Having
discovered that the BECE exam performance of girls was consistently worse than that
of boys, I asked people whether they knew that was the case, whether it was
unique to Bawku West (or the Upper East Region or the northern part or rural
parts of Ghana), and what the causes might be.
I’m not sure
whether people were already aware of the issue (you often don’t get a clear
answer to that sort of question here). What
I can say is that nobody expressed the least surprise.
I don’t
think anyone knew whether it is the case throughout the country, or unique to
Bawku West (or the north of Ghana or rural parts of Ghana). I was offered quite a range of reasons to
explain the phenomenon, including that girls’ attendance isn’t as good as boys;
that girls have a lot more household chores to do than boys (which impacts both
on their attendance at school and on their ability to do homework); that girls
have to work at the market with their mothers (another obstacle to attending school
and a drain on their energy and time); that families and society don’t perceive
girls’ education to be important so don’t encourage them to go to school or do
well there; that girls fritter away their free time watching romantic films on
TV; and teenage pregnancy. I didn’t
encounter too much overt “so what” or “why is that an issue”, though I think I
did detect a bit of an undercurrent of such thinking on occasion.
So I set out
to do a bit of investigating. The first
thing I looked at was attendance at school.
This was reasonably easy to look into because information is contained
in a “school report card” which is completed by all schools twice per year
(after Christmas and after the end of the summer term) – I had helped type the
data from some of these into the computer and I knew that the data for term 3
of 2012/13 and term 1 of 2013/14 were complete.
I had some doubts about the quality of the data – for example some head teachers
had filled in the forms giving the impression that their schools had enjoyed
perfect attendance levels; and others had written figures which claimed more
attendance than was actually possible if every pupil on the register attended
every day of the term – but at least there was some information to work
with!
I thought
the results were quite interesting - they are shown in the table below. These relate to the third term of 2012/13 (ie
April – July 2013).
Attendance Rates (Percentage), Term 3
of 2012/13
|
||||||||||||
|
KG 1
|
KG 2
|
P 1
|
P 2
|
P 3
|
P 4
|
P 5
|
P 6
|
JHS 1
|
JHS 2
|
JHS 3
|
All Classes
|
Girls
|
56.9%
|
61.7%
|
65.6%
|
65.7%
|
67.2%
|
70.4%
|
70.7%
|
77.6%
|
74.2%
|
71.4%
|
43.8%
|
65.9%
|
Boys
|
58.4%
|
65.2%
|
64.3%
|
63.5%
|
64.6%
|
68.3%
|
70.1%
|
73.4%
|
68.7%
|
73.0%
|
42.1%
|
64.9%
|
These data
do not show that girls’ attendance at school is any worse than boys’ – in fact,
although there isn’t much in it, girls’ attendance is slightly better overall,
and better for every year group except the two kindergarten years and the
second year in Junior High School.
It is true
that the levels of attendance revealed here are not particularly good. The overall rate is pulled down a couple of
percentage points by the JHS3 figures, which I think reflect the fact that this
is the exam term and these pupils don’t go to school in the second part of the
term (they go to Exam Centres when they actually have an exam). But even allowing for this, an average
attendance rate of around 70% would mean that children are absent on average
one and a half days every week. In my
book that amounts to a lot of missed opportunity and would be an obvious thing
to concentrate on if you wanted to improve academic results.
Because it
was easy to do this at the same time, I also looked at school enrolment
figures. The table below shows what I
found.
