Getting To Best Education Sector Plan 2017-2021. Liberia
Getting To Best Education Sector Plan 2017-2021. Liberia
Republic of Liberia
Full version
Acknowledgements ............................................................................................................. 12
President’s Foreword .......................................................................................................... 13
Minister’s Foreword ............................................................................................................. 14
Executive Summary ............................................................................................................ 15
Introduction ..................................................................................................................... 15
Recent achievements ...................................................................................................... 15
Challenges ...................................................................................................................... 16
Strategic response........................................................................................................... 19
Programs......................................................................................................................... 20
Development of the G2B-ESP ......................................................................................... 27
Chapter 1 Country context .................................................................................................. 28
1.1 Introduction ........................................................................................................... 28
1.2 Timeframe ............................................................................................................ 30
1.3 Political geography................................................................................................ 30
1.4 Demographic and social context ........................................................................... 31
1.5 Fragility and vulnerability....................................................................................... 32
1.5 Government finances ............................................................................................ 33
1.6 Development vision............................................................................................... 34
Chapter 2 Education sector context .................................................................................... 35
2.1 Structure ............................................................................................................... 35
2.2 Government and non-government schools ........................................................... 36
2.3 Governance .......................................................................................................... 37
2.4 Public education expenditure ................................................................................ 39
2.5 Priorities and plans ............................................................................................... 40
2.6 Achievements ....................................................................................................... 40
Chapter 3 Challenges ......................................................................................................... 44
3.1 Access .................................................................................................................. 44
3.2 Quality and relevance ........................................................................................... 47
Chapter 4 Strategic response.............................................................................................. 54
4.1 Theory of change .................................................................................................. 54
4.2 Evidence base and consultations .......................................................................... 57
4.3 Vision, goal, impact and strategies ........................................................................ 58
4.4 Program components............................................................................................ 62
4.5 High-level and program outcomes ........................................................................ 70
Chapter 5 School Quality Program ...................................................................................... 73
5.1 Summary .............................................................................................................. 73
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5.2 Introduction ........................................................................................................... 74
5.3 Legal and policy context ....................................................................................... 85
5.4 Achievements ....................................................................................................... 86
5.5 Challenges ............................................................................................................ 87
5.6 School Quality Program ........................................................................................ 89
Chapter 6 Education Management and Accountability Program .......................................... 92
6.1 Summary .............................................................................................................. 92
6.2 Introduction ........................................................................................................... 93
6.3 Achievements ....................................................................................................... 99
6.4 Challenges .......................................................................................................... 100
6.5 Education Management and Accountability Program .......................................... 105
Chapter 7 Early Childhood Education Program ................................................................. 112
7.1 Summary ............................................................................................................ 112
7.2 Introduction ......................................................................................................... 113
7.3 Policy and legal context ...................................................................................... 118
7.4 Achievements ..................................................................................................... 118
7.5 Challenges .......................................................................................................... 119
7.6 Early Childhood Education Program ................................................................... 120
Chapter 8 Overage and Out-of-School Program ............................................................... 124
8.1 Summary ............................................................................................................ 124
8.2 Introduction ......................................................................................................... 125
8.3 Legal and policy context ..................................................................................... 132
8.4 Achievements ..................................................................................................... 133
8.5 Challenges .......................................................................................................... 134
8.6 Overage & Out-of-School Program ..................................................................... 137
Chapter 9 Teacher Education & Management Program .................................................... 141
9.1 Summary ............................................................................................................ 141
9.2 Introduction ......................................................................................................... 142
9.3 Legal and policy context ..................................................................................... 147
9.4 Achievements ..................................................................................................... 148
9.5 Challenges .......................................................................................................... 149
9.6 Teacher Education & Management Program ...................................................... 152
Chapter 10 Curriculum & Assessment Program ................................................................ 156
10.1 Summary ............................................................................................................ 156
10.2 Introduction ......................................................................................................... 157
10.3 Legal and policy context ..................................................................................... 164
10.4 Achievements ..................................................................................................... 165
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10.5 Challenges .......................................................................................................... 165
10.6 Curriculum & Assessment Program .................................................................... 168
Chapter 11 Student Well-being Program ........................................................................... 170
11.1 Summary ............................................................................................................ 170
11.2 Introduction ......................................................................................................... 172
11.3 Legal and policy context ..................................................................................... 179
11.4 Achievements ..................................................................................................... 180
11.5 Challenges .......................................................................................................... 181
11.6 Student Well-being Program ............................................................................... 182
Chapter 12 Technical and Vocational Education and Training Program ............................ 187
12.1 Summary ............................................................................................................ 187
12.2 Introduction ......................................................................................................... 188
12.3 Legal and policy context ..................................................................................... 194
12.4 Achievements ..................................................................................................... 195
12.5 Challenges .......................................................................................................... 195
12.6 Technical and Vocational Education and Training Program ................................ 198
Chapter 13 Higher Education Program ............................................................................. 201
13.1 Summary ............................................................................................................ 201
13.2 Introduction ......................................................................................................... 202
13.3 Legal and policy context ..................................................................................... 207
13.4 Achievements ..................................................................................................... 208
13.5 Challenges .......................................................................................................... 208
13.6 Higher Education Program .................................................................................. 210
Chapter 14 Financing the G2B-ESP.................................................................................. 212
14.1 Introduction ......................................................................................................... 212
14.2 Budget projections .............................................................................................. 212
14.3 Projected efficiency gains ................................................................................... 215
14.4 Development partner contributions ..................................................................... 217
14.5 Other contributions to education sector activities ................................................ 219
14.6 G2B-ESP budget ................................................................................................ 219
Annex ............................................................................................................................... 234
Annex 1 Intermediate results framework ........................................................................ 234
Annex 2 Operational planning, monitoring and reporting process .................................. 254
Annex 3 Summary of teacher, principal and education officer professional development
...................................................................................................................................... 258
Annex 4 Summary of research trials and studies ........................................................... 261
Annex 5 Sustainable Development Goal 4 targets and indicators .................................. 265
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Annex 6 G2B-ESP risk matrix ........................................................................................ 272
Annex 7 Communication strategy .................................................................................. 276
Annex 8 Student and teacher projections ...................................................................... 279
References ....................................................................................................................... 291
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Table of Figures
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Table of Tables
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Table 9-1 Teacher workforce by sector and type of school, all schools, unadjusted for multi-
grade teachers ........................................................................................................... 142
Table 9-2 Teacher workforce by gender and level of school, all schools ........................... 143
Table 9-3 Number and share of qualified teachers by level, all schools, 2015 ................... 144
Table 9-4 Unit cost for teacher training ............................................................................. 146
Table 10-1 Percentage of primary and high schools using the national curriculum, 2015 .. 157
Table 10-2 Percentage of SH schools using the WAEC syllabus, 2015 ............................ 157
Table 10-3 National curriculum & WAEC curriculum, by grade, subject and date revised . 158
Table 10-4 Student/textbook ratio in primary and secondary schools, Language Arts and
Mathematics, 2015..................................................................................................... 161
Table 11-1 Teacher workforce by gender and level of school, public schools, 2015 .......... 175
Table 12-1 Enrollment in TVET institutions by provider, 2015 ........................................... 190
Table 12-2 Enrollment in TVET institutions by area of specialization, 2015 ....................... 191
Table 13-1 Student enrollment by major, 2009/10 to 2011/12. .......................................... 203
Table 13-2 Student-Faculty Ratio, higher education institutions with more than 500 students,
2012........................................................................................................................... 204
Table 14-1 Education expenditure actual and projections, 2012/13-2019/21, USD ........... 213
Table 14-2 Education sub-sector projections, 2016/17-2020/21 USD ............................... 213
Table 14-3 Ministry of Education budget projections by expenditure type excluding higher
education and Monrovia Consolidated School System, 2016/17-2019/20, USD ......... 214
Table 14-4 Development expenditure projection, 2016-2021, USD ................................... 215
Table 14-5 Annual efficiency saving projections redirected to G2B-ESP priorities, USD ... 216
Table 14-6 Estimated MoE contribution to G2B-ESP activities, 2017-2021, USD.............. 217
Table 14-7 Selected education sector development partners and donors ......................... 217
Table 14-8 Financial projections of G2B-ESP MoE contribution ........................................ 220
Table 14-9 G2B-ESP program budget, USD ..................................................................... 221
Table 14-10 Funding gap after MoE and partner program commitments ........................... 223
Table 14-11 G2B-ESP budget per component, USD ......................................................... 224
Table 0-1 Intermediate results framework ......................................................................... 234
Table 0-2 Annual operational planning and reporting cycle (proposed) ............................. 255
Table 0-3 Timetable for Year 1 Operational Plan development ......................................... 255
Table 0-4 SDG4-Education 2030 Indicators and Intended Reporting ................................ 266
Table 0-5 Selected major communications activities ......................................................... 276
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Abbreviations
AE Alternative Education
9
IMTTF Inter-Ministerial TVET Taskforce
10
UNFPA United Nations Population Fund
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Acknowledgements
We are grateful to the Minister of Education, Hon. George Kronnisanyon Werner, Deputy
Ministers and Assistant Ministers, Directors, Supervisors, County and District Education
Officers, and all Ministry staff for their cooperation and contributions made to enable the
team design and develop this plan. We give our thanks to our colleagues at the Ministry of
Finance and Development Planning, National Commission for Higher Education, Civil
Service Agency, Ministry of Youth and Sports and other Ministries for their support.
Special thanks go to our domestic and international development partners: UNICEF, Global
Partnership for Education, USAID, OSF, European Union, World Bank, World Food
Program, Mary’s Meals, UNESCO, UNFPA, Vitol Foundation, Big Win Philanthropy, Mulago
Foundation, Jasmin Foundation, Ark, and the many non-governmental organization partners
who contributed ideas and insights through the Education Sector Development Committee
and NGO Forum. We acknowledge the contribution of the National Commission for Higher
Education and West African Examinations Council. We also thank our partner faith-based
and private school operators who provide education to many of our children and young
people and to our teachers through the National Teachers’ Association of Liberia.
The development of the plan was funded through a sector plan preparation grant from the
Global Partnership for Education with technical advice from the World Bank. Development of
the G2B-ESP was led by civil servants from the Department of Planning, Research and
Development.
Gbovadeh Gbilia
Deputy Minister for Planning, Research and Development
Chair of the Education Sector Development Committee
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President’s Foreword
Our children and young people are the future we want for Liberia. Their education is the
responsibility of all of us: parents, grandparents, communities and the Government.
We work towards a vision for education in Liberia where every child can go to school, where
there is a quality teacher in every classroom, and where children achieve a good standard of
learning. We have a vision of education for young people where they can access relevant
quality education and training which improves their skills for livelihoods and work. We have
this vision because education is the foundation of development.
Despite the many challenges we face, Liberia has made progress in improving education as
we work towards the goal of education for all. In 2011, through the Education Reform Act,
we enshrined compulsory free basic education (up to Grade 9). The national teacher
verification exercise is removing the ghost teachers who have diverted resources from our
children’s education. We have led the world in innovations in improving early grade literacy
and experimenting with partnership schools. Our education system has recovered from the
scourge of the Ebola epidemic.
The new Getting to Best Education Sector Plan 2017-2021 continues these reforms,
progress and innovation, delivering on the priorities identified by education stakeholders in
consultations through the Joint Education Sector Review and Education Round Table. It will
help us move towards the goals of the Agenda for Transformation and Sustainable
Development Goal 4 to ‘ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote
lifelong learning opportunities for all.’ With this plan, we take steps to gradually removing
fees for early childhood, begin to regularly inspect schools, train thousands of teachers and
develop a new national curriculum for the 21st century.
I wish to thank the Ministry of Education, Ministry of Youth and Sport, Ministry of Finance
and Development Planning, Civil Service Agency and the many education officers, teachers
and educators who contributed to the G2B-ESP. I acknowledge the support of our many
development partners and local and international non-government organizations who
continue to support education in Liberia. I also thank the many faith-based partners and
private schools who provide education for our children. Truly, it takes a country to educate a
child.
The Government of Liberia is committed to the funding and delivery of the G2B-ESP and
approves the plan for implementation.
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Minister’s Foreword
The Getting to Best Education Sector Plan 2017-21 is the culmination of 14 months of
analysis, consultation and planning. It builds on the achievements and lessons of the last
decade and the vision of our teachers, principals and education officers.
Since we started work on the Getting to Best agenda we have removed many ghost
teachers from the payroll, started the Partnership Schools for Liberia, conducted the most
successful annual school census, and provided school improvement grants to over 2,500
schools. In the last few years, with the help of our development partners, we have built new
schools and hundreds of toilets and water systems. We have provided 340,000 reading
books and over a million textbooks. The B certificate teacher training program has restarted.
We have restructured and downsized the Ministry and recruited new District Education
Officers. Every day over 400,000 children are fed.
But we face many challenges: limited resources, many schools still without decent water or
toilets, many teachers without certificates, principals who need training, a TVET sector which
doesn’t prepare students for livelihoods and work, and large numbers of children who are too
old for their grade or who drop out or never attend school. Despite our efforts, learning
outcomes are poor.
The G2B-ESP will drive reforms right down to the school level as we try to tackle these many
problems. What changes will you see in schools?
Gradually, ECE fees will be reduced to ensure all children can attend kindergarten
More trained teachers: 1,000 new C certificate graduates, 2,500 in-service
Accelerated C teachers, 600 new B certificate teachers, 3,000 C ECE teachers and a
clean, strong payroll
Every school receiving at least one inspection visit per year
New national curriculum syllabi for English and Math and national assessments for
Grade 3 and 6
Construction of hundreds of new toilets and water systems
Special programs for overage and out-of-school children to get every child in school
New national certificate for Agriculture and strengthening our TVET institutions and
trainers
Improved quality assurance in higher education with stronger connections to
international universities
The Government will invest more in ECE and primary education, cutting inequitable
subsidies and redirecting resources to the foundation grades of education. We will invest in
teachers and the systems needed to monitor the performance of the education system. We
will invest in the most disadvantaged areas first, and the most vulnerable children first.
We cannot make this journey alone. Our development partners have been closely involved
in the development of the plan: their resources will be added to ours. I thank them for their
commitment and support. I call on every education officer, every teacher, every principal,
every parent and every student to do their part in implementing the G2B-ESP.
