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Page 1: Improving Secondary Education

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Improving Secondary Education

Preparation for the Implementation of the 10th National Economic and

Social Development Plan

October 27, 2006Bangkok, Thailand

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• Overview• Access and Equity

• Quality• Efficiency

• Addressing Next Generation of Challenges

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Secondary Education: Potential Roles

• Bridging basic education, tertiary education and labor market

• A key tool for alleviating poverty in Thailand, bringing broader income equality and social equity

• Contributing to higher social returns (e.g. in health)• Contributing to non-market public benefits (e.g. voting

rates, association with crime)

Overview

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Overview

• 1999 NEA “Equal right to receive 12 years of basic education of

quality without charge”

– Major reforms in all aspects, especially • learning reform learner-centered, curriculum• teacher reform teacher training, professional

standardization• education quality assurance internal and external

quality monitoring mechanisms

• 1997 Constitution– Local administration organization participation in

provision of education

Historical Background

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Education Transition PatternsOverview

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Education Attainment

• Consistent gradual rise of average years of education attainment overtime

• For population ages 15-21, average years of education attainment is nearly 10 years, suggesting successful compulsory education

Table 2.1: Average Years of Educational Attainment, 1999-2003

Age 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 15 and over 7.1 7.2 7.4 7.6 7.8

15-21 9.4 9.5 9.6 9.7 9.8 15-59 7.7 7.8 7.7 7.8 7.9

60 and over 3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 3.9

Source: Office of Education Council 2004a

Access

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Education AttainmentFigure 2.A: Thailand Educational Attainment Profiles for Ages 16 to 19, 1994-2002

.2

.4

.6

.8

1P

ropo

rtion

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9Grade

1994 1996 19981999 2000 2002

All Thailand: 1994 to 2002

Source: Household Socio-Economic Survey 1994, 2002

• 95% of 16-19 population completed primary education and 80% completed secondary education in 2002

• In 1994, only 50% of 16-19 population had completed secondary education

• Repetition is slight (1-2%) and most dropout occurs between levels

Access

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Gender Equity

• Gender gap has grown larger, and to the benefit of girls

• In 1994, NER for girls was 63% and 61% for boys

• In 2002, NER for girls was 72% and 64% for boys

Figure 2.C: School Participation Rates, Gross Enrollment Rates and Net Enrollment Rates by Sex and Gains, 1994-2002

61 3

63 9

68 5

69 12

74 9

75 14

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90

Male-NER

Female-NER

Male-GER

Female-GER

Male-SPR

Female-SPR

1994 2002

Access

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Rural-Urban Equity

• Coverage expanded to rural areas.

• Urban-rural gap for grade completion has decreased from 25% in 1994 to 8% in 2002.

Figure 2.D: Grade Completion by Urban/Rural Location, 1994 and 2002

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.4

.6

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1

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9Grade

Urban

Rural

Urban/Rural: 1994

.2

.4

.6

.8

1

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9Grade

Urban

Rural

Urban/Rural: 2002

Source: Household Socio-Economic Survey 1994, 2002

Access

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GER: International ComparisonFigure 2.G: Trends in Secondary Gross Enrollment Rates across Asian Countries, 1980-2003

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

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90

1980 1990 1995 2000 2003

Year

Perc

enta

ge

Cambodia Indonesia Lao PDRMalaysia Myanmar NepalPhilippines Thailand Vietnam

Note: Data for Thailand and Philippines in 2000 are from World Development Indicators 2003

Source: World Development Indicators Database, World Bank 2006

Access

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Reaching out to the Excluded

• Limited information on out-of-school children• Migrants, children with disabilities and ethnic

minorities are under-represented in secondary education

• In 2004, 175,000 children with disabilities enrolled in pre-primary to upper secondary level (1.27% of population ages 3-17).

• Financial constraints are often identified as the main obstacle keeping students out of schools

Access

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Measuring Quality Comparatively…Figure 3.A: PISA 2003 Test Score Results in Mathematics by Income Group

Source: di Gropello 2006

Figure 3.B: PISA 2000 Test Score Results in Reading Literacy by Income Group

Source: di Gropello 2006

0

20

40

60

80

100

Lower Middle Upper Middle Upper OECD Avg

Perc

entag

e of

Stu

dent

s in

each

Pro

ficie

ncy

Lev

el

0

100

200

300

400

500

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Mea

n Sc

ore

Level 6 Level 5 Level 4 Level 3 Level 2 Level 1 Below Level 1 Mean

Bra

zil

Ind

ones

ia

Thai

land

Mex

ico

Uru

guay

Japa

n

Kor

ea

Hon

g K

ong

• Thailand trails significantly behind Japan, Hong Kong SAR and Korea on international assessments.

• Compared to other lower middle income countries, Thailand performs better than its peers both in terms of mean test scores and proficiency level distribution.

• However, very few Thai children score in top proficiency levels (e.g. 40% at or below PISA level one in literacy and over 50% in Mathematics)

Quality

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Factors Affecting Student Achievement

Teacher

• 87% of OBEC secondary school teachers earned a bachelor’s degree.

