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Scaling up Successfully: Lessons from Kenya’s Tusome National Literacy Program

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dc.contributor.author Piper, Benjamin
dc.contributor.author Destefano, Joseph
dc.contributor.author Kinyanjui, Esther M.
dc.contributor.author Ong’ele, Salome
dc.date.accessioned 2020-06-18T06:23:51Z
dc.date.available 2020-06-18T06:23:51Z
dc.date.issued 2018-07-11
dc.identifier.citation Journal of Educational Change (2018) 19:293–321 en_US
dc.identifier.uri https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/s10833-018-9325-4.pdf
dc.identifier.uri http://kerd.ku.ac.ke/123456789/1086
dc.description An article in the Journal of Educational Change en_US
dc.description.abstract Many successful piloted programs fail when scaled up to a national level. In Kenya, this has a long history of particularly inefective implementation after successful pilot programs, the Tusome national literacy program—which receives funding from the United States Agency for International Development—is a national-level scale-up of previous literacy and numeracy programs. We applied a scaling framework (Crouch and DeStefano in Doing reform differently: combining rigor and practicality in implementation and evaluation of system reforms. International development group working paper no. 2017-01, RTI International, Research Triangle Park, NC, 2017. https://www.rti.org/publication/doing-reform-diferently-combining-rigor -and-practicality-implementation-and-evaluation) to examine whether Tusome’s implementation was rolled out in ways that would enable government structures and ofcers to respond efectively to the new program. We found that Tusome was able to clarify expectations for implementation and outcomes nationally using benchmarks for Kiswahili and English learning outcomes, and that these expectations were communicated all the way down to the school level. We noted that the essential program inputs were provided fairly consistently, across the nation. In addition, our analyses showed that Kenya developed functional, if simple, accountability and feedback mechanisms to track performance against benchmark expectations. We also established that the Tusome feedback data were utilized to encourage greater levels of instructional support within Kenya’s county level structures for education quality support. The results indicated that several of the key elements for successful scale-up were therefore put in place. However, we also discovered that Tusome failed to fully exploit the available classroom observational data to better target instructional support. In the context of this scaling framework, the Tusome literacy program’s external evaluation results showed program impacts of 0.6–1.0 standard deviations on English and Kiswahili learning outcomes. The program implemented a functional classroom observational feedback system through existing government systems, although usage of those systems varied widely across Kenya. Classroom visits, even if still falling short of the desired rate, were far more frequent, were focused on instructional quality, and included basic feedback and advice to teachers. These fndings are promising with respect to the ability of countries facing quality problems to implement a coherent instructional reform through government systems at scale. en_US
dc.description.sponsorship Tusome national literacy program—which receives funding from the United States Agency for International Development en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Springer en_US
dc.subject Literacy en_US
dc.subject Systems en_US
dc.subject National en_US
dc.subject Evaluation en_US
dc.subject Reading en_US
dc.subject Implementation en_US
dc.title Scaling up Successfully: Lessons from Kenya’s Tusome National Literacy Program en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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