As per my authority under the Education Reform Act (2011), I approve this plan for
implementation in all schools from July 1st 2017.
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Executive Summary
Introduction
Liberia’s future depends on improving the quality and equity of our education system: to
educate, inspire, train and develop our children and young people to continue the rebuilding
of our country. We will invest in our teachers, schools and institutions to increase access to
education and improve the quality of teaching and learning.
The Ministry of Education (MoE) has developed a four-year education sector plan (ESP) to
address the most urgent challenges facing the education sector in Liberia: Getting to Best
Education Sector Plan (G2B-ESP). The MoE will use the G2B-ESP to implement a series
of strategic, evidence-based, and innovative programs to measurably improve the quality
and relevance of teaching and learning for all students by June 2021.
The G2B-ESP is based on the priorities identified in the Getting to Best Roadmap and
Priorities 2015-2017 (2015), uses the latest data available, and builds on the achievements
and learning from the previous Education Sector Plan 2010-2020. It includes on-going or
planned activities which align with the Getting to Best priorities and implements the national
development priorities in the Agenda for Transformation (2015-2017) and Liberia Rising:
Vision 2030.
Recent achievements
The MoE and its partners have launched a series of new laws, policies, programs and pilots
to improve education access and quality in the last five years.
In 2011, a new education law strengthened the right to quality education, restructured
the MoE, introduced country school systems and set up the National Education
Advisory Board to improve accountability and decision making.
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Literacy and numeracy training and resources for primary teachers
Between 2010 and 2015, over 11,000 early grade teachers were trained through pre-
service, in-service and coaching modalities in early grade literacy and numeracy to
improve the teaching of foundation skills. Teaching resources, such as scripted
lessons and decodable readers, were included in the training packages. In addition,
1.4 million textbooks were distributed for G1-9 students.
Provision of annual school grants to primary schools
From 2011, all primary schools received an annual grant to support improvements in
teaching and learning by replacing school fees.
‘B’ certificate teacher training program to increase supply of secondary
teachers
To address the shortage of trained junior secondary teachers, MoE has established a
‘B’ certificate in-service teacher training program. Secondary student enrolment has
continued to increase.
Partnership Schools for Liberia (PSL) intervention to trial innovations to
improve basic education
MoE has entered into public-private partnerships with non-government organizations
and providers to manage 94 Government ECE and primary schools (approximately
25,000 students) for three years from the 2016/17 academic year. An evaluation of
the PSL is expected to identify lessons which can be shared across the education
sector.
Development of the National Policy for Technical and Vocational Education
and Training (TVET) to improve coordination and strategic direction
The President established an Inter-Ministerial TVET Taskforce (IMTTF) to drive
improvement in the TVET sector in 2014. The IMTTF has completed the national
policy and identified key priorities for action.
Challenges
The education sector faces a complex series of interrelated challenges, mostly related to the
rebuilding and recovery from civil war, constrained national finances, poor infrastructure and,
more recently, the Ebola epidemic. There is an increasing demand for education at all levels,
particularly for quality livelihoods education for young women and men.
Learning outcomes remain below MoE expectations. Pass rates among students
taking the West African Examination Certificate (WAEC) Grade 9 and Grade 12
examinations in 2014 were 60% and 47% respectively, representing declines from
previous years. In addition, the reading levels of students in early primary grades are
16
below MoE benchmarks. A literacy assessment conducted in 2014 found that Grade 3
students’ oral reading fluency in English was below 20 correct words per minute, which
is significantly lower than the MoE benchmark of 45 correct words. 1 The quality of
teaching and learning in all education sectors are a major concern.
Overage enrolment is a critical issue affecting access to quality education in
ECE classes and all primary and secondary grades. Over 74% of ECE students,
82% of primary students and 85% of secondary school students are over-aged for their
grade (EMIS 2015). Each grade enrolls a wide-age range of students. For example,
there are more 10, 11 and 12 years old students enrolled in Grade 2 than seven-year
olds, which is the correct age group for this grade. Overage enrolment exacerbates
drop-out rates, which in turn increases the need for alternative education programming
(UNICEF 2012).
There are large numbers of out-of-school children and children who do not
attend school regularly. The main reasons for children not accessing basic education
are: (i) school fees and expenses; (ii) unofficial grade entrance examinations; (iii)
distance to school; and, (iv) poverty and rural status. Most children with disabilities do
not attend school. School fees and indirect costs as the major barrier to access and
cause of students dropping out.
Girls and women are underrepresented at all educational levels and in the
teaching force. Just 26% of teachers are female. In addition, several recent studies
have found high prevalence of sexual and gender-based violence in Liberian schools.
“Ghost” teachers and unskilled teachers are wasting scarce government
resources, undermining MoE efforts to improve quality and negatively affecting
staff morale and public trust in the teaching profession. Based on the on-going
teacher verification exercise, the MoE estimates there may be around 2,250 ghost
teachers on the payroll, as well as a large number of teachers with fake qualifications.
A related problem is the number of teachers who are overpaid and underpaid due to a
range of teacher management-related problems.2
While the MoE is employing more qualified teachers than ever before, many
teachers are unqualified. 50% of ECE staff and only 62% of primary school teachers
are qualified, and less than 34% of junior and senior high school teachers hold
1 Hobbs, J. and Davidson, M. (2015). Expanding EGRA: The Early Grade Literacy Assessment and its
contribution to language instruction in Liberia. Presentation at UKFIET 2015. WAEC Presentation. Joint
Education Sector Review 2015.
2 Campbell, D. (2015). Teacher Verification Report: Montserrado, Bong, and Nimba counties. MoE/LTTP.
17
minimum qualifications for their positions (EMIS 2015). In addition, Continuous
Professional Development is irregular or non-existent in many areas.
There are no national school quality standards in place for basic education
schools in Liberia. This makes it difficult for country and district education officers,
parents and community leaders to demand accountability from school principals and
teachers.
Capacity and resourcing at county and district levels requires significant
improvement, especially in enabling sub-national officers to monitor education
quality. A high turnover of staff, a lack of professional training, guidance and tools,
and insufficient resourcing are collectively undermining the effectiveness of County
and District education offices – leaving schools, principals and teachers unsupported
and unaccountable.3
There are serious equity challenges facing the education sector in Liberia. There
are major inequalities in education access, participation and learning outcomes by
gender, urban-rural status, county of residence and household socio-economic status.
In addition, disparities in the public resourcing of education and training is evident in
major differences in key indicators by county and urban-rural status, such as pupil-
qualified teacher ratio and student-classroom ratios. Education expenditure at the
primary level, and the share of the national budget allocated to education, is low
compared with international benchmarks.
3 Ministry of Education (MoE) (2016). Ministry of Education Annual Report 2015. Monrovia: MoE USAID.
(2013).MID-TERM ASSESSMENT OF THE LIBERIA TEACHER TRAINING PROGRAM PHASE II. European
Union. (2014). Ex-Post Evaluation of the EC support to Education in Liberia (ECSEL).
18
Strategic response
Following a comprehensive analysis of both high-level and sub-sector challenges, the MoE
has identified interlinked strategies that will be implemented over the next four years (Table
0-1).
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Programs
The MoE will prioritize and focus all available human and financial resources on the
successful implementation of nine programs over the next four years to achieve strategic
change. Each program consists of a number of components and activities whose delivery is
the responsibility of specific MoE senior officers (Table 0-2).
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G2B-ESP Program and Lead officer(s) Supporting
component officer(s)
Resources
21
G2B-ESP Program and Lead officer(s) Supporting
component officer(s)
22
G2B-ESP Program and Lead officer(s) Supporting
component officer(s)
23
G2B-ESP Program and Lead officer(s) Supporting
component officer(s)
Strategy 6 Ensure that teachers have access to quality instructional materials and
assessment tasks
Strategy 7 Mainstream gender and school health across the education sector
24
G2B-ESP Program and Lead officer(s) Supporting
component officer(s)
and Demographics
Director,
Communications
Strategy 8 Improve the quality and relevance of technical and vocational education
and training
25
G2B-ESP Program and Lead officer(s) Supporting
component officer(s)
for Teacher
Education
Director,
Alternative Basic
Education
As the challenges faced by the education sector are complex, interrelated and persistent,
many program components are interrelated:
Inequalities at the school level are addressed, for example, by targeting resources
such as school grants, building infrastructure, funding school supervision and
inspection, piloting strategies to improve teacher deployment and ensuring teacher
26
training is mostly at the district level. All major activities are targeted on the most
disadvantaged areas and populations.
12. Education management information system (EMIS) data from 2014 and 2015
14. In-depth consultations with the Minister of Education, Deputy Ministers, Assistant
Ministers, senior MoE officers and advisers
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Chapter 1 Country context
1.1 Introduction
The Ministry of Education (MoE) has developed a four-year strategic plan called the Getting
to Best Education Sector Plan (G2B-ESP) to directly address the most urgent challenges
currently facing the education sector and to deliver measurable results for all Liberian
students.
The MoE intends to use the G2B-ESP to implement a series of evidence-based, aligned and
innovative education sector reforms that have the potential to realize dramatic improvements
in the quality of teaching and learning in schools across the country. The G2B-ESP is a
catalyst for change that will mobilize, unite and coordinate education sector stakeholders:
MoE staff, teachers, principals, students, parents, community leaders, faith-based and
private education partners, civil society organizations and development partners.
Since the official end of the Ebola crisis, the Minister of Education has led a rapid and
comprehensive education sector review followed by identification of reform priorities. Key
achievements from this review include publication of documents that provide the strong
evidence base for the G2B-ESP, namely: (i) Getting to Best Priorities 2015-2017; (ii) Getting
to Best (G2B) Roadmap (2015); and, (iii) Education Sector Analysis (ESA) Report (2016).
Development of the G2B-ESP will enable the MoE to build on the previous long-term
Education Sector Plan (ESP) for the period 2010-2020. The G2B-ESP replaces the 2010-
2020 ESP. The G2B-ESP will enable the MoE to take into account key policy, legal and
contextual changes impacting the sector, such as the Education Reform Act 2011, the
establishment of county school system, the re-organization of the MoE and recent reform
successes, such as cleaning the teacher payroll.
A four-year planning period for the G2B-ESP is more realistic in light of Liberia’s social,
economic and political vulnerabilities. Specifically, the Government of Liberia (GoL) faces a
highly uncertain macroeconomic and budgetary environment due to the lingering effects of
the Ebola epidemic and a downturn in global commodity prices. Furthermore, the population
remains vulnerable to food insecurity, which could be exacerbated by extreme weather
events (e.g. drought and flooding). In addition, the planned elections in late 2017 and
subsequent transition to a new government could lead to moderate levels of political and
security risk. Clearly it is important to have a widely-owned strategic plan that focuses on
delivering measurable change in schools during this period.
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The Getting-to-Best Education Sector Plan (G2B-ESP) is available in full or concise formats
(Table 1-1). The following full G2B-ESP contains contextual analysis summary, program-
level situational analysis, components, activities, results framework and indicative budget. In-
depth analysis on the state of education (including a review of the achievements of the 2010-
2010 ESP) is contained in the Education Sector Analysis (ESA). The MoE will develop
Annual Operational Plans based on the G2B-ESP which will include programmatic budgets
and detailed timelines (Annex 2). A summary of indicative budgets for each program and
component can be found in Chapter 14.
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1.2 Timeframe
The G2B-ESP runs for four years between 1st July 2017 to 30th June 2021 (Table 1-2).
There will be four Joint Education Sector Reviews during this period including a mid-term
review in late 2019.
30
There are sixteen indigenous ethnic groups in Liberia. Although English is the official
language, Liberia is a multilingual country where more than thirty languages are spoken4.
Liberia is a post-conflict country. In 1979, a coup d’état led to a long period of intermittent
civil war. During this period, violence claimed an estimated 270,000 lives and lead to the
displacement and migration of millions of Liberians. In 2003, Liberia transitioned to a state of
peace and stability and, as families and communities rebuilt their lives, the Liberian
government began the work of post-conflict reconstruction and stabilization. In 2013, the
GoL outlined an Agenda for Transformation, which sought to build on ten years of stability
and set the country on a course for inclusive growth.5
Liberia had approximately 4.4 million people in 2014 with a relatively high population growth
rate of 2.5%. It is a young country with around 40 percent of the population under age 15.
The relatively high proportion of young people will remain fairly constant for the next decade
and this puts significant pressure on the education system.
Liberia is experiencing growing urbanization: by 2016 it is projected that half the population
will live in towns or cities. The bulk of the urban population is in the Monrovia - Montserrado
area which has a population of over 1.4 million people. This poses particular issues for
school expansion and provision of quality education in both dense urban areas and remote
rural communities.
Several key health indicators have begun to improve since 2003. In particular, infant and
under-five mortality rates have reduced significantly. However, diseases such as malaria are
common. Many children are malnourished: 32 percent of under-fives are stunted and 15
percent are underweight (WHO, World Bank statistics 2013). Life expectancy is estimated at
4 https://www.ethnologue.com/country/LR
5 Ministry of Planning and Economic Affairs. (2013). Republic of Liberia Agenda for Transformation. Monrovia: MoPEA.
31
61 years and mortality rates, although improving, remain high. The recent Ebola Virus
Disease (EVD) outbreak further damaged the health system and had a major impact on
education through the closure of schools as an emergency measure.
Liberia enjoys a relatively stable and democratic government with presidential and legislative
elections scheduled for October 2017. President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf will be completing her
second and final six-year term so the transition to a new administration may result in political
uncertainty, particularly within government ministries. As of July 1, 2016, the GoL has
assumed responsibility for security from the UN Mission in Liberia (UNMIL). The transition
was a significant milestone for Liberia but may contribute to some uncertainty in the security
environment.
1.5.2 Inequality
Gender and income inequality are serious issues. Liberia ranks 146 out of 155 on the UN
Gender Inequality Index and most sources point to relatively high levels of income inequality
(UN Human Development Report 2015).6
Vulnerable employment;
Displacement during the civil war and rapid urbanization;
Geographical disadvantage due to remoteness;
Poor education and health services; and,
Marginalization of women and girls.
6According to the 2015 Human Development Report, 83.8% of Liberians are below income poverty line; 35.4% are in severe
poverty; 21.5% are near poverty.
