TY - JOUR
T1 - Improving Primary Education in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
T2 - End-Line Results of a Cluster-Randomized Wait-List Controlled Trial of Learning in a Healing Classroom
AU - Torrente, Catalina
AU - Aber, John Lawrence
AU - Starkey, Leighann
AU - Johnston, Brian
AU - Shivshanker, Anjuli
AU - Weisenhorn, Nina
AU - Annan, Jeannie
AU - Seidman, Edward
AU - Wolf, Sharon
AU - Tubbs Dolan, Carly
N1 - Funding Information:
Data collection for this evaluation was funded by the United States Agency for International Development under cooperative agreement #623-A-10-00023 and the NoVo Foundation. Additional support for scientific analysis and write-up of data was provided to authors Aber, Tubbs, and Wolf by the New York University Abu Dhabi Research Institute and to Aber, Tubbs, Starkey, and Johnston by the U.K. Economic and Social Research Council. The authors wish to thank the schools (directors, teachers, children) and education officials in the DRC whose participation made this study possible.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2019, © 2019 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
PY - 2019/7/3
Y1 - 2019/7/3
N2 - We used a cluster-randomized, wait-list controlled trial to examine impacts of a school-based social-emotional learning intervention on Congolese students and teachers. Seventy-six school clusters in two groups (A and B) were randomized to treatment or control. The groups differed in geographic location, accessibility, exposure to violence, and external donor investment. We estimated causal impacts in Group A, tested whether those impacts were replicated in Group B, and conducted sensitivity analyses on the pooled sample. Pooled analyses had higher statistical power and were therefore more likely to represent the true average impacts of the program. Improvements in students’ perceptions of school predictability and in addition and subtraction, geometry, and reading performance were specific to Group B. Only the effect on addition and subtraction remained significant in the pooled analysis. Improvements in teachers’ sense of accomplishment were found in Group A and remained significant in the pooled analysis. We detected no impacts on other outcomes. School-based interventions embedding social-emotional learning principles into the academic curricula are a promising but not yet proven approach to improving children’s outcomes in low-income countries affected by war.
AB - We used a cluster-randomized, wait-list controlled trial to examine impacts of a school-based social-emotional learning intervention on Congolese students and teachers. Seventy-six school clusters in two groups (A and B) were randomized to treatment or control. The groups differed in geographic location, accessibility, exposure to violence, and external donor investment. We estimated causal impacts in Group A, tested whether those impacts were replicated in Group B, and conducted sensitivity analyses on the pooled sample. Pooled analyses had higher statistical power and were therefore more likely to represent the true average impacts of the program. Improvements in students’ perceptions of school predictability and in addition and subtraction, geometry, and reading performance were specific to Group B. Only the effect on addition and subtraction remained significant in the pooled analysis. Improvements in teachers’ sense of accomplishment were found in Group A and remained significant in the pooled analysis. We detected no impacts on other outcomes. School-based interventions embedding social-emotional learning principles into the academic curricula are a promising but not yet proven approach to improving children’s outcomes in low-income countries affected by war.
KW - Democratic Republic of Congo
KW - mathematics
KW - reading
KW - social-emotional well-being
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U2 - 10.1080/19345747.2018.1561963
DO - 10.1080/19345747.2018.1561963
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85065708292
SN - 1934-5747
VL - 12
SP - 413
EP - 447
JO - Journal of Research on Educational Effectiveness
JF - Journal of Research on Educational Effectiveness
IS - 3
ER -