We only use your email address to send you the newsletter and to see how many people are opening our emails. A full privacy policy can be viewed here. You can change your mind at any time and update your preferences or unsubscribe.

Students at Kokebe School in Addis Ababa. Photo: Alexandra Humme/GPE

Leave no adolescent behind: addressing inequities in educational attainment in rural Ethiopia

11.10.20 | Ethiopia

Education | Education and learning

Authors

Megan Devonald, Nicola Jones and Workneh Yadete

Despite progress made against Sustainable Development Goal 4 on inclusive and equitable education for all, most vulnerable young people still face significant barriers in realising educational opportunities in many low‐income countries, especially at secondary and post‐secondary levels.
This article, in line with the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda’s call to ‘leave no one behind’, explores the factors that shape the educational trajectories of at‐risk populations and contributes to evidence‐informed policy and programming to tackle school dropout in rural Ethiopia.
The paper draws on qualitative research on 150 adolescent boys and girls aged 10–19 years, along with their caregivers and service providers, in communities from three diverse regions: pastoralist Afar, highland Amhara, and lowland Oromia.
While there has been remarkable progress in increasing enrolment over the past two decades, intersecting barriers put vulnerable adolescents’ educational opportunities at risk. Adolescents from poor households, those with disabilities, and internally displaced, out‐of‐school, or working adolescents face a range of challenges at the household, community and system levels. These barriers are also shaped by gender norms that restrict adolescent boys’ and girls’ education pathways, often in contrasting ways.
A multi‐pronged approach is critical to promoting educational opportunities where no adolescent is left behind, including investments in i) school quality, including positive disciplinary approaches, competency‐based grade progression, WASH facilities and school feeding programmes; ii) the wider enabling environment, including social protection and subsidised safe transportation; iii) initiatives to tackle age‐ and gender‐based violence that discourages school attendance; and iv) tailored strategies to support the most vulnerable young people.
Suggested citation

Devonald, M, Jones, N. and Yadete W. (2020) ‘Leave no adolescent behind: addressing inequalities in educational attainment in rural Ethiopia’. Development Policy Review. (https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/dpr.12523)


Related publications

Toolkits and survey instruments
01.11.24
Adolescent girls’ and women’s economic and social empowerment in pastoralist Ethiopia: midline qualitative research instruments
Across GAGE capabilities
Ethiopia
Read more
01.11.24 | Across GAGE capabilities | Toolkits and survey instruments | Ethiopia
Adolescent girls’ and women’s economic and social empowerment in pastoralist Ethiopia: midline qualitative research instruments
Read more
Toolkits and survey instruments
01.11.24
Adolescent girls' and women's economic and soical empowerment in pastoralist Ethiopia: midline survey (2023/2024)
Economic empowerment
Ethiopia
Read more
01.11.24 | Economic empowerment | Toolkits and survey instruments | Ethiopia
Adolescent girls' and women's economic and soical empowerment in pastoralist Ethiopia: midline survey (2023/2024)
Read more
Journal articles
28.10.24
Coping mechanisms and “homemaking” in the face of environmental challenges: exploring the experiences of adolescent refugees in Jordan
Across GAGE capabilities
Jordan
Read more
28.10.24 | Across GAGE capabilities | Journal articles | Jordan
Coping mechanisms and “homemaking” in the face of environmental challenges: exploring the experiences of adolescent refugees in Jordan
Read more