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Figure 1-2 GDP trends and projections
10
400
Percent
8
300 6
4
200
2
100 0
Liberia faces a severely constrained macro-economic and budgetary environment and weak
growth prospects over the medium term, especially as the prices of major commodity
exports (rubber, iron ore and oil palm) are likely to be depressed for some time.
Despite huge progress in the last decade, GDP per capita remains very low at around $500,
much lower than an average of US$800 for African low-income countries.
Thanks to the strong support from the international community, the government maintained
the fiscal deficit at a manageable size (8.1% of GDP in 2015 and 8.5% of GDP in 2016) even
with the constrictions in economic output and additional expenditure during the Ebola
outbreak. However, government finances remain highly vulnerable, especially in light of the
demands of a growing population, much-needed investments and difficult macroeconomic
environment. GDP in 2016 is now projected to contract by 0.5%, mainly due to continued
weakness of commodity exports.
33
1.6 Development vision
The Government of Liberia has articulated the following developmental vision for Liberia:
that Liberia move toward a more equal, just, secure and prosperous society. The Agenda for
Transformation (AfT, 2012, the second Poverty Reduction Strategy) and Liberia Rising
Vision 2030 (2015) are the overarching long-term and five-year medium-term development
plans.
Consistent with the development vision of economic growth, a peaceful and inclusive
political system, a diversified economy, stable institutions and healthy and productive
citizens, the Agenda for Transformation’s goal for the education sector is ‘to ensure equal
access to a high-quality free and compulsory basic education and to a variety of post-basic
education and training opportunities that lead to an improved livelihood and/or tertiary
education’ (Ministry of Planning and Economic Affairs, 2012).
In recent policy documents, the MoE has reinforced its commitment to improving the quality
of education and highlighted the important role that education can play in the development of
a more just and inclusive Liberia. This commitment aligns with Sustainable Development
Goal 4: to ‘ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning
opportunities for all’ (UNESCO, 2015). SDG commitments are summarized in Annex 5 and
included in relevant G2B-ESP programs and results frameworks.
Additional analysis of the country context can be found in the Education Sector Analysis
(2016).
34
Chapter 2 Education sector context
2.1 Structure
During the civil wars, the formal education system was almost non-existent in Liberia. Since
2003, MoE has rebuilt the government formal and non-formal educational systems to meet
the goal of providing equal access to education for all citizens regardless of age, disability
and gender.
Early Childhood Education, which is comprised of three years, for children ages 3, 4
and 5, and designated as KG1-37,
Basic (or Primary) Education, which is comprised of nine years, including six years of
lower basic education (Grades 1-6) for children aged 6-11 and three years of upper
basic education (Grades 7-9) for children aged 12-14, 8
Senior Secondary Education, which is comprised of three years of either academic
education or technical and vocational education and training, for young people aged
15-17 and designated as Grades 10-12, and
Higher Education and Post-Secondary Training, which includes certificate, diploma,
degree and post-graduate programs offered by teacher training institutes, colleges
and universities.
7 The current school census form reports four ECE grades: Nursery I (2 year olds in “day care”), Nursery II (3 year olds,
sometime knows as Beginner), Kindergarten I (4 year olds) and Kindergarten II (5 year olds). Terms can be used
interchangeably at the school level (for example, Nursery II can be referred to as KG I. There are three official ECE grades: 3, 4
and 5 year olds.
8Prior to the Education Reform Act (2011), Grades 1-6 were identified as primary education, Grade 7-9 as Junior High and
KG1 and KG 2 as pre-primary.
35
Figure 2-1 Structure of the formal education system
At the end of Grades 9 and 12, students are required to pass a West African Examinations
Council (WAEC) examination in order to be eligible to transition to the next level of
education.
MoE offers Alternative Education (AE) programs and the sector includes service providers
providing different forms of post-secondary and professional education and training services.
Alternative Education programs include the Accelerated Learning Program, which allows
overage children (8-13 year olds) to complete a basic education and transition to Grade 7
and Alternative Basic Education which allows young people and adult learners to complete
basic education requirements and transition to Grade 7, apprenticeships or the workplace.
36
Table 2-1 Number of schools, by ownership
Most non-government schools (private schools and faith-based schools) have entry
examinations and fees which disadvantage poorer families and increase the strain on
government schools. The majority of non-government schools are located in three counties:
Montserrado, Nimba, and Margribi.
2.3 Governance
The MoE is responsible for oversight of the whole education sector including establishing the
national curriculum, standards and policy for all schools and educational programs. It is the
largest government department and has management offices and personnel at central,
county and district levels, as well as over 20,000 staff (teachers and principals) working at
the school level.
The education legislation is the Education Reform Act (2011) which restructured the MoE
bureaus (Figure 2-2), reformed the student grade structure and laid out a pathway to
decentralization through the establishment of county and district education boards. In 2015,
the MoE reduced headquarter staffing from 926 to 425 persons.9
9 Ministry of Education (MoE) (2016). Ministry of Education Annual Report 2015. Monrovia: MoE.
37
Figure 2-2 Ministry of Education organogram
38
2.4 Public education expenditure
Education in Liberia is financed by multiple sources including the government, development
partners and private out-of-pocket contributions by parents. The volume of public education
expenditures has increased by 80% since 2009 but the share of the education sector as a
proportion of overall government expenditure has averaged just 12% over the last six years.
In 2014/15 the share was especially low at only 10.3%. The education budget (including
salaries, higher education and subsidy transfers) has averaged USD 73,964,000 between
2012/13 and 2015/16.
The overall education budget is equivalent to 3.83% of Liberia’s Gross Domestic Product
(GDP) over the period of 2012/13-2015/16. In FY 15/16 the investment on education sector
increased to 13.5 percent due to the Economic Stabilization and Recovery Plan (ESRP)
which focused on health and education sectors and was designed to guide the economy
back to the path before the Ebola epidemic. The actual spending is both below the
government’s own target in the Education Sector Plan 2010-20 and the Global Partnership
for Education minimum benchmark (20%), and compares poorly with similar countries.
Liberia remains on the lower end in regards to the allocation of government resources to the
education sector (Figure 2-3). The education sector is operating in a fragile budget context
where external shocks or crisis can easily have negative influence on the available
resources to education.
Figure 2-3 Share of education expenditure in overall expenditure in selected countries, latest available data
Source: Ministry of Finance & Development Planning and World Bank Edstats, 2016
39
The share of donor financing of the education sector is fairly high at over 50%. Most
development funds are channeled outside the national budget system and go directly to
implementing agencies. The share of higher education expenditure in the education sector
budget is high: 32% of total education budget in 2014/15. Coupled with transfers to non-
government institutions (known as subsidies), and the relatively low share of government
spending, this presents substantial challenges to improving education.
In summary, the Ministry of Education, and the majority of schools, are underfunded and
under-resourced. Significant and pervasive underfunding prevents the system from making
progress toward quality basic and post-basic education.
Recently, MoE has undertaken consultation on priorities for the remaining years of the
Education Sector Plan, leading to the G2B-ESP.
2.6 Achievements
The MoE has achieved substantial improvements in the last few years:
Coverage at the primary level had increased steadily and structurally exceeded 100
percent in 201110
Secondary level enrollment has increased (Table 2-2)
Implementation of the teacher payroll verification exercise has removed 1,100 “ghost”
teachers
Organizational restructuring at the MoE central office, reducing the number of central
office staff
Regular strengthening of the annual school census exercise and EMIS accuracy. In
2011–12, only public schools were covered. In 2012-13 and 2013–14, public, private,
10 Due to the Ebola outbreak, enrolment dropped sharply in 2014 and 2015. This is projected to recover.
40
mission and community schools were covered but responses from schools were
limited and the team had to make projections to estimate the actual level of
enrollment in the country. In 2013–14, alternative education programs were added. In
2015-16 a second wave of data collection has ensured that MoE has complete
coverage (98.44%, with only 86 schools not responding to the forms sent to them).
Moreover, a verification exercise conducted in July 2016 and additional error
correction and verification protocols have ensured that 2015-16 has one of the most
accurate assessment of education data to date11.
Implementation of a new ‘B’ certificate in-service training program to address the
shortage of trained junior high school subject specialist teachers
Provision of annual grants to basic education schools
Distribution of over 1.4 million textbooks to schools for Grade 1-9 students
41
Table 2-3).
Table 2-2 Gross enrolment ratio by education level (%)
Lower
42.7 46.4 49.4 52.7
Secondary
31.5
Upper
- - 40.3 39.4
Secondary
42
Table 2-3 Partnership Schools for Liberia summary
These ‘Partnership Schools’ will remain government-owned, fee- and selection free, and part
of the public system of education provision.
The school operators will work with the existing teacher workforce, infrastructure and
curriculum and within a budget of USD 100 per student per year. This per-student amount is
made up of two components: a USD 50 per student grant made by third-party donors, and
c.USD 50 contributed by the MoE through teacher salaries and maintenance costs. Within
this framework, operators will have considerable scope for innovation in management
practices, teacher training and performance management and curriculum delivery.
The program will be externally evaluated through an independent randomized control trial
(RCT) which will measure the performance of the Partnership Schools, compared with a
sample of schools under unchanged Government management.
The MoE envisages PSL as one possible delivery mechanism for piloting G2B-ESP
strategies and activities alongside, and complementary to, the programs outlined in this plan.
For example, as a test bed for the development of school quality standards, school quality
assessment tool and learning assessments.
43
Chapter 3 Challenges
3.1 Access
The education system faces a number of structurally persistent challenges to improving
access to education. These are driven by the inequality, demographic and socioeconomic
factors identified in Chapter 1 and 2.
Due to demographic trends, the education system will continue to face significant, and
increasing pressure to deliver education at all levels:
Growing school-age population seeking access to ECE and basic education. For
example, only 77% of children entering Grade 1 have attended ECE, and this
varies across the country, falling as low as 66% of Grade 1 entrants in Margribi
county
Large numbers of young people and adults, many of whom never completed a
basic education, who seek access to literacy, numeracy and other basic skills
Increasing pressure on secondary education, TVET and tertiary sectors to deliver
quality, support labor market entry, and help youth and adults find livelihoods and
employment.
Despite the expansion in the non-government school sector, the government commitment to
delivering free basic education is expected to place a significant burden on the limited GoL
human and financial resources over at least the next two decades. It is currently unable to
offer free ECE which reduces access for poor families. Additionally, there is the challenge to
provide low-cost education in poorer, rural areas where private schools are less likely to
operate. For poorer families, school fees and the indirect cost of education are the primary
reasons children and young people do not go to school.
Liberia continues to have a large number of out-of-school children (Table 3-1). An estimated
15-20% of children between the ages of 6-14 are not enrolled in school (HIES 2014, EMIS
2015).
44
Table 3-1 Number of Out-of-School children
2015
Source: EMIS 2015 & HIES 2014 in Education Sector Analysis, 2016
The main reasons for a child not accessing basic education appear to be (i) school fees and
expenses, (ii) late enrolment, and (iii) distance to school driven by poverty and rural status
(CWIQ 2007, CWIQ 2010, DHS 2013, UNICEF 2012). UNICEF (2012) also notes that issues
related to low school quality (e.g., few learning materials, low teacher attendance,
prevalence of corporal punishment) also negatively influence demand for schooling. Most
children with disabilities do not attend school.
In addition, UNICEF (2012) and DHS (2013) suggest that a high proportion of children are
'at-risk' of dropping out of school. These are children who may not attend school regularly,
who are over-age for their grade, or who are vulnerable because of coming from poor
households or households in rural areas or marginalized communities. At least 73% of
students drop out between primary and junior high, with another 62% dropping out between
junior high and senior high schools. Only an estimated 20% of students that enrolled in
Grade 1 are expected to enroll in Grade 12.
Female students are more likely to drop out of school or never attend school in the first
place, which means that fewer girls and young women complete a basic or secondary
education. This is a particular problem in rural areas.
12 A large share of 15-17 year olds are enrolled in school, but the majority of students are enrolled in primary and JH levels.
45
The majority of grade 2 learners are age 10 or older, even though the policy is that a
grade 2 learner should be seven years old (Table 3-2Figure 3-1).
Over 40% of children enrolled in primary school are age 12 or above (the age-
appropriate range).
There are more 18 year olds enrolled in Junior High than 12,13,14 year olds
combined.
Gender disparity increases greatly with age. The majority of girls do not have the
chance to complete primary education prior to becoming adolescents.
Nearly 50% of children enrolled in ECE programs (over 250,000 children) are age 6 or above
(EMIS 2015). These children should be enrolled in primary school, but for various reasons,
are enrolled in ECE. While these children are not technically "out of school", neither are they
enrolled in age-appropriate programs.
Figure 3-1 Age of primary school students, all primary schools, 2015
Table 3-2 Grade 2 student enrolment and enrolment share by age, all primary schools 2015
Grade 2 enrolment 5,568 14,411 17,895 17,988 18,401 14,288 12,895 9,300 6,344 3,792
Enrolment share 4.5% 11.6% 14.3% 14.4% 14.7% 11.5% 10.3% 7.5% 5.1% 3.0%
The reasons for overage enrolment are thought to include: 1) Entrance examinations at non-
government and government primary schools 2) High grade repetition due to poor academic
46
performance or school fee problems 3) Late entry into school in early grades 4) High drop-
out and re-entry rates caused by poverty, illness and high rates of teenage pregnancy
(illness and high teenage pregnancies (31%, LDHS 2013). Although the average age of
overage students is reducing steadily, the impact of the overage and out-of-school issue on
quality and access is severe.
Evidence suggests that student learning outcomes are poor. Mean scores from early grade
literacy assessments found that the majority of early grade students are not literate. 35% of
grade 2 students and 17% of grade 3 students could not read a single word in English (RTI
2008). A literacy assessment conducted in 2014 found that Grade 3 students’ oral reading
fluency was below 20 correct words per minute, which is significantly lower than the MoE
benchmark of 45 correct words13. This has a serious impact on learning in other subject
areas and grades. Students who do not have a strong foundation in reading and writing
struggle to make meaningful progress in other subjects and perform poorly in examinations
(in recent years, Grade 9 and 12 WAEC examination results have declined). It is also likely
the low literacy levels increase the likelihood of grade repetition and dropping out of school
entirely. Children of poorer, more rural families have lower literacy levels, enforcing a cycle
of poverty and lack of opportunity.
Within the key education sub-sectors there are additional challenges to improving the quality
education. These are explored in more detail in specific programs.
