坦桑尼亚西北部成人死亡与父母死亡对小学教育的影响

The Impact of Adult Mortality and Parental Deaths on Primary Schooling in North-Western Tanzania

Journal of Development Studies · 2004
被引 231
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

利用坦桑尼亚西北部面板数据,研究发现成人死亡和孤儿身份会延迟儿童入学,并减少在校时间,尤其对女孩影响更大。

Abstract

Mortality of parents and other adults due to the African AIDS epidemic could reduce children's primary schooling by reducing households' ability to pay fees, raising the opportunity cost of children's time, and leaving orphaned children with guardians who care less about their education than would their parents. This study measures the impact of adult deaths and orphan status on primary school attendance and hours spent at school using a panel household survey from north-western Tanzania, an area hard-hit by the AIDS epidemic. Attendance was delayed for maternal orphans and children in poor households with a recent adult death; there was no evidence that children 7-14 dropped out of primary school due to orphan status or adult deaths. However, among children already attending, school hours were significantly lower in the months prior to an adult death in the household and seemed to recover following the death. In addition, girls sharply reduced their hours in school immediately after losing a parent. Improvements in school quality and better access to secondary education would improve outcomes for all children, including those affected by adult AIDS mortality. Beyond that, public policy needs to focus on the special schooling constraints faced by children affected by adult deaths, both in terms of increased opportunity costs of their time and the psychological impacts, with an eye to how they might be mitigated and at what cost.

成人死亡率孤儿状态小学入学率坦桑尼亚