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Autor/inn/enBrock, Colin; Cammish, Nadine
InstitutionDepartment for International Develpment, London (England).
TitelFactors Affecting Female Participation in Education in Seven Developing Countries. Second Edition. Education Research Paper.
[Report No.: DFID-Ser-9
Quelle(1997), (109 Seiten)
PDF als Volltext kostenfreie Datei Verfügbarkeit 
Spracheenglisch
Dokumenttypgedruckt; online; Monographie
ISBN0-861920-65-2
SchlagwörterAccess to Education; Adult Basic Education; Adult Students; Comparative Analysis; Cultural Influences; Developing Nations; Economic Factors; Education Majors; Educational Attitudes; Educational Legislation; Educational Trends; Elementary Secondary Education; Enrollment Influences; Foreign Countries; Geography; Health; Higher Education; Participation; Politics; Public Policy; Questionnaires; Religious Factors; Rural Areas; Rural Education; Sex Differences; Sex Role; Social Influences; Student Attitudes; Tables (Data); Trend Analysis; Womens Education
AbstractFactors affecting female participation in education in seven developing countries were examined through field visits to the following countries: Bangladesh, Cameroon, India, Jamaica, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, and Vanuatu. In each country, researchers interviewed key personnel, consulted local documentation, and conducted two empirical surveys designed to ascertain the views of gender and education held by primary school pupils and women training to become primary teachers. Nine groups of factors potentially affecting female participation in education were considered: geographical, sociocultural, health, economic, religious, legal, political/administrative, educational, and initiatives. Several factors, including residence in a rural area and the health effects of poverty and malnutrition, proved to affect female participation in education much more than male participation. The near-universal fundamental cultural bias in favor of males and economic factors proved to be the biggest obstacles to female participation in education in developing countries. Religious and legal factors had only indirect effects. Significant initiatives aiming to address aspects of the problem of female participation in education were noted in all seven countries; however, the political will to implement those initiatives policies was largely lacking. (Thirty-three tables/figures and the questionnaires are included. The Seychelles case study is presented as an appendix.) (MN)
AnmerkungenDepartment for International Development, Education Division, 94 Victoria Street, London SW1E 5JL, England, United Kingdom.
Erfasst vonERIC (Education Resources Information Center), Washington, DC
Update2004/1/01
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