2010
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-8268.2009.00234.x
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African Education Challenges and Policy Responses: Evaluation of the Effectiveness of the African Development Bank's Assistance*

Abstract: From marginal access to school before 1960, African modern education systems expanded steadily during the 1960s and 1970s, prompted by high priority given to education. The 1980s experienced stagnation and decline due to a drastic decrease in education financing further to the balance of payment and budget deficits, and the ensuing structural adjustment programmes. Since 1990, there have been intensified efforts to reverse the trend through national and international efforts. The African education sector conti… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…There are divergent views regarding aid effectiveness on quality of life. Scholars such as Gakusi (2010), Dreher and Fuchs (2011), and Furuoka (2017) found a negative relationship. Generally, they think that aid donors assist poor and developing countries not because they want to engender growth in those economies but purely based on donors’ self‐interests.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…There are divergent views regarding aid effectiveness on quality of life. Scholars such as Gakusi (2010), Dreher and Fuchs (2011), and Furuoka (2017) found a negative relationship. Generally, they think that aid donors assist poor and developing countries not because they want to engender growth in those economies but purely based on donors’ self‐interests.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Dreher and Fuchs (2011, 2018) concluded that the aid donor's self‐political, social and economic interest is the motivation for giving out aid to needy countries but not for human development and economic growth purposes. According to Gakusi (2010) development assistance to SSA for education has not achieved its intended goal of excellence in schooling.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…No particular economy develops more than its educational system. The educational system in most developing nations mostly sub-Saharan Africa has educational expansion as its main goal thereby leaving off skill acquisition [18]. With the increasing number in the population, the existing educational institutions are seen not to be enough to cater for the growing population.…”
Section: A African Educational System Goalmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With the policy of expansion, public and private educational agencies have worked tremendously to increase the number of institutions and the number of students attending school but using the old curriculum that plays down on skills acquisition [19]. Insufficient technological experts are triggered by challenges of low and inequitable access to education, poor learning outcomes, inadequate political commitment, financing, and weak education system capacity [20]. Figure two indictate that respondents strongly disagree with the items in the questionnaire, which agrees with the work done by authors in [20] as the factors that determines the level of skills acquisition.…”
Section: B Insufficient Technological Expertisementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The first is symbolic based on the firm belief on the part of the founder leaders in universities as symbols of independent state hood or fruits of nationalism. The second is instrumental based on the belief that universities could be centres of human capital formation as well as hubs for the production and doctoral studies in sub-saharan africa 119 distribution of knowledge to eliminate poverty, ignorance and disease (Lulat 2005;AAU 2004;Sawyerr 2004;Gakusi 2010).…”
Section: Background and Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%