the Speed School 
         programme that is responsible for the positive effects.  In reviewing the Speed School pedagogy, the researchers were also interested 
         in aspects of the curriculum and the organisation of the training for the facilitators (teachers) that might need improving to enhance 
         its impact.  Analysing how the pedagogy is practiced is a key part of understanding why the pedagogy works in the way it does, but 
         also identify gaps between the philosophy and aims, and the observed practice. 
          
         Research into the Speed School pedagogy covers a wide range of schools and teachers, and was completed in spring 2016. The 
         following research questions underpinned the review of the Speed School curriculum, pedagogy and practice: 
              •   What is the philosophy behind the Speed School curriculum and pedagogy? 
              •   How does the organisation of Speed Schools support this? 
              •   To what extent does the training of the facilitator support convergence with the curriculum and pedagogy? 
              •   How does the pedagogy work in practice? 
              •   What are the gaps that arise between the philosophy, documentation and practice? 
         The qualitative research took place in four different Speed Schools using videos of lessons, still photographs, researcher notes, and 
         interviews with teachers and students, all undertaken by researchers from the University of Hawassa, using interpreters where 
         necessary. Data analysis involving all six researchers focused on close analysis of pedagogic practice, drawing up individual case 
         studies and then accounting for differences between methods and approaches. 
          
         The review found that in the hands of motivated and creative teachers, the Speed School pedagogy succeeds in getting OOSC to 
         learn with enjoyment and demonstrate an aptitude for deep learning that traditional teaching approaches find more difficult to achieve. 
         The pedagogy can be characterized through three key aspects: 
         Activity-based learning through group work – all case study teachers placed emphasis on learning through group activity and 
         process skills and wherein pupils re-enact pedagogic content knowledge through multimodal means  
         Flexible lesson planning and delivery – there was also an emphasis on using a wide range of learning resources and activities 
         within and outside the classroom which kept lessons lively and engaging.   
         Reflexive student thinking and verbalisation of knowledge – all teachers encouraged individual or group student thinking, sharing 
         and verbalisation of understanding.  
          
         Training plays a big part in how this are achieved. The facilitator training goes beyond showing teachers what to do, but provides 
         them with the kind of learning experiences that they are expected to promote in their classrooms.  Thus, even in the hands of less 
         experienced and responsive teachers, the longer time spent in school learning the full curriculum of Primary 1, 2 and 3, albeit with a 
         narrower number of subjects, and flexible structure promoted in the teaching process means that pupils are able to engage with the 
         content through a variety of activities that always includes social interaction, so that learning is far more likely to take place.   
          
         However, gaps identified that, once acted on would ameliorate some of the differences found between the four case study teachers 
         were  the heavy demands made upon poorly paid teachers; differing teacher qualifications; poorer knowledge of Amharic and English 
         in some facilitators; varying training by the different IPs; geographical location and size of classrooms; lack of resources, particularly 
         supplementary readers; use of textbooks; varying use of questioning; need for differentiation of students. 
          
         This report was prepared by Professor Kwame Akyeampong (Principal Investigator), Prof John Pryor, Dr Jo Westbrook, Rahel 
         Abreham, Teketel Adane and Solomon Woldie. 
                                              
    Introduction and background 
     
    The Speed School programme is a temporary catch-up programme based on Ethiopia’s national primary school curriculum focusing 
    on Literacy and Numeracy skills of grades 1 to 3, and involving innovative ways of delivering this curriculum. It targets Out of School 
    Children (OOSC) between the ages of 9-14 who dropped out of school for economic reasons, loss of one or both parents, who never 
    attended schools, girls and older children. The graduates of the program are expected to pursue formal education in Link government 
    primary schools from grade 3 or 4, after passing a placement examination prepared in collaboration with the woreda (district) 
    education office. Speed Schools are set up by different Implementing Partners operating in a particular woreda over a period of two 
    to three years, closing down operations once all the OOSC have been identified and passed through the programme. Operating 
    since 2011/12 in the Southern Nations Nationalities and Peoples Region (SNNPR) some 3.7 million children have been through the 
    Speed School programme with 96% of them integrating into a local government primary school. As such, the curriculum and 
    pedagogy have to be regarded as successful. The research presented in this report explains this success.  
     
