他们学到的东西:卢旺达发展型国家中的抱负、不确定性与学校教育

The Things They Learned: Aspiration, Uncertainty, and Schooling in Rwanda’s Developmental State

Journal of Development Studies · 2018
被引 20
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

结合政策分析与民族志田野调查,研究卢旺达基础教育政策如何在后冲突国家建设中既承诺包容性发展,又因质量低下使学生感到被排斥。

Abstract

The role of formal education in the reproduction of inequalities is well documented. Less clear is how this lens can be applied to a study of post-conflict state-building. The present study pairs policy analysis with student-centred ethnographic fieldwork to examine education policy in Rwanda. Since the end of the genocide, the government has staked its claim to legitimacy in delivering inclusive development. Its basic education policy is an entitlement programme with broad public support and designed to allow all children to attend primary and secondary school. Students found themselves caught up in a web of contradictions with important symbolic and material dimensions. They went to schools designed to improve access for the poor. But they were also poor schools, lacking in quality and associated with failure. The country’s switch from French to English was bound up in alliances of domestic power that further undermined effective teaching and learning. The basic education policy intended to highlight the government’s commitment to deliver development to all. But in absence of a sustained and effective strategy to improve quality, young people felt excluded from meaningful engagement in the education system. Whether the basic education policy constitutes inclusive development is therefore debatable.

卢旺达基础教育政策包容性发展教育不平等