3.2.1 Teachers
The quality of teaching and learning is badly damaged by long-term teacher absenteeism,14
which primarily involves teachers who have secured employment and abandoned their post
13Hobbs, J. and Davidson, M. (2015). Expanding EGRA: The Early Grade Literacy Assessment and its
contribution to language instruction in Liberia. Presentation at UKFIET 2015.
14 Liberian Teacher Training Program (LTTP) Report 2015.
47
(“ghost teachers”), teachers who misrepresented their qualifications to become a teacher,
and those who not have the minimum education requirements to teach. The teacher payroll
is the largest component of the MoE budget at approximately US$35 million annually and
estimates, based on evidence from teacher verification activities undertaken in three
counties, indicates that the current payroll of over 19,000 teachers could include an
estimated 2,250 ghost teachers (equal to 15% of the entire payroll) 15.
A large proportion of the existing basic education teaching force do not have the knowledge
or skills required to be effective in the classroom. Hiring practices over the past decade have
allowed teachers to be employed with insufficient qualifications and fake credentials. Many
teachers who are considered ‘qualified’ may not have sufficient knowledge and skills due to
previous ‘emergency’ certification programs.
There are severe inequity issues: rural counties and ECE schools have high pupil-qualified
teacher ratios (Table 3-3). This disadvantages the poorest and most marginalized
communities, and prevents good practice in ECE.
Table 3-3 Pupil-Qualified Teacher Ratio, all counties, all ECE, primary and secondary schools, 2015
COUNTY ECE PQTR Primary PQTR JHS PQTR SHS PQTR Total PQTR
Sinoe 204 66 21 35 74
Bomi 111 48 30 27 59
Gbarpolu 117 42 13 14 54
Lofa 123 44 19 28 50
Bong 102 39 17 35 46
15Estimates included in this section draw on Campbell (2015) which offers empirical data from three counties
and 42% of the teaching force.
48
Maryland 92 42 21 24 43
Grand Gedeh 84 36 17 18 39
Nimba 82 29 15 21 35
Margibi 62 32 17 24 33
Montserrado 51 29 18 24 29
Total 77 34 18 24 37
While many teachers have valuable practical experience they lack foundational knowledge
and skills in a wide range of teaching competencies, such as pedagogy, lesson planning,
student assessment, engagement with parents, teaching children with disabilities and
innovative use of teaching and learning materials among other areas.
The national curriculum syllabuses for literary and numeracy, published in 2011, is in need of
revision. For example, the Language Arts (English) syllabus for Grade 1-6 does not provide
enough detail on literacy learning outcomes, assessment and effective teaching strategies.
The syllabus does not prescribe the progressive acquisition of phonological awareness and
high frequency vocabulary. With little training themselves, the teachers are unable to use the
syllabus to design and deliver effective language lessons. Effective teacher guides with daily
49
lesson plans for literacy and numeracy have been developed as part of the Liberia Teacher
Training Program (LTTP) and these could be utilized and expanded to cover more grades.
The MoE payroll includes nearly 1,100 staff who are eligible for retirement and who want to
retire. However, these staff are not able to transition from MoE payroll to the CSA-operated
pension fund because the pension fund does not have the resources need to provide a
pension for these staff. As a result, the MoE continue to pay these staff, even though many
are no longer able to carry out the responsibilities affiliated with their positions. This wastes
precious resources.
(2) County and district level capacity development and resourcing for monitoring
and improving school quality
MoE staff at the county and district levels do not have the professional education, job-
relevant training, MoE guidance and tools, or, critically, the operational resources needed to
successfully execute the responsibilities of their positions. In the 2016/17 school year, nearly
50% of CEOs, DEOs, and CEO support staff (i.e., Monitoring and Evaluation Officer,
Planning Officer, Personnel Analyst, Accountant, and Procurement Officer) will be new to
their positions. At present, the MoE does not have a training program, official guidelines, or
operational tools for these positions.
In addition, MoE CEO and DEO operations face a severe shortage of operational resources.
Staff do not have the resources to travel to, or communicate with schools, to conduct school
monitoring visits and quality assurance activities. Several recent evaluations highlight the
limited resources at the CEO and DEO level, limited performance management, poor
reporting, and the extent to which lack of petrol, difficulty in maintaining vehicles,
communication challenges (e.g., airtime, or no access to a network) combined with the
logistical challenges in much of the country (i.e., remote schools and roads which are
50
impassable during rainy season) restrict CEO and DEO execution of key job
responsibilities.16
The MoE in Liberia currently does not have a school-based quality assurance system in
place or a regular schedule of school inspections. There are two draft frameworks for
defining, measuring, and monitoring school quality, 17 however, these frameworks are not
comprehensive, or grounded in the latest national and international evidence. Furthermore,
they have not been adapted and incorporated into quantitative tools, along with linked
guidance, that can be used by district staff to undertake school quality assessments.
Lack of measurable quality standards undermines efforts by sub-national officers and school
and community stakeholders to promote change in schools and hold principals and teachers
to account for their performance.
(2) Principals
Principals are critical in improving access to, and quality of, education. The majority of
school principals in Liberia do not have relevant training or official guidance in areas such as
teacher performance management and community engagement. Furthermore, many lack
degrees, diplomas, or certificates related to their field of work (Tuowol et al 2014, Norman
2012, MoE 2011, 2014 and 2015). The recruitment process for principals is not transparent,
few are women and the salary structure is not commensurate with their responsibilities.
ECE has disproportionally large benefits for a child’s later learning outcomes. For many
families, especially in poor and deprived communities, the costs of ECE are a barrier to
education.
16USAID. (2013).MID-TERM ASSESSMENT OF THE LIBERIA TEACHER TRAINING PROGRAM PHASE II.
European Union. (2014). Ex-Post Evaluation of the EC support to Education in Liberia (ECSEL).
17These are identified in the Liberia Education Administrative Regulations (LEAR) and the document General
Accreditation in Liberia .
51
overage enrollment in ECE, including entrance exams, fees, cultural barriers and school
distance from households (UNICEF 2012).
Many educators and communities in Liberia expect ECE classes to resemble those for older
children in primary grades, rather than age-appropriate play-based learning. A majority
overage student population shifts the balance in ECE classes away from programming that
caters to younger students’ needs, particularly in classes of large size (average pupil-teacher
ratio is 53:1 in government ECE schools). An additional challenge is that ECE has the lowest
proportion of qualified teachers of all the education sectors (49%) and there are no ‘C’
certificate specialisms in ECE.
High dropout rates mean that many girls do not complete a basic or secondary education,
especially in rural areas. Reasons include poverty, safety, and lack of girl-friendly
infrastructure. A long-term impact is that there are fewer female teachers and principals in
basic and secondary education.
In Liberian schools ‘sex for grades’, the rape of students by teachers engaging in
transactional sex or threatening students with failure, is too often accepted as commonplace.
‘Sex for grades’ is often represented as a form of bribery, but the relationship of power that a
teacher has over a student means that students, even if they are above the age of consent,
cannot freely consent or withdraw consent.
Pregnancy interrupts the education of many Liberian young women. 38% of young women
will have their first child before the age of 18 – a very significant proportion of the school-age
population, especially as nearly all students are over-age for the grade in which they are
enrolled. Though current policy does not require that girls or women leave school or attend
night school when they are pregnant, in practice students are often directed or encouraged
to do so while pregnant.
18
Postmus et al., ‘Examining gender based violence and abuse among Liberian school students in four counties: An
exploratory study’, Child Abuse Neglect 44 (June 2015), 76-86. See also ‘Passing the test – the real cost of being a student’,
IBIS, Concern, the Norwegian Refugee Council and Save the Children, 2014, available via http://ibis-
global.org/publications/passing-test-real-cost-being-student/ .
52
3.2.7 Employability
An estimated 1/3 of young people aged 15 to 34 are classified as NEET (not in education,
employment or training) 19 . The technical and vocational education and training sector is
uncoordinated and not strongly linked to labor market demands. There is no national
qualification framework and many training institutions are under-equipped with poorly trained
and remunerated teachers and instructors.
In 2014/15 higher education in Liberia absorbed 32% of the education budget but the quality
of higher education is considered poor. Many graduates are not prepared for the labor
market or advanced studies. Quality assurance of courses is limited or non-existent and
faculties are still rebuilding after the civil wars.
53
Chapter 4 Strategic response
4.1 Theory of change
To address these challenges, the MoE intends to implement an aligned and integrated set of
strategies and linked programs over the next four years.
(b) the desired future state of education in Liberia at the end of four years (Goal) and
ten years (Vision) and the MoE’s stated mission;
(c) the approaches to drive and measure change, such as the strategies, programs
and components that will collectively contribute to the achievement of the overall
goal statement; and,
(d) the measures of change, such as the G2B-ESP high level impact outcome,
program outcomes and outputs
The priority remains improving equity and quality of ECE and basic education with
complementary programs for TVET and higher education sectors. Figure 4-1 is a graphical
representation of how learning outcomes in ECE and basic education will improve in Liberia
through implementation of the G2B-ESP programs and program components.
The ultimate beneficiaries of the G2B-ESP will be children (3-18 years old) and young
people (15-24 years old) in ECE, basic, secondary, alternative education, TVET and higher
education institutions. Intermediate beneficiaries will include teachers and trainers, education
officers and principals.
54
Figure 4-1 G2B-ESP theory of change diagram for improving learning outcomes in ECE and basic education
55
4.1.1 Driving educational change
The MoE identified four sequential management interventions to drive and sustain
educational change in Liberia.
(a) Strategies
(b) Programs
The MOE has identified three measures of educational change. These are:
There are two high-level impact outcomes for the G2B-ESP, namely (i) improved
student learning outcomes and (ii) young people have the necessary skills for
livelihoods and employment. The outcomes target is a MoE commitment to achieve a
quantifiable result by the end of G2B-ESP implementation.
A program outcome describes a measurable change that will take place in a target
population by the end of 2021, directly as a result of a G2B-ESP program, e.g.
increase in the proportion of trained teachers.
(iii) Outputs
56
Program outcomes and outputs are summarized in the Intermediate Results Framework
(Annex 1).
12. Education management information system (EMIS) data from 2014 and 2015
14. In-depth consultations with the Minister of Education, Deputy Ministers, Assistant
Ministers, senior MoE officers and advisers
During the development of the G2B-ESP, a wide range of stakeholders were consulted
directly or via circulation of drafts (Table 4-1).
57
Table 4-1 Consultation schedule for G2B-ESP
G2B-ESP Program Work 29th July, 3rd August, 5th MoE officers, development
Sessions August and 10th August partners, non-government
2016 organizations
A Liberia where: (a) every child can access a nearby school, where there is a quality
teacher in every classroom, each school day, who achieves improved learning
standards that are linked to an updated curriculum and assessed at each level; and,
(b) young people can access relevant quality education and training which improves
their livelihood and employability skills; and;
(c) robust, accessible and efficient mechanisms are in place to hold school principals,
teaching staff, county and district education officers and the boards of education
institutions to account for achieving quality standards and improved learning
outcomes and relevant skills.
The goal of the G2B-ESP is to measurably improve the equity, quality and relevance of
teaching and student learning in early childhood education, basic education, secondary,
alternative education, TVET and higher education through:
58
(a) maximizing existing human resource capabilities from MoE Central Office, county
and district education offices and schools;
(c) more efficient and sustainable use of government, development partner and private
sector financing;
(f) establishing transparent mechanisms across the national education system through
which MoE officers at all levels and front-line service providers are held to account
for their performance.
(g) utilizing approaches to lifelong learning such as pathways for student transition
between sectors and improved pedagogy for teaching and learning.
There are nine interrelated strategies which describe how MoE will address the persistent
access and quality challenges. Each strategy will be achieved through a program of
activities. The G2B-ESP structure is summarized as follows (Table 4-2).
59
Table 4-2 G2B-ESP mission, vision, goal, impact and programs
Mission of Ministry of To provide all Liberians with the opportunity to access and
Education complete affordable education of quality and relevance that
meets their needs and those of the nation
Vision20 of the G2B-ESP (a) every child can access a nearby school, where there is a
quality teacher in every classroom, each school day, who
achieves improved learning standards that are linked to an
updated curriculum and assessed at each level; and,
(b) young people can access relevant quality education and
training which improves their livelihood and employability
skills; and;
(c) robust, accessible and efficient mechanisms are in place
to hold school principals, teaching staff, county and district
education officers and the boards of education institutions to
account for achieving quality standards and improved
learning outcomes and relevant skills.
Improve the efficiency and Education Management & Deputy Minister for Planning,
performance of education Accountability Program Research and Development
management systems
20
Long term i.e. 10 years
21
Medium term i.e. 4 years
60
Improve the efficiency, Teacher Education & Deputy Minister for
effectiveness and Management Program Instruction
satisfaction of the teaching
workforce
Ensure that teachers have Curriculum & Assessment Deputy Minister for
access to quality instructional Program Instruction
materials and assessment
tasks
Improve the quality and Technical and Vocational Deputy Minister for
relevance of technical and Education and Training Instruction
vocational education and Program
training
61
4.4 Program components
This section lists the nine national programs and components that the MoE will implement to
achieve the nine strategies.
62
G2B-ESP Program and Lead officer(s) Supporting
component officer(s)
63
G2B-ESP Program and Lead officer(s) Supporting
component officer(s)
64
G2B-ESP Program and Lead officer(s) Supporting
component officer(s)
65
G2B-ESP Program and Lead officer(s) Supporting
component officer(s)
Strategy 6 Ensure that teachers have access to quality instructional materials and
assessment tasks
Strategy 7 Mainstream gender and school health across the education sector
66
G2B-ESP Program and Lead officer(s) Supporting
component officer(s)
and Demographics
Director,
Communications
Strategy 8 Improve the quality and relevance of technical and vocational education
and training
67
G2B-ESP Program and Lead officer(s) Supporting
component officer(s)
for Teacher
Education
Director,
Alternative Basic
Education
The G2B-ESP programs are interrelated: components and activities link with each other and
activities are designed for maximum synergy across programs. Complex challenges require
multiple interventions and delivering improved learning outcomes and skills require a holistic
approach (For example, Figure 4-2).
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Figure 4-2 Example program map for improving learning outcomes in ECE and basic education schools (selected
components)
69
4.5 High-level and program outcomes
The following section presents the higher-level and program level results and indicators that
the MoE commits to achieving after four years (Table 4-4). The intermediate results
framework, including program outputs and cumulative targets, can be found in Annex 1.
