Early investment in preschool and completion of secondary education in Ethiopia: lessons From Young Lives

Investments in early childhood education are believed to be critical in forming the foundation for life-long learning and providing children with the opportunity to reach their full potential. This is because early childhood is a crucial phase of growth and development, where early circumstances can...

全面介绍

书目详细资料
Main Authors: Woldehanna, T, Araya, M
格式: Working paper
出版: Young Lives 2017
_version_ 1826263299918921728
author Woldehanna, T
Araya, M
author_facet Woldehanna, T
Araya, M
author_sort Woldehanna, T
collection OXFORD
description Investments in early childhood education are believed to be critical in forming the foundation for life-long learning and providing children with the opportunity to reach their full potential. This is because early childhood is a crucial phase of growth and development, where early circumstances can influence outcomes across the entire course of an individual’s life. Despite the plethora of studies in high-income countries, little is known about the long-term contributions of early childhood investment in low-income countries. To the best of our knowledge, there is no longitudinal study in Ethiopia that has looked at the contribution of preschool education beyond primary school-aged children. The study that this working paper reports on aimed to fill this research gap by using longitudinal data from Young Lives in Ethiopia to look at the long-term estimates of early childhood education on successful completion of secondary education and the chance of transitioning to institutions of higher learning. As the data showed a huge divide in preschool access between urban and rural children, we used only the urban sample in our logit models. Findings indicate that urban preschool children are 25.7 per cent more likely to complete secondary education than their non-preschool counterparts at the proper age. The marginal returns are higher for those who attended preschool for two and three years than those who only attended for one year. In particular, those who attended for three years have a higher probability of transitioning to higher education at the age of 18.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T19:49:33Z
format Working paper
id oxford-uuid:237f59f8-faea-4e0c-b4d5-de5f4a961695
institution University of Oxford
last_indexed 2024-03-06T19:49:33Z
publishDate 2017
publisher Young Lives
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:237f59f8-faea-4e0c-b4d5-de5f4a9616952022-03-26T11:44:36ZEarly investment in preschool and completion of secondary education in Ethiopia: lessons From Young LivesWorking paperhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_8042uuid:237f59f8-faea-4e0c-b4d5-de5f4a961695Symplectic Elements at OxfordYoung Lives2017Woldehanna, TAraya, MInvestments in early childhood education are believed to be critical in forming the foundation for life-long learning and providing children with the opportunity to reach their full potential. This is because early childhood is a crucial phase of growth and development, where early circumstances can influence outcomes across the entire course of an individual’s life. Despite the plethora of studies in high-income countries, little is known about the long-term contributions of early childhood investment in low-income countries. To the best of our knowledge, there is no longitudinal study in Ethiopia that has looked at the contribution of preschool education beyond primary school-aged children. The study that this working paper reports on aimed to fill this research gap by using longitudinal data from Young Lives in Ethiopia to look at the long-term estimates of early childhood education on successful completion of secondary education and the chance of transitioning to institutions of higher learning. As the data showed a huge divide in preschool access between urban and rural children, we used only the urban sample in our logit models. Findings indicate that urban preschool children are 25.7 per cent more likely to complete secondary education than their non-preschool counterparts at the proper age. The marginal returns are higher for those who attended preschool for two and three years than those who only attended for one year. In particular, those who attended for three years have a higher probability of transitioning to higher education at the age of 18.
spellingShingle Woldehanna, T
Araya, M
Early investment in preschool and completion of secondary education in Ethiopia: lessons From Young Lives
title Early investment in preschool and completion of secondary education in Ethiopia: lessons From Young Lives
title_full Early investment in preschool and completion of secondary education in Ethiopia: lessons From Young Lives
title_fullStr Early investment in preschool and completion of secondary education in Ethiopia: lessons From Young Lives
title_full_unstemmed Early investment in preschool and completion of secondary education in Ethiopia: lessons From Young Lives
title_short Early investment in preschool and completion of secondary education in Ethiopia: lessons From Young Lives
title_sort early investment in preschool and completion of secondary education in ethiopia lessons from young lives
work_keys_str_mv AT woldehannat earlyinvestmentinpreschoolandcompletionofsecondaryeducationinethiopialessonsfromyounglives
AT arayam earlyinvestmentinpreschoolandcompletionofsecondaryeducationinethiopialessonsfromyounglives