Enrolment, Term 3 of 2012/13
|
||||||||||||
|
KG1
|
KG 2
|
P 1
|
P 2
|
P 3
|
P 4
|
P 5
|
P 6
|
JHS 1
|
JHS 2
|
JHS 3
|
Total
|
Girls
|
2428
|
1888
|
2446
|
2217
|
2036
|
1915
|
1571
|
1373
|
1015
|
830
|
488
|
18207
|
Boys
|
2344
|
1801
|
2491
|
2197
|
2107
|
1873
|
1482
|
1356
|
1166
|
894
|
634
|
18345
|
% Girls
|
50.9%
|
51.2%
|
49.5%
|
50.2%
|
49.1%
|
50.6%
|
51.5%
|
50.3%
|
46.5%
|
48.1%
|
43.5%
|
49.8%
|
Previously I
had also found some census data – Ghana seems to do a population census every
ten years, though I could only find year 2000 figures. The context which the census figures provide
is that something over 3,000 children are born each year in the Bawku West
District, and that the birthrate is slowly increasing (as is the overall
population of the District). It was
slightly disturbing to find that these figures showed there were more female
children than male children at birth, but that the proportion of girls reduced quite
markedly (from slightly more than 50% at birth to 49.1% the age of 4 to 47.1%
at age 15 – 17). I’d asked about it at
the time and several people had irritated me by saying that, as everyone knows,
female children are weaker than males and succumb more to disease and the
like. Linking that knowledge with these
school attendance figures, I was encouraged that there were slightly more girls
than boys in school throughout the kindergarten and primary school years. At least during those years, it seems that if
anything a slightly greater percentage of girls go to school than boys.
Also
interesting, though worrying, was the way the numbers of pupils, both boys and
girls, fell each year. Only about a
quarter of the children who started out in kindergarten are still in school in
the final year of Junior High School. There
is a drop of varying size each year; the drops after P4 and P6 are noticeably
bigger. The drop after P6 is the first
time that significantly more girls than boys drop out, and the proportion of
girls drops again at JHS3, resulting in the under-representation of girls at
BECE which had started me looking at these figures. The greater wastage rate for girls is
certainly a worry, but it strikes me that the fact that so many pupils of both
genders progressively drop out of school might be a greater cause for concern.
It doesn’t
seem easy to draw any conclusions from these data, unfortunately, either about
why the numbers of girls in school drops in the early teenage years, or about
why those who don’t drop out perform less well than their male counterparts.
Meanwhile,
something has struck me about market days.
There is a market every three days in Zebilla (and also, and on the same
days, in the next large towns, Bolgatanga and Bawku). That means that there is a weekday market
five times every three weeks – ie on five days out of fifteen. If a pupil stayed away from school every
market day, his/her attendance rate would be 66%. Could it be mere coincidence that the male
and female attendance rates in term 3 of 2012/13 were 65.9% and 64.9%
respectively?
I decided to
investigate that question by taking a close look at the pupil attendance
registers at the Junior High School where Jane and I help out every Monday. This is (to give it its full title) the
Hamdaniya English/Arabic Junior High School.
It is on the edge of Zebilla, on the north side, on the same site as a
primary school (including kindergarten) of the same name. With 189 pupils, it isn’t a particularly
large school, though it is among the larger JHSs in Bawku West District (there
are 45, 11 of which only came into existence this year). As far as we can tell, it’s pretty typical of
Junior High Schools in this district.
There are equal numbers of girls and boys overall. There are 82 pupils in the first year, 69 in
the second and 38 in the third and final year – so the trend of reducing
numbers in the higher classes is clearly visible here.
The
head-teacher has split the JHS1 class into two streams, something that I think
he was able to do because he could borrow a classroom from the primary school,
and because there are four student teachers on site for the first two terms,
plus two “national service” teachers, which gives a bit of slack in teacher
resources. (Ghana operates a system of
national service, whereby people who have benefited from tertiary education
subsidized by the government have to do a year’s “national service” at the end
to repay the state. One hears very mixed
comments about the scheme – apparently many people find themselves doing
something that isn’t related in the slightest to the qualification they have
obtained, and there are stories about them doing very little work. However, the two individuals at Hamdaniya JHS
seem to work hard and are good members of the team.) Without the students and national service
personnel, the school would have 6 teachers; I’ve recently heard it stated that
the Government allocation for teachers in a one-stream JHS is 5, including the
teaching head-teacher – which, obviously, means that most teachers have to
teach more than one subject. With only
five teachers, I don’t think splitting the class would have been possible, so
the teachers would have been dealing with 82 pupils in the JHS1 class – quite a
thought (and I’m sure it happens elsewhere)!