School Quality Improved water, sanitation and Proportion of schools with access to: (a)
Program electricity; (b) the Internet for pedagogical
hygiene at ECE, basic and
purposes; (c) computers for pedagogical
secondary schools (WASH)
purposes; (d) adapted infrastructure and
materials for students with disabilities; (e)
basic drinking water; (f) single-sex basic
sanitation facilities; and (g) basic
handwashing facilities (as per the WASH
indicator definitions), by location and type
of school (SDG 4.a.1)
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(SDG 4.5.4)
Overage and Out- Reduced average over-age gap in Average overage gap per grade by sex
of-School Program and location
targeted schools
Percentage of children over-age for grade
(pre-primary, primary education, lower
secondary education), by sex and
location (SDG 4.1.6)
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Pupil-qualified teacher ratio by education
level, by sex, type of school and location
(SDG 4.c.3)
Increased use of quality teaching % of primary teachers using new English
Curriculum &
and mathematics materials, by location
Assessment and learning materials
Program and type of school
Technical and Increased proportion of trained Pupil-Qualified Teacher Ratio (TVET sub-
Vocational sector)
TVET teachers
Education and
Training Program Participation rate in technical and
vocational programmes (15- to 24-year-
olds), by sex and location (SDG 4.3.3)
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Chapter 5 School Quality Program
5.1 Summary
SDG targets 4.1 By 2030, ensure that all girls and boys complete free,
equitable and quality primary and secondary education leading to
relevant and effective learning outcomes
4.a Build and upgrade education facilities that are child, disability
and gender sensitive and provide safe, non-violent, inclusive and
effective learning environments for all
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4. Increase the proportion of Assistant Minister for General
ECE, basic and secondary Administration
schools with toilets and safe
water
5.2 Introduction
Improving the quality of ECE, basic and secondary education requires interventions to:
ensure students are in the correct grade for their age (Overage & Out-of-School
Program, Chapter 8);
improve the skills of teachers (Teacher Education & Management Program, Chapter
9);
improve instructional materials, student time-on-task and assessment (Curriculum &
Assessment Program, Chapter 10);
ensure boys and girls have equal access to education and are well nourished
(Student Well-being Program, Chapter 11);
supervise and inspect schools regularly (Education Management & Accountability
Program, Chapter 6);
improve infrastructure and resourcing;
ensure the school environment is healthy and child-friendly; and,
improve school management, teacher performance management and community
engagement.
This chapter addresses the latter three elements of school quality across ECE, basic and
secondary education.
5.2.1 Enrollment
In 2015, ECE22, basic education (grades 1 to 9) and secondary education (grades 10 to 12)
schools have a total of 1,467,541 students (Table 5-1).
22 There are three grades at the ECE level in the 2015 school census form: 1) Beginner (Nursery II) for three-year-olds; 2)
Kindergarten (Kindergarten I, KG I) for four-year-olds; and 3) Pre-first (Kindergarten II, KGII) for five-year-olds. Although not in
the official categorization, day care services (Nursery I), which are designed to serve two-year-olds, can also be commonly
found in Liberia and were reported in the school census. The G2B-ESP uses KI (3 year olds), KII (4 year olds) and KIII (5 year
olds as the terminology for ECE grades.
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Table 5-1 Student enrollment, grade and type of school in basic and secondary education, 2015
Although the proportion of female students is increasing, they are still underrepresented,
particularly in secondary schools (Figure 5-1). This issue is explored in detail in Chapter 11.
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Source: EMIS, 2015
The student population is particularly large in a number of counties, with remote areas
having proportionally fewer female students (Table 5-2).
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Grand Cape Mount 22,429 21,211 48.60%
Many students are too old for their grade level (Figure 5-2). Basic and secondary public
school students are, on average, two years older than their grade level. This problem is
evident in all types of schools but is more acute in public schools. However, there is
evidence that the age gap has reduced since 2008 (
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Figure 5-3). Overage enrollment is discussed further in Chapter 8.
Figure 5-2 Average age of students per level, disaggregated by school ownership and level, 2015
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Figure 5-3 Average age per grade, all schools, 2008, 2012 and 2016
5.2.2 Infrastructure
Many schools lack infrastructure such as well constructed classrooms, water supplies or
adequate toilets (Table 5-3). There are rarely enough toilets for the number of students. A
recent nationwide survey found just 56% of toilets were functional and only a quarter (24.5%
of toilets were for female students). Many schools have no access to clean water or
handwashing facilities (an issue which impacts school feeding, deworming and transmission
of disease). Student/ functioning toilet ratios are high at 100.3:1 with a number of counties
having extremely high ratios (for example, Gbarpolu and Sinoe). Secondary schools report a
lack of specialist classrooms and equipment.
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Table 5-3 Percentage of schools with solid structures, water supply and functioning toilets, 2015
Number Percentage
Solid structure schools, access to water and functioning toilets 1,168 21.48%
School principals in public schools are appointed by County Education Boards or MoE.
These appointments should be merit-based but there are reports of problems in the process
(Norman 2012)24. The majority are male (Table 5-4) and most receive no induction or on-
going training. There have been efforts to improve principal training through short courses
and projects. For example, a brief review of program reports show that school principals
have participated short term training in the following areas: early grade reading and
mathematics, school census surveys, the teachers’ code of conduct, deworming, community
participation and PTAs, child-friendly schools, Ebola response, gender equity, WASH,
alternative basic education, and school feeding25. However, there is currently no requirement
for principals to have completed a nationally-recognized course which covers the wide range
of their responsibilities. There is reportedly a high turnover of principals (JESR, 2015).
23 A recent nationwide survey found just 58% of schools had reliable access to water (UNICEF, 2016).
24 Norman, Z.B. (2012). The Perceptions of Liberian Public School Principals about their Leadership
Development Needs in Post-Conflict Liberia. Unpublished Dissertation. Northeastern University: Boston MA.
25 Ministry of Education (MoE) (2016). Ministry of Education Annual Report 2015.
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Table 5-4 School principals by sex and type of school, 2015
Many schools have established a School Management Committee (SMC) and a Parent
Teacher Association (PTA). Progress has reportedly been swift in establishing these bodies
(Table 5-5) and a number of projects have targeted training towards them (for example, the
Global Partnership for Education school grant program, GEEAP, GOAL Plus and WFP (MoE
Annual Report 2015)).
Table 5-5 Schools reporting an operational SMC and PTA, by type of school, 2015
While parent and community participation in schools varies greatly by community, recent
reviews argue that parental and community participation in school affairs and student
learning will continue to need support (JESR, 2015). After more than 30 years of civil war
and unrest many parents have been unable to access basic education themselves.
Consequently, they do not have a good understanding of their roles and responsibilities in
supporting and monitoring their school and their children’s education.
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While EMIS (2015) data shows that 92.3% of primary schools state they have a “functioning”
Parent Teacher Association (PTA), there is a lack of data on the extent to which PTAs are
active in demanding accountability from school principals and teachers for the delivery of
quality education. Of concern is a finding from EMIS (2015) that in nearly 60% of primary
schools the School Management Committee (SMC) is either ‘not functioning’ (28%) or meets
three or fewer times per year.
Supervision of schools falls under the responsibility of District Education Officers (DEOs)
and Instructional Supervisors. These officers are supposed to visit schools to provide
supervision, inspection, advice and support. Anecdotal evidence from the JESR and other
reviews suggest that schools are rarely visited and that monitoring and reporting are
rudimentary. There are no national school standards for basic and secondary education. The
lack of guidelines for county and district education officers outlining their roles and reporting
responsibilities in school supervision, combined with limited training and financial resources
to visit schools has seriously affected external oversight of school performance. MoE has
recognized these problems and efforts to improve the human capacity and resourcing of
District Education Offices have begun. These are discussed in further detail in the Education
Management & Accountability Program, Chapter 6.
Between 2013 and 2015, the MoE in partnership with the Global Partnership for Education
provided annual school grants to 2,558 basic education schools to replace school fees. The
project encouraged the development of School Improvement Plans. Many schools
established bank accounts to receive the grant which averaged around USD 1,000 per
school per year. In recent years, schools have also received textbooks, supplementary
materials and reading books through GPE and USAID. There have been investments in new
classrooms (GPE), water supplies and toilets (Action Contre la Faim, Concern Worldwide,
Oxfam, Plan Liberia, Save the Children, GPE and UNICEF) but the extent to which County
Development Funds are used to support basic and secondary education is not known.
5.2.6 Partnerships
Private and faith-based schools provide education for 43% of primary and 67% of secondary
education students. Non-government schools should register with MoE and be inspected
prior to receiving a permit to operate. However, key officers report that this system does not
function effectively. MoE does provide subsidies for a few non-government schools and has
recently completed a draft Subsidy Policy.
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In September 2016, MoE began the Partnership Schools for Liberia (PSL) pilot to explore
public-private partnerships in the operation of ECE and primary schools. MoE also has a
growing network of local and international non-government organizations that provide
support to schools in a wide range of areas.
There have been a number of national programs to improve school quality beyond teacher
training and textbooks (Table 5-6).
EGRAPlus & EGRA Provision of (i) CPD/ teacher Improvement in early grade
USAID through LTTP and training, (ii) intensive literacy outcomes in schools
EGRAPlus projects coaching, (iii) learning with intensive interventions.
materials and instructional
manuals, and (iv) regular
assessment on early grade
reading
26 This included one-million supplementary readers (for grade 1-4 students); 340,000 levelled readers, one million textbooks in
mathematics, science, social studies and language for Grade 5-9 students and 200,000 teachers’ guides in these subjects. The
procurement also provided over 1.4 million pieces of supplementary material related to language, social studies, and the
sciences.
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Gender-Equitable Implementation in 40 86% promotion rate among
Education and schools of after school Grade 7 and Grade 8
Achievement Program support in children in grades students, formation of 67
(GEEAP) 7-9, PTA and SMC capacity girls’ club, training of 48
UNICEF building, life skills and girls school and community
club, CPD on child-centered based monitors
instruction.
There is international evidence and learning about improving school quality. For example,
school grants can be effective if programs are designed to encourage expenditure according
to local contexts and needs, and have a discretionary element (i.e, if they are contingent
upon development of a school improvement plan). Factors that contribute to the
effectiveness of school grants include the following:
The international literature also offers useful lessons on the design of effective SBM
programs, emphasizing:
27While providing clear reporting to parents about their children’s learning should help parents hold education
providers accountable, Krishnaratne, White and Carpenter (2013) found this did not necessarily have any impact.
Test scores can also be understood as an accountability device, and Hanushek and Woessmann (2011) found
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the value of school networks or cluster systems (Barrera-Osorio et al., 2009.).
Finally, De Grauwe (2008) makes the following recommendations regarding external school
supervision/quality assurance systems:
Supervision services must have adequate human and financial resources and assets
at their disposal to fulfil their mandate.
Once a clear mandate has been assigned, it should inspire the organization and
structure of the service; the profile of the staff; their recruitment, training and
evaluation; and the definition of the actions they are expected to undertake.
Successful supervision systems achieve the right balance between support and
control, and this balance takes into account the strength and professionalism of
principals and teachers.
When supervision services are lacking in resources, it is crucial to combine their
interventions with other inputs; for example, using school networks.28
5.3 Legal and policy context
While nearly all MoE Departments and Bureaus are involved in supporting basic and
secondary education, the Education Reform Act (2011) assigns key oversight and policy
guidance responsibilities to the Bureau for Basic and Secondary Education, which operates
under the Department of Instruction.
The Education Act states that “the Minister shall establish policy guidelines and criteria
regarding the establishment of new education facilities for all categories of schools in the
country” (MoE 2011:32). The Department of Administration, in consultation with the
Department of Planning is responsible for supervising the construction, renovation,
maintenance and expansion of schools. The Act states that basic education in Liberia “shall
be free and compulsory” for all pupils within the public school system, and that basic
that this has improved learning outcomes in some contexts. While the matriculation exam already works this way
in Myanmar, the current assessment system is not an accurate measure of student learning.
28
The UNESCO school network provides an international example of this.
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education is comprised of lower basic education (Grades 1-6) and upper basic education
(Grades 7-9).
The Act also identifies the government, through the national budget, as the “primary financier
of public education” in Liberia. However, the Act also emphasizes the possibility of securing
additional financing and support though public-private partnerships and concession
agreements. The MoE is responsible for establishing a school subsidy policy.
Policy guidance on school quality standards and establishment and registration of new
schools have not yet been created, however, they are listed as responsibilities for the Center
for Educational Accreditation and the MoE, respectively. While the Center for Educational
Accreditation has not yet been established, the Act provides MoE the authority to develop
quality standards and use these standards to guide education officer monitoring activities.
The Act does not provide guidance on the establishment and governance of school-level
Parent Teacher Associations or School Management Committees. However, the Act is
explicit that the chair of the National PTA of Liberia have a seat on the National Education
Advisory Board (NEAB).
5.4 Achievements
In 2015, the MoE led a nationwide rollout of its school grants program. The program
provided grants worth a total of $US 2.58m to 2,558 public primary schools for an
average grant size of slightly over $1,000 per school.
Grants played an important role in helping schools procure teaching and learning
materials. Following the Ebola epidemic, school principals identified teaching and
learning materials procurement as one of the most important strategies to encourage
children to return to school (Education Cluster 2015).29
The grants program strengthened community participation and school level planning,
administration and financial management capacities.
The MoE has developed school classification standards, in the Liberia Education
Administration Regulations, and detailed accreditation standards, in General
Accreditation in Liberia. Both documents provide frameworks which could be drawn
on to develop school quality standards.
In one MoE M & E report, the authors note: “grants help schools procured urgent items like chairs, instructional
29
materials, sporting materials for the students.” (MoE M & E Unit 2015).
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Over 93% of primary schools have a functioning PTA – a steady increase over the
last several years. 71% of PTAs meet four or more time per year (EMIS 2015).
In 2015, the MoE reached 2,026 schools with PTA training, using the PTA
Operational Manual. PTAs and other community groups have become increasingly
recognized as playing an important role in promoting school quality improvement
(MoE Annual Report 2015).
The MoE has effectively leveraged partnerships with NGOs to progressively train
PTAs across Liberia on critical social issues, including girls’ education promotion,
gender-based violence, the code of conduct, school feeding, psychosocial support
and psychological first aid (MoE Annual Report 2015).