    However, real success has to be measured in the extent to which the Speed School graduates are able to learn effectively in the 
    Link Schools, stay on and complete their primary education.  In this regard, the report is the first of three research reports with a 
    second forthcoming report looking at the pedagogy taking place in the classrooms of the Link School teachers where the Speed 
    School graduates are. A third report looks at the possibility of pedagogy transfer between Speed Schools and Link Schools though 
    action research involving Link School teachers, strengthening learning for both the graduates and the existing students in mainstream 
    school.  
     
    This research also integral part of the three-pronged design that includes qualitative research on the nature and impact of mothers’ 
    Self-Help Groups and interviewed Speed School graduates on their experiences of mainstream Link Schools and which, together 
    with this research on Speed School training and pedagogy, underpins and informs the quantitative data. The longitudinal quantitative 
    data begun in 201/12 tracked the socioeconomic characteristics of children, school history, attitudes towards school, and academic 
    performance in literacy and numeracy during baseline and endline. A new round of data collection will focus on three specific long-
    term outcomes: (i) academic performance in literacy and numeracy; (ii) schooling trajectories from which we measure dropout rates, 
    repetition rates, and completion rates; (iii) attitudes towards education and learning in general.  The quantitative survey will take place 
    5 years after the Speed School intervention.  
                     
    The objective of the Speed School programme is to provide a short period of high-quality intensive remedial education to bridge 
    basic skills gaps for out of school children (OOSC) for reintegration into the mainstream education system and ultimately positive 
    educational and welfare outcomes. Through the provision of learning materials, supervision and facilitator training, the goal is to 
    ensure that a second-chance education for OOSC leads to successful completion of primary education. The programme recognises 
    the effect of poverty on the achievement of this goal, especially on educational aspiration, school attendance and completion, and 
    attempts to address this by including a ‘conditional’ micro-credit facility for mothers of Speed School children.  The goal is to 
    encourage attendance, reduce poverty and the opportunity cost associated with going to school. Many factors contribute to 
    educational outcomes, including teaching and teacher quality, classroom facilities, commitment of parents to children’s’ education 
    and their income levels.  
     
    A basic assumption is that Speed School children would have accrued sufficient educational capital from 10 months of accelerated 
    learning to successfully complete primary education at the standard required. This also means that the government schools which 
    OOSC after their Speed School education enroll will be able to sustain or add value to the learning accumulated.  If Speed Schools 
    provide enough ‘boost’ in terms of high learning outcomes, improve attitudes to learning, then as an accelerated learning model, it 
    ensures that OOSC can catch up and go on to successfully complete primary or lower secondary education.  
     
    Whilst an evaluation of the Speed School programme focused on how many children improve their learning, or even make the 
    transition into government schools, is important, what it does not reveal is how and why it is able to achieves its effect; what do we 
    know about who gains the most or the least from the programme and why? To answer this question, the research team decided to 
    study a small number of purposely selected cases of the programme in action and in great depth. Carefully designed, case studies 
    offer the deepest insights into a phenomenon allowing researchers to understand how and why things happen the way they do, and 
    in the case of Speed Schools, can help us to understand how it accelerates learning and improves learning outcomes.  
     
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...Research into the speed school curriculum and pedagogy in ethiopia monograph october contents acknowledgements executive summary introduction background organisation of report barriers to educational access for out children ssp assumptions principles structure lesson planning goals recruitment training facilitators methodology data analysis contexts teacher identity influence on practice characteristic features classroom management delivery summarizing at start explaining teaching learning materials questioning student talk development skills group work new content learned nature participation social interaction variations how students participate teachers responses difficulties class assessment what levels are attaining relation minimum level competences discussion conclusions gaps that arise between philosophy documentation appendix observation template interview guide tool thanks go officers who we observed a day but mostly four case study their involved this an impact evaluation pr...

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