| Literature DB >> 33935296 |
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has seen an unprecedented shutdown of society. Among the various safety measures taken, much attention has been given to school closure as a non-pharmaceutical mitigation tool to curb the spread of the disease through ensuring "social" (physical) distancing. Nearly 1.725 billion children in over 95% of countries worldwide have been affected by school closures implemented in April 2020 as the virus continued to spread. In the field of education, policymakers' attention has been directed at keeping students on board through remote learning and addressing the immediate needs of schools upon reopening. The study presented in this article focuses on who remains absent after schools resume. Using publicly available survey data from the USAID Demographic Health Surveys Program and the UNICEF Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey from before and after the 2013-2016 Ebola pandemic in Guinea and Sierra Leone in West Africa, the author examined changes in school enrolment and dropout patterns, with targeted consideration given to traditionally marginalised groups. At the time, schools closed for between seven to nine months in the two countries; this length and intensity makes this Ebola pandemic the only health crisis in the recent past to come close to the pandemic-related school closures experienced in 2020. The author's findings suggest that post-Ebola, youth in the poorest households saw the largest increase in school dropout. Exceeding expected pre-Ebola dropout rates, an additional 17,400 of the poorest secondary-age youth were out of school. This evidence is important for minimising the likely post-COVID-19 expansion in inequality. The author's findings point to the need for sustainable planning that looks beyond the reopening of educational institutions to include comprehensive financial support packages for groups most likely to be affected.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Ebola; West Africa; differences-in-differences; dropout; health crisis; school closure
Year: 2021 PMID: 33935296 PMCID: PMC8074702 DOI: 10.1007/s11159-021-09900-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Rev Educ ISSN: 0020-8566
Basic differences-in-differences design
Fig. 1School enrolment patterns in Sierra Leone and Guinea by age group and country, pre- and post-Ebola pandemic
Change in dropout rate by age group: Sierra Leone
Change in dropout rate by age group: Guinea
Predicting dropout by age group in Sierra Leone and Guinea
Fig. 2Probability of dropping out for secondary-age youth from the poorest families by country, pre- and post-pandemic. Note: Probability estimates control for sex, orphan status and location
Differences-in-differences estimate of the impact of the Ebola pandemic on whether secondary-age youth from the poorest households would drop out of school
| Country | Pre-/post-pandemic | Affected by the pandemic? | Probability of poorest secondary-age youth dropout (standard error) | Between-group differences in probabilities | Differences-in-differences estimate (standard error) | Differences-in-differences p-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Guinea | Pre-pandemic | Yes | 0.060 (0.025) | 0.047 | 0.086 (0.044) | 0.026** |
| Guinea | Post-pandemic | Yes | 0.108 (0.024) | |||
| Côte d’Ivoire | Pre-pandemic | No | 0.095 (0.022) | –0.039 | ||
| Côte d’Ivoire | Post-pandemic | No | 0.056 (0.016) | 0.056 (0.032) | 0.038** | |
| Sierra Leone | Pre-pandemic | Yes | 0.046 (0.012) | 0.017 | ||
| Sierra Leone | Post-pandemic | Yes | 0.064 (0.012) |
Note: Linear probability model controlling for sex, location and orphan status. Côte-d’Ivoire used as control country for separate differences-in-differences estimates for Guinea and Sierra Leone. ** p<.05 + one-tailed test
Descriptive statistics for Sierra Leone and Guinea