Contracted school operators in the Partnership Schools for Liberia program to trial
innovative strategies to improve school management and accountability in 94 ECE
and primary schools.
Post-Ebola WASH improvements included 531 schools in 9 counties with improved
water access (new boreholes/wells and rehabilitation) and planned support for 120
schools in 2017.
5.5 Challenges
5.5.1 Lack of a school quality standards system
Currently there are no national school quality standards in place for schools in Liberia. This
makes it very difficult for county and district education officers, PTAs, parents, community
leaders and MoE officers working in Monrovia to demand accountability from school
principals and teachers for the provision of quality education. Lack of measurable school
quality standards means that systems cannot be put in place to collect and report data on
the extent to which schools are improving.
Lack of national quality standards also undermines school leadership and management as
school principals and SMCs lack clear guidance as to their roles and responsibilities in
delivering quality education. Schools and communities do not know about proven steps to
improve education access and quality and they do not know how well they are performing
compared to similar schools. Furthermore, CEOs and DEOs do not know which schools
need additional support and resources.
School inspection and supervision is inadequate as few schools receive regular, structured
visits from MoE officers. DEOs are unable to inspect schools due to a lack of travel budget,
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difficult transport conditions and lack of human capacity. There is no functioning school
inspectorate system.
Finally, the lack of a School Quality Standards Assessment System has meant that the MoE
has been unable to use data from school quality standards assessments to target resource
allocations in counties, districts and schools. In addition, civil society education stakeholders
are unable to access quality data on how schools are performing within and between
districts, and this has seriously undermined their oversight role.
5.5.3 Weak engagement of parents and PTAs in school affairs and their children’s
education
Barriers to parental involvement are many: the majority of Liberians have not completed
basic education and nearly 33% of adults are illiterate (HIES, 2014). Many parents are
intimidated by school principals and teachers, and they lack of good understanding of their
role. Many parents are young and they lack experience in child development and their
education needs. Currently PTAs are not involved in a structured program of monitoring their
local school to support the provision of quality education. SMCs need to be strengthened.
5.5.4 Many schools lack basic facilities such as safe water and toilets
Schools across the education sector lack basic facilities. There is a continuing need to
provide toilets and safe water in schools (either through direct construction or community
mobilization). Improvements in data collection and a new targeting policy will allow provision
of additional resources to the schools which are most in need. Toilets and water supply
improvements will include ECE schools.
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5.5.5 Principal recruitment, training and support needs strengthening
Principals have a vital role to play in improving access and quality. Currently, their
recruitment and deployment is inadequate. There is no national qualification for school
leadership and management and infrequent training for new principals (for example, in
practical management strategies to improve teaching and learning and access). Anecdotally,
the turnover of principals is high which harms long-term planning. Aspects of this issue are
addressed in the draft Educator Management Policy (Chapter 9).
Develop national school quality standards and quality assurance and inspection tools
1. Establish a technical working group on school quality standards with a mandate to
draw on existing MoE guidance, PSL learning and local and international learning to
develop school quality standards.
2. Based on those standards, develop a quality assurance tool for use by DEOs and
School Inspectors. The standards will provide a framework for the school
improvement planning, school grant process and school inspections and include
specific WASH, school health and gender equality standards.
3. Conduct consultation meetings with education stakeholders to review and improve
the draft MoE School Quality Assessment (SQA) tool.
4. Test the SQA tool in representative 100 schools.
5. Conduct a workshop to revise the SQA tool following testing. Draft management
guidelines.
6. Disseminate the school standards to all education officers and schools via Minister’s
Circular.
7. Establish school inspectorate, train and resource DEOs and begin to inspect schools
(Education Management & Accountability Program).
Component 2: School improvement grants
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DEO support and school-community engagement
3. Training for county and district officers on revised School Improvement Grants and
Plans. The school improvement program will be facilitated by DEO and School
Inspectors to school leadership, the PTA and SMC.
4. Training for principals on School Improvement Grant utilization (see Component 3).
5. Conduct public awareness activities using radio and SMS to raise awareness of
grants and ensure transparency (so communities know when grants have been
distributed to school bank accounts).
6. DEO and school inspectorate spot-checks on schools to check SIP and utilization of
school grants.
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Chapter 6 Education Management and Accountability
Program
6.1 Summary
G2B priorities MoE and schools are accountable for children’s learning
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6.2 Introduction
Improving learning outcomes in the classroom requires stronger management and
accountability systems at the district, county and national level. Most importantly, many of
the G2B-ESP programs require increased supervision, inspection and monitoring of schools.
The Education Management & Accountability Program includes:
Establishing a specific management unit to drive the implementation of G2B-ESP
and ensure accountability
Specific measures to strengthen the partnerships needed to implement the G2B-ESP
successfully
Increasing the quality and tempo of school supervision and inspection visits through
the creation of a School Inspectorate and improving training and resourcing of sub-
national officers
Continuing to build robust data collection and analysis systems to measure the
outputs and impact of the G2B-ESP
The chapter also addresses the pressing issue of MoE payroll management including payroll
verification, retirement and the impact of teacher training and transitions from supplementary
payroll.
In addition to being responsible for 1.4m students, 19,000 teachers, education officers and
support staff, and 2,500 schools in the public sector, the MoE is also responsible for policy
and oversight of an equivalent number of private, faith-based and community schools. Given
the country-wide reach and cross-cutting nature of MoE programming, the MoE liaises with
the Civil Service Agency, the Ministry of Finance and Development Planning (MFDP) and
other Ministries at the central level, as well as a large number of stakeholders at the county
and district levels.
Deputy Ministers are responsible for the activities of the three Departments: Administration,
Instruction and Planning, Research and Development. Assistant Ministers manage each
Bureau, supported by Directors and senior staff.
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The Education Reform Act (2011) called for the establishment of a National Education
Advisory Board (NEAB), comprised of stakeholders representing different institutions
engaged in education, to serve as an advisory body to the MoE. The President constituted
the NEAB in April 2015.
The Act also calls for the establishment of three Centers of Excellence in Accreditation and
Certification, Curriculum and Research, and Education Management. The centers would be
responsible for several important governance functions, including the development of the
national curriculum, development of accreditation and quality assurance systems, licensing
teachers, and strengthening school, district and county management systems. At the time of
writing, these centers have not been established. There is, for example, no school quality
assurance or inspection, the responsibility currently falls on district-based officers.
The Department of Planning, Research and Development takes the lead on data collection
and analysis. This includes the management of the annual school census exercise. There is
currently a draft Monitoring and Evaluation Policy.
The CEO serves as a Ministry representative responsible for the “operations of the school
system in the county, including the responsibility for the personnel in the system” (Education
Act 2011:34). The CEO oversees District Education Officers (DEOs) based in district offices.
DEOs oversee and address school-related matters, including personnel, school supplies,
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relaying communications, school registration, checking school census data and providing
oversight of non-government schools in the district. There are usually Instructional
Supervisors based at the district offices who are responsible for in-service teacher training.
The Act also outlines school principal roles and responsibilities, including DEO and principal
roles in teacher support and management. To deal with offences and grievances, the Act
offers guidelines for an Administrative Hearing and Review process which are elaborated on
in the Code of Conduct for Teachers and School Administrators.
In September 2016, there were 15 CEOs (13, or 87% male) and 98 DEOs (90, or 92%
male). During 2015-16, recruitment processes for two new CEOs and 35 new DEOs were
begun, to replace officers due to retire and improve the caliber of the workforce. A number of
development projects have included training for DEOs but concerns remain about capacity
and ensuring that key positions are filled with people who have the right skills and
commitment (JESR, 2015). Resourcing CEO and DEOs, especially for school visits, is a
recurrent challenge.
6.2.4 Payroll
The MoE shares the teacher and education officer payroll responsibilities with the Civil
Service Agency. The payroll absorbs the majority of the MoE annual budget and presents a
number of challenges:
Large number of irregularities such as ‘ghost teachers’, unqualified teachers,
volunteer teachers and teachers who are not being paid correctly
Over 6,000 teachers on a supplementary payroll (established as a temporary post-
war measure) receiving a smaller salary than teachers on the main payroll
Approximately 6,910 volunteer teachers who are not on payroll
Approximately 1,100 staff who have retired and need to receive their pension
62 redundant central office staff who need their severance pay
Bringing additional trained teachers onto the payroll promptly (for example, new
graduates from the RTTIs or new graduates from university)
At the beginning of the budget cycle, MoE receives teacher lists including key information
such as name, qualification and age from DEOs and CEOs, from which the calculation of
teachers’ salary costs are made. The estimated cost of teachers feeds into the draft MoE
budget that is submitted to Ministry of Finance and Development Planning (MFDP). However
due to the ongoing MoE payroll cleanup, the MFDP is reluctant to accept the teachers cost
projection made by MoE. Instead, compensation of employees has maintained almost
unchanged since 2013/14 and even decreased in 2015/16, and is expected to remain the
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same until MoE completes the teacher vetting/ payroll cleanup exercise. New teacher
recruitment has been halted for an extended period of time, wasting government resources
in pre- and in-service teacher training program.
Currently the average teacher salary on regular payroll is $151 per month, while average
teacher salary on supplementary payroll is $97 per month (Table 6-1).
Recently, MoE has established the Partnership Schools for Liberia public-private partnership
trial (Table 2-3) which involves developing more robust contract management and quality
assurance processes. Finally, MoE has experience implementing a number of projects
utilizing a number of mechanisms including embedded technical advisers, project delivery
units and contract staff.
6.2.6 Financing
Most of the budget is allocated to compensation of employees, higher education transfers
and various subsidies to non-government schools. Neither the wage nor the subsidy
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component allows the implementation of strategic education development activities.
Funding for operations and investment (such as G2B-ESP priority activities) is very limited.
The share of MoE expenditure in the total government education budget has declined for the
past three years, from 62% in 2012/13 to 52% in 2015/16. The rest of the education budget
is allocated directly to institutions including higher education and TVET institutions, the
Monrovia Consolidated School System, the West African Examination Council (WAEC) and
Rural Teacher Training Institutes (RTTIs).
The government does not have a clear formula for allocating resources to different level of
education, nor does it clearly track education expenditure by level. As a substantial amount
of resources is allocated to compensation of employees, the number of teachers in each
level of education is the best proxy for government investment. GoL allocates
approximately30 40% of overall education expenditure to primary education (including pre-
service teacher training), and is on the lower end for secondary education (8% for junior
secondary and 4% for senior secondary in 2014/15). In the meanwhile, the share of higher
education is substantial (32% in 2014/15).
Table 6-2 Share of education budget for each level of education 2012-15
Junior Secondary 9% 9% 8%
Senior Secondary 4% 4% 4%
TVET 6% 5% 5%
30 The methodology for estimating the share of education and additional analysis can be found in the Education Sector
Analysis, 2016.
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Payroll and goods and services
Unit costs
Based on estimation of teachers by level of education, spending per public primary school
pupil is around USD 71 per year (Table 6-3). Junior and senior secondary school per student
spending levels are higher at USD 79 and USD 90 per year. This is due mainly to the
generous pupil-to-teacher ratio resulting from the use of specific subject teachers at the
secondary level, the relatively high proportion of other staff, higher salaries based on a
teacher’s qualifications, and more expensive teaching and learning materials.
Many TVET institutions are not included in education budget as they are the responsibility of
the Ministry of Youth and Sports. Combining the different sources of funding, TVET unit cost
calculated is USD 1100 per year, more than 15 times that of the primary level.
ECE 24 34%
Primary 72 100%
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Source: National budget, MoE budget execution report and EMIS 2015 31
Subsidies
Historically, there have been transfers of Government money and resources to support the
operation of private and faith-based institutions. These are known as “subsidies” and have
been allocated on an ad-hoc basis. There has never been an official policy or guidelines for
the management of subsidies although a draft was developed in 2015-16. The process of
subsidy allocation is uncoordinated and rarely transparent. Schools that get subsidy in a
certain year might lose the funding in the next year due to the election and change of
representative. Institutions can lobby directly with the legislature. As a result, even though
subsidies are channeled through MoE and it has monitoring responsibilities, MoE does not
have authority over the total amount of the subsidy expenditure. Almost 90% of institutions
receiving subsidies from MoE are private or faith-based schools and institutions. Most
reportedly charge student fees and impose entrance tests on students. Currently, the MoE
spends between USD 43 – 69 per primary-age student in Government schools. For the few
subsidy beneficiary schools that are captured in 2015 school census, per student subsidy is
an average of USD 387 per student. Within the MoE budget, actual expenditure on subsidies
remained around USD 2.5 million over the past three years except 2014/15 when the overall
government revenue shrank due to Ebola.
Within the last three years, MoE has not made any investment on capital projects from GoL
resources (such as school infrastructure): 100 percent of the funding was devoted to
recurrent spending. Further analysis of financing can be found in the Education Sector
Analysis (2016) and Chapter 14, Financing the G2B-ESP. Transfers to higher education
institutions are analyzed in the Higher Education Program, Chapter 13.
6.3 Achievements
In 2015, the MoE central office was re-structured to align with the organogram
articulated in the Education Reform Act (2011).
Teacher verification exercise has identified the presence of a large number of
irregularities in the staff payroll and provided data critical to transitioning to a more
efficient and effective payroll. As of October 2016, six counties had been completed
and the verification exercise will continue in the remaining counties.
31
To calculate the cost per student educated in government schools, EMIS 2015 and budget execution report is used. The
cost per student is calculated as the total expenditure allocated to each level divided by the total number of students enrolled in
public and community schools.
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The annual school census has progressively improved coverage and accuracy over
the past four years and the MoE EMIS unit operational capacity has been
significantly strengthened.
The MoE conducted Joint Education Sector Reviews in 2013 and 2015, the latter
securing participation from key education stakeholders and partners from all 15
counties.
Public expenditure per student has increased from 10 dollars to more than 70 over
the past ten years.
A costed Operational Plan for the Education Sector Plan 2010 – 2020.
Investments in textbooks, teacher training and curriculum development.
Development and implementation of the Partnership Schools for Liberia (PSL)
program. Beginning September 2016, MoE has engaged eight non-government
school operators in Africa’s largest trial of public-private partnerships in education to
improve learning outcomes for over 15,000 children in 94 ECE and primary schools.
