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A Characterization of the Private Segment of Kenya’s Educational Sector. Felipe Barrera-Osorio Ilyse Zable World Bank March 31, 2010. Public-Private Partnerships (PPP). Several governments around the world are adopting novel strategies to reach the Millennium Development Goals
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A Characterization of the Private Segment of Kenya’s Educational Sector Felipe Barrera-Osorio IlyseZable World Bank March 31, 2010
Public-Private Partnerships (PPP) • Several governments around the world are adopting novel strategies to reach the Millennium Development Goals • Governments are forming alliances with the private sector in primary education • Initiatives like PPPs require a dynamic private sector • The private sector is an important player in education • Private providers, by having a more flexible, are more effective in providing education • The separation of roles between the finance role—lead by the government—and the provision role—lead by the private—can increase efficiency • Contract can serve as a vehicle of quality assurance by introducing clauses of specific delivery of quality of education • A pragmatic view states that the government alone cannot archive universal education, and that the private sector is an important player de facto that can help, especially reaching low-income households
The objective of the study • This study presents a description of the private sector in education in Kenya • Presents new data that allows the characterization of private institutions in Kenya’s education sector • We make use of a survey collected for the impact evaluation of Kenya’s Private School Support Program (KPSSP) and a follow-up case study • KPSSP aims to provide local currency financing and advisory services to private K-12 institutions • On December 7, 2006, IFC signed a risk-sharing agreement with K-Rep Bank (K-Rep) of up to 120 million Kenyan shillings ($1.7 million equivalent) on loans extended to eligible private schools in Kenya.
Characteristics of the sample of schools • Baseline survey: • Information for 142 schools between September and November 2007 in Nyeri (19.2% of the sample); Nukuru (16.9%); Mombassa (24.6%), and Nairobi (39.2%) • The sample includes 798 teachers, and 8,863 students • 68% are primary, 28% secondary, and 4% both primary and secondary • Sample of schools was chosen from a list of private providers • Follow up case study: • Made between June and July 2009 • 35 schools from the original list • Schools that were able to get a loan through the program; schools that were in the process of applying; and schools that did not apply for the loan.
Schools’ average fees per term were around 18,800 KSH ($284) and 18,200 KSH (US$275) per term for primary and secondary
Active learning is the critical factor to induce gains in achievement. Copy from blackboard and “independent work” account for more than 50% of the time spend in the class.
30% of students reported math teacher missed at least one day of school in the past week (40% for English)
Sustainability of Schools • The sustainability of schools depends on the stream of students, which in turn, determines the flow of revenues • The majority of the demand for these schools comes from nearby households • Year of creation can be a strong indicator of the viability of the school • These schools are observing a huge demand • Liquidity constrains are binding for private schools • 80% of schools indicated that they would access a bank loan at prevailing interest rates if they could, to be used predominantly for physical expansion and, secondarily, purchasing computers and other educational materials. • Own savings and net revenues were the predominant options for financing non-recurrent expenditures
There is a positive relationship between number of students and year of creation
Schools have difficulties in collecting fees. More than 50% of schools were not able to collect an average of around 15% of fees by the end of the term
Own savings and net revenues were main • options for financing non-recurrent expenditures
Loan to be used predominantly for physical expansion and • purchasing computers and other educational materials
Administrative capacity • Schools reported employing 18 administrative staff • This number seems high given that the average school size is 140-160 students. • The majority of schools do not utilize computerized systems for accounting, payroll, tuition, and student and exam records • Critical decision-making is distributed across different people
Three main messages • The private education sector in Africa is growing fast, even more than the public counterpart • The quality of private schools diverges enormously • The private sector is reaching low-income populations, filling a vacuum that the government is leaving behind.
Some policy implications • The study presents a mixed view of private institutions in Kenya’s education sector. • They are schools with fairy high level of infrastructure, with young qualified teachers. • They are schools with an “adequate” and growing number of students enrolled from middle- to low-income populations. • However, they are schools that face serious administrative challenges (they do not have systematic book-keeping or audited financial statements) • These schools are hiring young teachers, with low experience and the minimum level of education required for the profession • Young teachers are open to new challenges • However, the schools are reaching very difficult populations: need experience teachers • The KPSSP is proposing the establishment of a Local School Development Provider, which can provide educational services for the private sector • If the government is interested in PPPs, and the private sector is reaching low-income households, there are reasons for public intervention. • If the private sector is sorely for-profit, reaching well-off populations, an institution that provides technical and administrative support for schools should be financed by private funds.