• Higher levels of teacher confidence associated with superior student scores (TIMSS 1999) … 55% of students taught by instructors who felt less than adequately prepared in math and 58% in science.

• Front-style lecture format. Limited opportunities to apply knowledge to new situations or exercise creative thinking during school days.

Quality

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Factors Affecting Student Achievement

School

• Class sizes in Asia tend to be large, but do not appear to have a negative impact on student test scores in Thailand.

• However, the relationship between class size and student achievement is difficult to extricate.

• Quality of school physical infrastructure rated around OECD country mean, but availability of educational resources is rated much lower (-0.82) and inequitably distributed.

• Less than 40% of students have access to a calculator.

Quality

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Factors Affecting Student Achievement

Household/ Individual

• The distribution of knowledge across income groups is fairly equitable.

• Socioeconomic status is not influential in shaping student aspirations for tertiary education.

• Higher income families willing to pay more for children’s education (Q5: 7,878 Bht vs Q1: 840 Bht per year)

Quality

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Public Spending on Education• 20% of total Government budget allocated to education (4% of

GDP)• Secondary education received 28% of total education budget

(1.13% of GDP)

Figure 4.A: Share of Education Budget by Spending Category, 1997-2004

Source: Ministry of Education

0% 5%

10% 15% 20% 25% 30%

35% 40% 45% 50%

1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004

Pre Primary and Primary Secondary Tertiary Services not defined by level Educational support Others

Efficiency

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Public Spending across Income QuintileEfficiency

Figure 4.C: Incidence of Public Expenditure across Income Quintiles by Education Level, 2002

3119

5

25

23

7

21

22

12

15

20

23

8 15

53

0%

20%

40%

60%

80%

100%

Pre & Primary Secondary TertiaryEducation Level

Perc

enta

ge

Q1 (poorest) Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5 (richest)

Source: Household Socio-Economic Survey 2002

• Pro-poor allocation of resources at primary level

• Quintile distribution for secondary education is relatively equitable

• Spending for tertiary education is clearly regressive

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Public Spending on Secondary Education

• Comparatively, Thailand under-spends in secondary education (1.13% of GDP):– OECD countries spend 2.1% of GDP– Lower middle income countries spend 1.86% of GDP

• Per student public spending on secondary education is 24% lower than for primary education– EAP: Unit cost for 2ry education was 74% greater than for 1ry

education– OECD: Unit cost for 2ry education was 39% greater than for 1ry

education

• Share of local government resources spent on education still low. Much reliance on central government

Efficiency

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Household Education Expenditure• Only 5% share of private resources in secondary

education.• Average household spending varies significantly across

regions and income quintiles.Table 4.3: Total Secondary Education Expenditure as % of GDP by Sources of Funding, 2003

Public Resources

Private Resources

(% of GDP)

(% of GDP)

Argentina Upper-middle 1.58 0.38 24%

Chile Upper-middle 1.49 0.7 47%

Colombia Lower-middle 1.53 1 65%

Hong Kong, SAR High 1.5 0.75 50%

Indonesia Lower-middle 0.48 0.28 58%

Mexico Upper-middle 1.52 0.4 26%

Philippines Lower-middle 0.69 0.58 84%

Korea High 1.83 0.6 32%

Thailand Lower-middle 1.13 0.06 5%

Source: UNESCO 2005

Income Level Share of Private

Resources in all Domestic Resources

Efficiency

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Raising Efficiency of Secondary Education Financing

• Does financing make a difference in schooling outcomes?– “The greater the socio-economic advantage, the greater the

advantage it has in terms of student performance” (OECD 2004)– Quality improvements are costlier at secondary level than at

primary level.• Need to assess inter-sectoral allocative efficiency and

benefit-incidence of public investments• Could there be savings from rationalizing student-teacher

ratio/school merging? delicate balance– Teachers/student and time spent at school analysis suggests

inefficiencies in teacher deployment– Lowering cost VS individualized attention to students– School location within a reasonable distance

Efficiency

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Increasing Access and Equity

• Improving data collection and analysis to better target the currently excluded.

• Alternative education service modalities can be strengthened. Greater flexibility in terms of learning sites, class schedule and curriculum.

• Financial disparities between provinces and income groups could be minimized through the use of a funding formula that factors in conditions and different needs across provinces and income groups.

Challenges

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Improving Quality• Enhancing pre-service and in-service teacher

development• Developing criteria and methods to upgrade teacher

standards and quality. Capacity building for both teachers and principals

• Further strengthening quality assurance mechanisms. Relevance and follow up need to be guaranteed

• Strengthening accountability of schools to communities as an incentive to improve educational quality

• Reinforcing step-by-step implementation plan for decentralization of education provision and management

Challenges

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Assuring Efficiency

• Explore reallocation of resources from other educational levels to secondary schooling

• Careful review of student-teacher ratio/class size• Encourage higher level of private spending on education

Challenges