Recruitment and deployment of 54 (out of total of 75) decentralized professional staff
to strengthen county and district education offices.
National Education Advisory Board (NEAB) established in April 2015.
Introduction of a performance management system for education officers
Work to improve communication with students, parents and teachers including
weekly media summaries, user-friendly website, Facebook page and training from
the Carter Center on freedom of information.
6.4 Challenges
Challenge 1: Managing partnerships and interventions
In addition, private operators, faith-based organizations and corporations run schools which
enroll over 350,000 children in basic education and employ over 15,000 teachers. MoE
struggles to provide effective oversight of the private and faith-based school system.
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Challenge 2: Workforce reform
The MoE workforce reform agenda includes five inter-related priorities to address five critical
challenges: (i) verifying staff payroll and removing ghost names, (ii) testing teachers and
removing ‘untrainable’ teachers, (iii) transitioning supplementary and volunteer teachers onto
official payroll, (iv) retiring and retrenching eligible staff, and (v) training and certifying
untrained teachers who meet minimum requirements. The aim is for a clean, stable payroll
which is able to absorb newly qualified teachers.
The presence of an estimated 2,250 ghost teachers and staff on payroll costs the MoE
millions of dollars annually. A major payroll verification exercise has begun which has
removed 1,100 ghost names from 40% of the payroll saving approximately USD 2.3m
annually. In addition, there are approximately 1,000 teachers who do not have the basic
literacy levels or qualifications to be teachers (Teacher Education & Management Program).
The MoE also operates a ‘supplementary’ payroll of approximately 6,000 teachers and staff.
Many teachers on the supplementary payroll are underpaid for their qualification. In addition,
the maintenance of a ‘supplementary’ payroll increases the difficulty MoE faces in
addressing long term absenteeism and streamlining human resource management
processes between MoE, MFDP and CSA. In late 2016, MoE was transitioning these
supplementary teachers to the main payroll.
Currently, there are over 6,000 volunteer teachers and 1,158 teachers who stand ready to
transition onto payroll. Given high pupil teacher ratios (PTRs) in government schools,
especially in ECE (where the PTR is over 50), there is also a critical need for more teachers.
Cleaning payroll of ghosts and untrainable teachers will create space for these teachers.
Finally, the MoE payroll also includes over 1,000 staff of retirement age who want to retire,
but who have not yet been able to transition to the CSA pension for lack of resources in the
pension fund. The central office also includes over 62 staff whose positions have
disappeared under the new MoE organogram. The presence of these staff costs an
estimated USD 2m annually and detracts from the overall performance of the MoE
workforce. Table 6-4 shows one-time and recurrent costs of workforce reform priorities
(which cannot be fully covered by the estimated savings (~USD 4m) from removing ghost
teachers). It is important to note the importance of regular modeling of teacher and civil
servant workforce costs as the G2B-ESP is implemented.
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Table 6-4 Cost of workforce reform priorities32
One-time costs
Sub-total $5.76m
Transitioning 6,000 supplementary teachers onto payroll. Date for pay Underway in
adjustment not yet set. 2016/17
Hiring 1,000 trained ‘C’ and ‘B’ certificate teachers from previous RTTI Completed in
cohorts 2016/17
Hiring 500 newly trained ‘C’ certificate teachers bi-annually from RTTIs $0.96m
Hiring 100 newly trained ‘B’ certificate teachers bi-annually from $0.22m
34
RTTIs
Sub-total $8.18m
32
Based on MoE Workforce Reform Concept Note May 2016, MoE Presentation to Cabinet April 2016 and MoE estimates
October 2016.
33 The additional payroll costs of additional trained ECE and TVET teachers or pay increases for qualified principals are not
yet projected. Modelling is included in the relevant components.
34 MoE assumes that previous cohorts of newly qualified ‘C’ certificate teachers will be employed by end of 2016/17. In
addition, the numbers of newly qualified degree or associate degree graduates entering the teaching workforce has not been
modelled at the time of writing.
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Removing ghost and unqualified teachers from payroll $4m
Sub-total $6m
Effective monitoring and review of the ESP 2010-20 and Operational Plan 2014-16 have
been hampered by four critical challenges. Until 2014, the Education Management
Information System (EMIS) did not provide sufficient system coverage and reliability to
inform education sector policy and planning activities. While the completion of the 2015
EMIS successfully addresses the coverage and reliability concerns of the 2014 school
census, there is a significant risk that without continued attention to EMIS function and
capacity that successes realized in 2015 may not be maintained.
Joint Education Sector Reviews conducted in 2013 and 2015 did not track MoE progress
against ESP and operational plan targets. In the absence of regular performance review, the
MoE missed opportunities to ask ‘why’ or ‘how’ its programs were succeeding or struggling
and identify areas for scale-up or mid-course correction.
Sector monitoring activities are not yet guided by a monitoring and evaluation (M&E)
framework which identifies data needs, reporting timeframes and data flows at each level
and between levels. In the absence of a holistic M&E framework, CEO, DEO and school
level staff are frequently engaged in multiple and over-lapping data collection and reporting
activities which takes time away from their other responsibilities.
In 2012, the MoE established County School Boards (CSB) in all 15 countries and trained
board members on their roles and responsibilities. In 2015, the terms of existing board
members expired and many CSBs do not appear to be operating at the capacity envisioned
by the Act.35 Additionally there has been a high turn-over of CEOs and DEOs.
In 2015/16, the MOE identified 45 EO staff (DEOs and CEOs) of retirement age and began a
process of re-hiring for all 75 EO county-level support positions. Given these two issues, in
2016-17, nearly half of EO staff will be new to their positions. In addition to being new to their
positions, the majority of CSB, CEO and DEO staff do not have professional training related
35Ministry of Education (MoE) (2015). Post JESR Stakeholder Engagement Report. Monrovia: MoE; Ministry of
Education (MoE) (2016). Joint Education Sector Review Report (draft). Monrovia: MoE.
103
to their job descriptions and the MoE has not yet developed training programs or clear MoE
guidance or tools to support the education officers.
County school systems also face a severe shortage of operational resources. Specifically,
CEO and DEO staff do not have the resources to travel to, or communicate with schools, to
conduct periodic school monitoring visits, inspections and quality assurance activities. In the
2015-16 budget, less than USD 200,000 was allocated to non-salary CEO and DEO
activities. 36 There are no independent school inspectors which limits accountability and
reporting to parents and MoE.
Several recent evaluations highlight the limited resources at the CEO and DEO level and the
extent to which lack of petrol, difficulty in maintaining vehicles, communication challenges
(e.g., airtime, or no access to a network) combined with the logistical challenges in much of
the country (i.e., remote schools and roads which are impassable during rainy season)
restrict CEO and DEO execution of key job responsibilities.37
The current budget framework does not reflect the MoE priorities and does not allow proper
programmatic budgeting. There are no clear guidelines within MoE to mainstream strategic
areas during the budget preparation. Investment to each level of education is not planned
nor tracked at the central level and critical information such as unit cost is not calculated to
inform funding requests.
36
Ministry of Education. (2016). Ministry of Education 2015-16 Ceiling.
37
USAID. (2013).MID-TERM ASSESSMENT OF THE LIBERIA TEACHER TRAINING PROGRAM PHASE II. European Union.
(2014). Ex-Post Evaluation of the EC support to Education in Liberia (ECSEL).
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6.5 Education Management and Accountability Program
Component 1: Education Delivery Unit (EDU) and education partnerships
The MoE will establish an Education Delivery Unit (EDU) responsible for driving
implementation of G2B-ESP priorities. The EDU will address some of the shortcomings
identified regarding implementation of ESP 2010-2020 and Operational Plan 2014-2016.
Namely, that these plans sought to address too many priorities, and in so doing, undermined
funding of and momentum toward key strategic objectives and failed to empower high-
potential staff toward improved performance.
The EDU will be structured to (i) focus on a small number of priority ESP programs, (ii)
empower, and hold accountable, high potential staff, and (iii) report directly to the Minister of
Education. While identification of priority programs will be finalized during the EDU
development process, these may include (i) workforce reform, inclusive of teacher
verification, (ii) school management and accountability, (iii) education partnerships and (iv)
fundraising and resource mobilization. Given its focus on narrowly-defined priority initiatives,
the EDU will not displace the core functions of MoE Departments or budget normally
allocated to departmental activities. EDU staff selection will be competitive and may be open
to MoE, other civil service and eligible non-civil service applicants. If EDU staff are seconded
from existing MoE positions, a transition arrangement will be made to minimize disruption.
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2. Develop MoE partnership engagement strategy, mechanism(s), and program and
evaluation priorities. For example, the MoE may want to widen stakeholder
participation in the ESDC, support CEOs in engaging in county-level partnerships, be
more aggressive in seeking out international technical and financial resources, seek
to better utilize and influence non-government schools, or re-visit existing concession
agreements to orient them toward a quality agenda.
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9. Secure funding to provide severance packages as a fair compensation to staff who
will leave the Civil Service as required by law.
10. Secure approval for the revised MoE organogram including district and county
offices.
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9. Conduct ‘flash visits’ (surprise inspections) to 1,250 schools in year 1 (with an equal
share in each county) and 2,500 schools annually thereafter. Target the most
disadvantaged areas first. Inspectors will be paid per inspection completed. Schools
will receive at least one inspection per year.
10. For each inspection, the Inspector will invite the local DEO and instructional
supervisor to join. The visit will include a school inspection (based on the school
quality standards) and meeting with and listening to, students, teachers, principal,
PTA members and SMC members.
11. Within a week of each visit, the write up from individual inspections will be
transmitted to Ministry Central Office. Once per quarter the Inspectorate will complete
a summary report for distribution the Deputy Ministers and Parliament.
12. Inspection activities could eventually be overseen by a Centre for Education
Management once it is established and funded.
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7. Identify and select candidates (based on minimum qualifications, experience, and
interviews) to participate in the certification course: 40 DEO candidates and 15 CEO
candidates. Repeat in year 2 to ensure all positions are filled with certified
candidates. Aim for at least 50% female officers. Target the most disadvantaged
areas first.
8. Deploy candidates who successfully pass the certification exam and selection
process to the districts.
9. Conduct once-yearly refresher trainings for all DEOs.
Resourcing of DEO and CEO monitoring and school support activities
10. Provide sufficient material and financial resources for DEOs to visit all government
schools in their district at least once per year. Visits should ensure oversight of
school improvement and school grant monitoring, as well as addressing issues
identified by the school community.
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originates from the school or district levels and is required central level actions and
reporting nationally and internationally.
4. Develop a policy-relevant Research Program on an annual basis. The program
should include 3-5 targeted studies from the G2B-ESP. The agenda should include
cost-effectiveness analysis to strengthen the link between sector planning and
budgeting activities.
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of new partnerships with the Carter Center (on access to information) and Hampton
Creek (on a user-friendly website).
5. Use multiple, accessible channels to communicate information. Make sure that radio,
especially local radio, is used, and that simple English and local languages are used
where appropriate.
6. Establish channels for public feedback and reporting, such as free SMS and
anonymous channels. Ask the public to report misuse of resources or unprofessional
behavior. Publicize information about how MoE responds. (See Student Well-being
and Teacher Education and Management Programs.)
7. Undertake regular evaluations of communications.
Financing
1. Finalize and implement Subsidy Policy covering all sub-sectors to free up resources
for public schools. Reduce subsidy to non-government schools by USD 2m.
2. Reform higher education transfers to improve efficiency and resourcing of
foundational education sectors (Higher Education Program, Chapter 13).
3. New chart of accounts which reflects MoE program areas.
4. Establish task force on education financing to identify new and innovative sources of
education finance and engage with Ministries and stakeholders to target resources to
the G2B-ESP priority sectors.
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Chapter 7 Early Childhood Education Program
7.1 Summary
G2B priority Lay the foundations for children’s learning with ECE
SDG target 4.2 By 2030, ensure that all girls and boys have access to quality
early childhood development, care and pre-primary education so
that they are ready for primary education
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greatest need
7.2 Introduction
Early childhood education (ECE) was recognized in the Education Reform Act (2011)
although had existed previously as kindergarten classes. Since the establishment of the
Bureau of Early Childhood Education within the Department of Instruction in 2011, there has
been noticeable progress, including the development of a National Inter-Sectoral Policy on
Early Childhood Development (2012).
7.2.1 Enrolment
Early childhood education (ECE) has expanded significantly in recent years and by 2015
over 500,000 students were enrolled (Table 7-1). Within the education sector, children are
can attend Kindergarten I (age 3), Kindergarten (KG) II (age 4) and KG III (age 5) before
transitioning to primary education grade 1 when they are six years old. Many ECE schools
also have Nursery classes (age 2). Approximately 51% of students enrolled in ECE are male
with the other 49% being female.
Most children in ECE are the incorrect age for their grade. The 2015 School Census found
that 74.7% of ECE students are over-age for the level they are attending (Table 7-2) with
remote areas generally worse affected. 48% of students enrolled in ECE programs (over
250,000 children) are 6 years of age or older and should be attending primary school.
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Table 7-2 Number and % of early childhood education overage students by county and gender, 2015
The reasons for the overage phenomenon are not clearly understood but may include entry
tests at grade 1, poor child development, distance to school and the incentive for schools to
keep children in ECE as fees are a source of income. The impact of overage children in ECE
is severe: limiting access and preventing age-appropriate education. Although the average
age of students in ECE is reducing, this is a major challenge for the sector.
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Figure 7-1 Age profile in ECE schools by grade and type of provider, 2015
Many ECE schools are established within existing primary schools which can improve
transition and reduce management costs. However, this means ECE classrooms can be
some distance from family homes in rural areas. Relatively few ECE schools are faith-based
schools but there is a large private ECE sector (Table 7-3).
Public 2,425
Private 1,555
Faith-based 851
Community 307
Total 5,080
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7.2.2 Teaching workforce
The ECE teaching workforce has expanded rapidly. 57 percent of ECE teachers are women,
with higher proportions of female ECE teachers in non-government schools (Table 7-4). It is
important to note than many teachers work across multiple grades in the sites with combined
ECE, primary and high schools.
