A natural experiment comparing the learning levels of children who attended early years of formal education with those who have had no chance of attending formal education. All children showed progress in learning despite they attended school or not. School matters for learning literacy and numeracy skills but showed more impact on children's social emotional wellbeing.
This study is the first chance to see children's readiness for, and the impact of, attending early years’ schooling. The added value from this research is generating an evidence base for policies to make informed recommendations for early childhood education. Collaborators from India and Pakistan are playing a very active role in informing regional education policy.
The project is an opportunity for us to investigate the importance and function of school in children’s lives in the two largest regions of Punjab, Pakistan and the State of Gujarat, India. AESAS is a comparative study of children’s learning outcomes at 3 to 6 years of age. We are assessing children in this study regardless of their school enrolment status (less than 50% attend formal schools), so that we can compare the learning levels of children who attended early years of formal education with those who have had no chance of attending formal education. This comparison will carefully match children based on their family socioeconomic status, family size, parental education, access to schools and regional characteristics. The analysis of these factors will give us an indication of differences among children and their learning patterns and how much early years of education can determine children’s readiness to attend formal school.
The project has been successfully launched in the State of Gujarat, India and the province of Punjab, Pakistan under most unfortunate and critical circumstance due to the Covid 19 crisis. Before the global pandemic hit these two regions, we were able to complete the preparatory work such as identification of regions for sampling, development of assessment tools, signing memorandum of understanding with partners, website development, ethics approval, and approval from the local government regions to conduct this activity. In addition, we completed a comprehensive pilot of the instruments in Gujarat and Punjab. We are in the process of conducting the work now using mobile technology.
Collaborators from India and Pakistan are playing a very active role in informing regional education policy.
Principal Investigator: Dr Nadia Siddiqui
Co-Investigators: Professor Stephen Gorard, Dr Beng Huat See, Professor Pauline Dixon, Dr Smruti Bulsari, Saba Saeed, Hamza Sarfaraz
Project Advisory: Professor Kiran Pandya, Baela Raza Jamil
Keynote speech by Ziauddin Yousafzai (Malala's Father and author of Let Her Fly: A Father's Journey)
The collaboration involves academics and practitioners from various countries and disciplines coming together and forming a research partnerships in the DAC-listed countries. This has allowed us to increase our research capacity networks and have a wider impact through involving research active teams that are actually doing the grass-roots level work in regions of economic deprivation and poor literacy. This will be relevant to users at all levels from policy-makers to families, and to settings beyond India and Pakistan.
Funded by GCRF British Academy Reference ECE190026 Collaborators: India, Pakistan
Several outputs have been produced from this project in the form of peer reviewed journals and conference papers