Maintaining Universal Primary Education: Lessons from Commonwealth Africa
Synopsis
Every country that has worked towards, and then attained, universal primary education has celebrated that achievement as a great step forward. Maintaining universal primary education, once achieved, offers new challenges, examined in this book. Lalage Bown and her co-researchers from the Council for Education in the Commonwealth explore the various economic, political and social pressures which may affect the progress of educational provision, as well as the different national educational policies and strategies themselves, as they play out in five very different Commonwealth African countries: Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, Tanzania and Zambia. The contributors’ findings will inform the decisions of both national and international education policy-makers working to ensure that universal primary education becomes, and remains, a reality across Africa.
Chapters
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Foreword
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List of abbreviations
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Introduction and acknowledgements
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Ghana – Towards FCUBE (Free and Compulsory Universal Basic Education)
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Kenya's three initiatives in UPE
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Regaining momentum towards UPE in Zambia
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UPE and UBE in a federal systemWhat happened in Nigeria
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Sustaining UPE against the odds in Tanzania
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Lessons for the future
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Appendix: Growth in GER
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Sources and references
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.