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World Bank supports efforts to improve secondary education

June 23, 2007 00:00:00


The World Bank approved Friday a US$ 100 million credit from the International Development Association (IDA) to support the Government of Bangladesh's efforts to deepen and sustain reforms in the education sector.
An agreement in this connection will be signed today (Saturday) in Dhaka, according to a press release, reports BSS.
The Third Programmatic Education Sector Development Support Credit is designed to address systemic governance issues in order to make the best use of the resources in improving quality and enhancing access to secondary education.
Gross primary enrolment rates in Bangladesh are around 90 per cent, and the secondary enrolment rate has more than doubled to 57 per cent over the past two decades.
The country has already met the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) on gender parity in primary and secondary schooling. However, while access to secondary education has increased considerably, lack of systemic improvement to deal with the rapid expansion has caused quality to suffer.
Despite impressive progress, Bangladesh needs substantial improvement in providing quality education in order to achieve the MDGs and its Education for All targets, said Xian Zhu, World Bank country director for Bangladesh.
This programme supports reforms aimed at tackling governance problems in secondary education, enhancing quality of secondary school teachers and tying government support to the performance of the institutions.
"We hope this will also lead to greater access to secondary education for all children, especially the poor and marginalised who cannot afford the expenses of secondary schooling, Zhu said.
To improve governance and address other issues, the government has started implementing a substantive policy reform agenda in secondary education supported by this series of credits.
The programme particularly focuses on (i) increasing accountability and transparency in the use and allocation of resources with greater stakeholder participation and greater resource allocation for poorer and disadvantaged children; (ii) streamlining the teacher recruitment process to ensure the selection of best candidates as teachers free from all kinds of influences; and (iii) enhancing quality of textbooks through competitive production.
The government has successfully implemented the first two phases of the reforms. With regard to systemic improvement, it has linked financing of institutions to performance, leading to the suspension of subsidies to the worst performing institutions.
At the same time, the government has taken measures to help the institutions in the disadvantaged and remote areas to perform better so that the children from the disadvantaged communities, particularly the first generation learners, are not punished for the strict adherence to the performance criteria.
New schools are also being established in underserved and disadvantaged areas. The composition of school management committees has been reformulated to ensure greater community voices, particularly of women, in monitoring institutions' activities, the press release added.
Many of the systemic hindrances are being removed, said Subrata S Dhar, World Bank senior operations officer in education and the task leader for the programme.
For example, the government has established a Non-government Teachers' Registration and Certification Authority for secondary education which certifies, through a rigorous testing process, a pool of potential teachers from which the school management committees must recruit the teachers to receive the government support.
This precludes any possibility of recruiting unqualified teachers based on favouritism. Besides, the schools need better teachers to perform better in order to continue to receive support from the government. The basic principle of the whole reform programme is to institute stronger incentives for the institutions to perform better.
The first credit in this connection was approved by the World Bank on August 29, 2004 and the second on February 7, 2006. This third operation will help the government build on the previous two phases of its reform agenda, and move forward with the third set of reforms in order to deepen and consolidate the gains.
The credit from the IDA, the World Banks concessionary arm, has 40 years to maturity with a 10-year grace period; carries a service charge of 0.75 per cent.

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