So, I copied
down lots of figures from the class registers, typed them into Excel, and had
hours of fun calculating averages and creating pretty bar charts. The main things I found were:
·
In
every class, the girls’ attendance rate was slightly higher than the boys’;
·
On
market days, attendance rates were slightly higher than the average for the
whole term, and this was true for both boys and girls except for JHS3 boys –
but the differences were small (for JHS3 boys, the overall average was 88.9%,
with 87.8% on market days);
·
Attendance
rates were noticeably worse on Fridays – the average for the whole school was
80.4%, but 81.4% on market days and 75.8% on Fridays. The head teacher had said that attendance on
Fridays was poorer, and there is also the problem that lessons don’t continue
after midday on Fridays, because of Friday prayers. Once every three weeks, Friday is also market
day, and attendance rates on these days were lower than on other Fridays;
·
There
were 78 pupils in the school (ie 41.3% of all pupils) whose attendance rate was
90% or better, and 120 (63.5% of pupils) whose attendance rate was 80% or
better (including the ones with 90% or better).
·
In
the whole school there were only 8 pupils whose attendance was below 50%. Some of these had dropped out early in the
term but their names hadn’t been removed from the register; some had arrived
towards the end of the term and had good attendance records.
This final
point alerted me to another potential data problem. When head teachers are asked to provide
attendance data, they aren’t given any guidance about how to deal with
drop-outs and late arrivers, so I suspect that all are included as though they
should have been present for the whole term.
Obviously that will make the attendance statistics appear a bit worse
than they actually are.
So, here was
another interesting little piece of research, which seemed to scotch pretty
comprehensively the idea that girls’ poor attendance at school lay behind their
poorer academic performance. In the
process, perhaps it also exploded the idea that pupils staying away from school
on market days is part of the problem.
Then again, maybe not – the registers are only marked in the morning and
there is nothing to say that pupils don’t turn up at school, maybe stay for the
first few lessons, and then disappear off to the market around midday when
trading starts in earnest. It certainly
is the case that there are lots of children of all ages at the market; and it’s
also the case that many children, perhaps particularly older ones, are expected
to earn money to contribute to their own schooling (not to mention pocket money
for themselves). I asked the head
teacher about this. He confirmed that
the registers would not show if pupils were absenting themselves at some point
during the morning on market days, and he agreed that it would be interesting
to ask the teachers if they noticed it. I
don’t think a coherent answer to this question has emerged yet.
The data
from this school also made me think that the figures reported through the
School Report Card might give an unduly pessimistic picture, because of the
effect of pupils who drop-out shortly after the term has started, and those who
arrive later. The 80.4% average
attendance rate for the school was certainly good compared to the average of
65% reported via the SRC (admittedly for the previous terms and thus not
strictly comparable. I have since had
the chance to look at the average attendance rates for the District for the
first term of 2013/14. These were boys
73.33%, girls 74.54% - so actually quite a bit better than in the exam
term. It has also occurred to me that
term 3 includes the start of the rainy season, when a lot of work has to be
done in the fields and perhaps results in more absences from school).
I was,
though, conscious that one school is a pretty small sample. So I decided to repeat the exercise at
another local school. This time, for
base reasons of convenience, I picked the one closest to the office. This is a large primary school and we were
introduced to the head early in our placement and have run into him a few times
since and found him friendly. The only
disadvantage was that this was also an Islamic school (this time designated as
such – Hariya Islamic KG/Primary School – don’t ask me what the difference is
between an Islamic school and an English/Arabic school, I’m sure there will be
a sensible one). So the school might
once again have particular and unrepresentative problems on Fridays, which
would distort my data. About a third of
the population in this region are Muslims, so I would have to be careful about
drawing conclusions about Fridays based on two schools with Islamic
connections.
