Reaching the poorestEnrolling the world’s poorest children in school needs new thinking, not just more money from taxpayers DAWN has just broken but classes have already started at the village school in Aqualaar, in the Garissa district of Kenya's arid north-east. Around 30 children, mostly from families of Somali herders, sit listening as an enthusiastic 18-year-old teacher, Ibrahim Hussein, give
Investing in brainsShould the economic squeeze mean cuts, reform or more spending on education? IN CALIFORNIA the students are revolting—not against their teachers, but in sympathy with them. The state's governor, Arnold Schwarzenegger, has cut $1 billion, some 20% of the University of California's budget, as he tries to balance the state's books. Fees may rise by a fifth, to over $10,000. Support
It still pays to studyNot the panacea it is billed as, but the best hope for this year’s school-leavers THE law of supply and demand tells you that increasing the quantity of something tends to reduce its price. But not, it seems, in higher education. That is the puzzle on display in “Education at a Glance”, the annual research compendium published by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
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