Monitoring educational performance in the Caribbean

Most decades, averaging 4-5 percent of GDP, and considerable progress has been made in making access to primary education universal. However, despite this progress, there are still several deficiencies that need to be addressed related to insufficient coverage and inequitable access in secondary and...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Di Gropello, Emanuela
Corporate Author: Banco Mundial
Format: Book
Published: Washington, D.C. World Bank 2003
Series:World Bank working paper no. 6
Subjects:
Description
Summary:Most decades, averaging 4-5 percent of GDP, and considerable progress has been made in making access to primary education universal. However, despite this progress, there are still several deficiencies that need to be addressed related to insufficient coverage and inequitable access in secondary and post-secondary education as well as the overall low quality and internal efficiency of the education system. To be capable of effectively undertaking this global effort and to take specific policy actions, it is imperative to have precise knowledge of the deficiencies in question. Despite recent efforts and initiatives, the region ' s foremost shortfall remains the availability of comparable indicators that can be effectively used for policy-relevant diagnostics of the education sectors. The main objectives of this study are: (a) to define a set of operationally relevant education indicators; (b) to provide a database of comparable education indicators in Caribbean countries where data is available, namely Belize, Dominica, Dominican Republic, Grenada, Guyana, Jamaica, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines and Trinidad and Tobago and (c) to propose methods on how the common set of indicators can be used for analyses of the education sectors.
Physical Description:xiii, 96 p. : il.
Bibliography:Incluye bibliografía
ISBN:082135513-3
ISSN:1726-5878