Hariya
Islamic KG/Primary School has 667 pupils on its register. There is one class for most year groups, but
two for Primary 4 and Primary 6. The two
smallest classes (KG2 and P1) each have 57 pupils, whilst the biggest (P3) has
87. There are 308 boys and 359 girls and
every year group except P1 and P5 has more girls than boys (P5 has one more boy
than girls). The registers were not kept
quite as neatly as in the JHS and as I copied down figures I spotted (and corrected)
some arithmetic and transcription errors.
The main
points to emerge from the Hariya data were:
·
Overall,
girls’ attendance is slightly better than boys (82.2% compared to 79.7%);
·
Market
day attendance is slightly better than average (82.8% compared to 81.0%);
·
Attendance
on Fridays is consistently worse (73.6%);
·
The
attendance rate is better in the Primary classes than in Kindergarten (84.2%
compared to 68.5%);
·
As
at Hamdaniya JHS, a significant proportion of the pupils are very good
attenders (over 40% attend more than 90% of the time – almost all of these are
in the Primary classes), but there is a larger proportion of pupils who attend
less regularly;
·
A
rather larger number of pupils dropped out shortly after the start of term –
particularly in the Kindergarten and Primary 1 classes, which contributed to
but did not entirely explain the poorer attendance rate in these classes.
My
conclusion – the data from this second school were entirely consistent with
those from the first school and showed the same broad patterns. Caution is still needed in drawing broad
conclusions from these data because of the small sample size, the fact that
both schools are located in Zebilla (so will not illustrate the particular
features of village schools, if they are different), and because both are
Islamic schools (and thus, for example likely to show distinct characteristics
on Fridays). Was I any closer to
understanding why the girls’ BECE results are poorer than the boys? To be honest, I wasn’t.
Before we
leave this subject, the eagle-eyed among you might have reacted to a statistic
revealed earlier. I said that the census
data showed that something over 3,000 children are born each year in Bawku West
District. If that is true, how is it
that there are over 4,000 pupils per year in the Kindergarten classes and in
Primary 1, 2 and 3?
There are,
no doubt, several components to the answer to this question. One undoubtedly is that there are children
from Burkina Faso who walk over the border to attend school in Ghana –
apparently because some would prefer to be educated in English than in
French. But the numbers are not large, I
think. The main component of the answer
hits you in the face when you walk into any class in any school in Bawku West
District. There appear to be pupils of a
very wide range of ages in all classes.
So, whilst undoubtedly some of the children in P1 and P2 are aged 6, 7
or 8 – which is the age for which government policy would indicate that these
classes are intended – there are also numerous children who are older, and some
of these are a lot older. In the Junior
High School, where policy would lead you to expect to find pupils aged 12 – 14,
there are in fact pretty few who are as young as that. Fifteen is a fairly typical age for a pupil
in JHS1, and it is not uncommon to find pupils aged 18, 19 and 20 still in the
Junior High School (and fully intending to continue their education in Senior
High School, which in theory they should have left by age 17-18!)
I haven’t
yet succeeded in getting hold of data which illuminate this issue a little
more, but I will continue to try.
Meanwhile, one conclusion that should be drawn is that the proportion of
children attending school is smaller than the figures would suggest. There are 32,700 children between the ages of
4 and 14 (inclusive) in Bawku West District – who are catered for by the basic
education system in which 35,872 children are enrolled (according to figures
sent from this office to the Ghana Education Service HQ in Accra within the last
few weeks). Given those figures, you
wouldn’t immediately think that there is a problem of children not attending
school. But if you come here and walk
around the towns and villages on any school day, you will see all those
children, and I promise you it is not just the odd one here and there. How many?
So far, I haven’t managed even a half-decent estimate from the official
figures that I can find, and I haven’t run into anyone who is putting much
effort into calculating it (or even collecting the data from which it could be
calculated). My wet finger in the air
tells me that it might be as many as half of all children – but I couldn’t
prove it.
Does it
matter? Well, it seems to be generally
accepted that access to education is a basic right of all children. But you couldn’t reasonably argue that these
children are being deprived of that right – they are simply exercising the right
not to take it up. Perhaps the question
is whether they are doing so in an informed way – my strong suspicion is that
they aren’t.