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Table 7-5 Qualified ECE teacher ratios, 2015
PTR PQTR
Qualified Qualified
Total ECE male female Total %
workforce teachers teachers qualified qualified
7.2.3 Resourcing
Funding for ECE schools is limited to parent and community contributions. Almost all charge
fees (3,500 Liberian dollars per year (approximately USD 41) and there are additional costs
for uniform and shoes so ECE is not free at point of use38. Resourcing from GoL is limited
although public and community school ECE teachers may be on the MoE payroll. There
have been no major procurements of materials to ECE schools, no school grants and no
national distribution of the ECE national curriculum or teaching resources. Teacher training
courses, community awareness materials39 and a national curriculum have been developed
by MoE.
39 Level 1: ECD Community Education and Awareness Program (ECDCEAP) is a 10-session workshop designed for parents,
caregivers, teachers, community health workers, and other community stakeholders who have primary and secondary roles in
improving the health, education and care of children from prenatal/birth to eight. It is a community/parent empowerment
strategy and a mechanism to increase awareness of, and sensitization to, early childhood development in Liberia. Each
workshop is approximately two hours long, and each one has four parts: 1. Parenting issues, 2. Early brain development, 3.
Health nutrition and safety/protection, and 4. Adult-child interactive experiences.
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7.3 Policy and legal context
Liberia formally recognized Early Childhood Education as a vital part of its educational
system in the Education Reform Act (2011). This recognition led to establishing a Bureau for
Early Childhood Education which is responsible for designing, developing, implementing,
coordinating, monitoring and reviewing all early childhood education programs. It also
supports the registration and quality assurance of all ECE programs and provides oversight
to MoE ECE teachers.
The Bureau works in collaboration with the Ministries of Health and Social Welfare, Gender
Development and Children Protection. It also works closely with international organizations
including the Open Society Foundation (OSF), OSIWA, Save the Children, Plan
International, Project Concern International, the World Bank and UNICEF.
The Education Reform Act (2011) does not specify that ECE is to be fee-free. The Act
proposes the development of guidelines for “opening and operating” ECE institutions and for
the standardization of ECE programs and curriculum. Many of the activities of the ECE
Bureau are new and evolving, including curriculum development, establishment of teacher
training programs, and ECE financing and oversight.
7.4 Achievements
Participatory development of a four level National Professional Development
Framework40 including pilot testing and production of final products.
40 Level 1: ECD Community Education and Awareness Program (ECDCEAP); level 2: ECD Skills-Based Training and
Education Program (ECDSTEP); level 3: ECD Certificate Program; and Level 4: ECD University Programs (AA, BA, MA,
PGCE, and PGDE)
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follow-up training and consists of the ECDSTEP Curriculum and Training
Manual for Master Trainers.
7.5 Challenges
Despite the achievements mentioned above, ECE programs in Liberia still suffer numerous
interrelated challenges.
7.5.1 Geographical and social disparities in access to quality ECE (e.g. school fees)
ECE school fees and expenses such as uniforms prevent poor children from accessing
quality ECE. Rural areas also have fewer ECE classrooms and these may be some distance
from the children’s homes. Many ECE classrooms have very large pupil numbers which
harms the quality of teaching. There are not enough ECE classrooms across the country to
accommodate the growing number of ECE pupils.
7.5.2 Lack of awareness among parents and communities on the importance of ECE
and school readiness programs
Parents and communities often do not know why ECE is so critical for a child’s future
learning. These is limited understanding of the importance of play-based learning, holistic
child development and pre-literacy and pre-numeracy skills. Children are often enrolled into
ECE at too late an age when they should be primary grades. This reduces access for
correctly aged students and makes age-appropriate teaching more difficult.
7.5.3 Limited training for ECE teachers and early childhood professionals
Until recently there were no formal ECE teacher training courses. Many ECE teachers lack
qualification or training in ECE. There is an urgent need for pre- and in-service teacher
education and Continuing Professional Development.
The persistent challenge of overage children in ECE remains a major concern. The factors
driving overage enrollment are not fully understood but could include school fees, concerns
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about the quality of education, child development and growth, distance from home and
cultural reasons. The impact on children’s learning is severe: older children do not receive
the right level of education and younger children cannot get a place or learn in a play-based
environment. The overage enrolment issue in basic and secondary education is further
addressed in Chapter 8.
Investment in ECE is widely considered to be an effective use of resources but the sub-
sector is underfunded. Ensuring teachers have planners, teacher guides and curriculum and
receive CPD requires additional resources. Many ECE centers have no toilets or child-
appropriate equipment and toys. Although a small number of model ECE centers have been
established, most teachers do not have the opportunity to observe and practice good quality
ECE.
Component 2: Roll out ECE certification and training for teachers through Rural
Teacher Training Institutes, colleges and universities
ECE certification for teachers through Rural Teacher Training Institutes, colleges and
universities
1. Work with institutions offering or planning ECE courses (such as WRTTI) and the
Bureau of Teacher Education to ensure that there is a strong certificate program, and
that teacher training course content on ECE meet the needs of the education sector
(for example, including strategies for overage children, children with disabilities, pre-
literacy and pre-numeracy). Train 300 pre-service ECE teachers with user-pay model
and use targeted scholarships to ensure participation women and students from
disadvantaged areas. Update Educator Management Policy.
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2. Work along with the Bureau of Fiscal Affairs and Human Resource Development to
ensure that ECE teachers are included in payroll verification which is checking
teachers’ qualifications (Education Management and Accountability Program) and
ensure that teachers who have qualifications in ECE are placed in ECE schools.
3. Review user-pay model regularly to ensure it is not reducing numbers of female
teachers or those from remote areas.
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Component 4: Improve the quality of ECE provision for children aged 3- to 5-years-old
Research to understand demand and supply of ECE programs and the potential impact of
tuition fee removal
1. Based on demographic projections, assess demand for ECE in all districts.
2. Assess the potential costs and impact of abolishing school fees, including increased
enrolment, resources available to ECE schools, and possible community responses.
3. Assess supply of ECE programs, including school-based and community-based ECE
institutions, teachers, trainers, ECE providers and financial resources, including unit-
costs, payroll, central and local grants and transfers and fee payments.
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early intervention for children with disabilities etc.) and draw the lessons based on
thorough evaluation.
9. Roll-out successful ECE quality improvement programs such as procuring and
distributing locally-produced, locally-relevant materials to public ECE schools or
school grants to reduce fees.
10. Quality and learning outcomes study to examine quality of teaching and learning in
ECE schools.
11. Conduct a process evaluation of ECE provision in PSL schools.
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Chapter 8 Overage and Out-of-School Program
8.1 Summary
G2B priority Reduce overage enrollment and increase access to education for
out-of-school children and young people
Challenges Many children are not in the correct grade and over-age
children in ECE block correct aged children from attending
school
Large numbers of children and young people are out-of-
school
Alternative education programs need to be better
coordinated and harmonized
Donor dependent sub-sector with impending gaps in
program funding
SDG targets 4.1 By 2030, ensure that all girls and boys complete free,
equitable and quality primary and secondary education leading to
relevant and effective learning outcomes
4.2 By 2030, ensure that all girls and boys have access to quality
early childhood development, care and pre-primary education so
that they are ready for primary education
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Research and Development
8.2 Introduction
The education system continues to deal with significant challenges related to overaged and
out-of-school children and young people. These challenges have been further compounded
by high levels of school drop outs, starting at early grade levels and continuing through to
post basic education. The MoE defines Alternative Education (AE) as comprising of three
streams:
It is estimated over 170,000 children between the ages of 6-14 (nearly 15-20% of the school
age population) are not enrolled in basic education (Table 8-1). The ESA offers background
on how these estimates were made and provides information on ‘zones of exclusion’ - a
policy-relevant way of looking at different populations of children and reasons which explain
lack of access to school, dropout, and low learning outcomes.
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Table 8-1 Out-of-school children and young people, 2015
2015
Source: EMIS 2015 & HIES 2014 in Education Sector Analysis, 2016
The main reasons for a child not accessing basic education appear to be (i) school fees and
expenses, (ii) late enrolment, (iii) distance to school and (iv) poverty and rural status (CWIQ
2007, CWIQ 2010, DHS 2013, UNICEF 2012). UNICEF (2012) also notes that issues related
to low school quality (e.g., few learning materials, low teacher attendance, prevalence of
corporal punishment) also negatively influence demand for schooling.
Most children with disabilities do not attend school. Current school census data about
children with special educational needs is regarded as unreliable and only includes physical
disability. There is one government school for the blind and a small number of non-
government schools - which are subsidized by MoE - specifically for physically disabled
children. However, student enrolment is small, unit costs are high and geographical
coverage is limited. Most teachers and principals in regular schools do not have basic
training on effective teaching strategies for children with disabilities (including early
intervention in ECE and early grades). As Liberia has poor health outcomes, it is likely that
there are significant numbers of children with disabilities who either never attend school,
have to repeat grades, or drop out early.
Figure 8-1 shows the survival rate, by grade, from Grade 1-9 between 2007 and 2013. In
2013, 80% of children starting school completed Grade 1. These survival rates indicate that
40% of children entering grade 1 drop out prior to completing their basic education.
Figure 8-1 Grade survival in ratio: Grades 1-9, 2007 and 2013
41 A large share of 15-17 year olds are enrolled in school, but the majority of students are enrolled in primary and JH levels.
126
Source: DHS 2007, 2013
In addition, analysis from UNICEF (2012) found that, in addition to children who are "not
enrolled" in basic education, there are over 500,000 children who are "at-risk" of dropping
out of basic education. At-risk children include children who are significantly overage for their
grade, who do not attend school regularly, and who come from poor households or
otherwise marginalized backgrounds. Girls and young women are particularly affected
(Chapter 11).
The challenge of overage enrolment significantly influences the quality of early childhood
and basic education in Liberia. As discussed in Chapter 7, nearly 50% of children enrolled in
ECE programs (over 250,000 children) are above the age of six (EMIS 2015). These
children should be enrolled in primary school, but for various reasons, are enrolled in ECE.
While these children are not technically "out of school", neither are they enrolled in age-
appropriate programs.
42 At the secondary level the over age students out number at age enrolments by at least 6:1 accounting for 85.4% of total
enrolment.
127
Table 8-2 Number and percentage of at age and overage children at primary school by county and gender, 2015
The average overage gap is reducing (Figure 8-2) but this remains a significant challenge for
MoE.
128
Figure 8-2 Average age of students per grade between 2008 and 2016
It is important to note that there are a number of issues related to late or no enrolment of
children at the primary level, and which also contribute to the high rate of drop outs and the
high number of adults and youth also not achieving a basic level of education. A joint
assessment on out of school youth conducted by the MoE in conjunction with UNICEF and
the EU in six43 counties in the South East indicate that these challenges include but are not
limited to:
Financial problems: For example, uniform and other hidden education costs
(copybooks, footwear)
Child and youth labor: having to earn an income to support themselves and or their
families at mines, plantations or farms
Unfriendly and inaccessible learning environment with untrained or absent teachers
Lack of enforcement of compulsory education policy by schools and communities
Early marriage and teenage pregnancy
The absence of continuity programs and motivational clubs in schools44
43 Grand Kru, Maryland, River Cess, River Gee, Sinoe, Grand Gedeh
44 MoE, EU, UNICEF & GIZ South East Mission Briefing Notes, 2015
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8.2.4 Young people
According to the Revised National Youth Policy (2012-2017) the definition of youth in Liberia
is ages 15 to 35. At present, this age group accounts for roughly 50% of the present national
population45. Given the high rates of low enrolment and school dropout, it’s not surprising
that this group remains largely uneducated, with the 2014 Liberia Demographic and Health
Survey reporting that 33% of women and 13% of men between the ages of 15 and 34 had
never been to school.
With such a high illiteracy rate among youth, Liberia is at risk of not being able to achieve
several objectives that have been laid out in various policies including but not limited to the
Economic Stabilization and Recovery Plan (2015), or achieving the vision of Liberia as a
middle income country as indicated in Liberia Vision 2030. Though the most recent Youth
Fragility Assessment was conducted as far back as 2009, many of the challenges remain
largely unchanged with youth still being faced with high levels of unemployment, low levels
of education and skills training, lack of links to sustainable livelihoods and insufficient and/or
inappropriate training for the actual Liberian job market. 46 Relevant training is addressed
further in the TVET Program in Chapter 12.
The MoE introduced the ALP in 1998 as a strategy to provide a basic level of education for
over-aged and out-of-school children. Though by 2011, ALP was being offered in all 15
counties, however given the Ministry’s announcement in 2009 that 2012 was to be the last
year of implementation of ALP, the rate of implementation by donors was dramatically
slowed with only 2,396 learners in 30 centers national wide reported in the 2015 EMIS data.
Catering for overage children and those returning to primary education between the ages of
7 and 13, the ALP model uses specially trained teachers facilitating after-school and night
classes using a compressed curriculum. These teachers received a small stipend for their
extra workload. The ALP ran between 1999 and 2012. Since the cessation of donor support
for ALP in 2012, the numbers of children and young people accessing ALP has fallen to
modest levels (Table 8-3).
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Table 8-3 ALP and ABE enrolment, public schools, 2015
ABE provides an alternative pathway into education in grades 1-6. Young people who have
not completed a basic education, or have never been to school at all, can access after-
school or evening classes led by facilitators (government school teachers with additional
ABE training). There is an ABE curriculum consisting of three levels which are equivalent to
a grade 1-6 education. ABE enrolment is relatively small (Table 8-3) (although this could be
a consequence of service providers not being captured by the School Census) and the
current large-scale ABE donor funded program (USAID’s Advancing Youth Project, which
supports 147 sites) is scheduled to finish in 2017.
Both ALP and ABE programs are based on the national curriculum and cover four core
subjects: mathematics, science, English and social studies, with additional skills focusing on
work readiness, life skills and leadership integrated into the ABE curriculum for older youth.
Both programs use a compressed three-levelled curriculum to provide the equivalent of
Grades 1-6 over a three-year period, with learners completing periodic assessments to
determine if they have met the criteria for promotion to the next level.
Adult education
At present the MoE offers primary and secondary level classes for adult learners at night at
selected government primary and secondary schools using an MoE-approved curriculum.
Most learners enrolling in these programs have dropped out of the formal school system and
are subsequently returning to complete either basic and or secondary education. However,
adult education classes are not offered at all schools; the majority are offered in urban areas.
Limited data is available on these adult education night schools and currently they are not
covered under the School Census. In addition to Night School, Adult Education also
comprises basic literacy and numeracy classes which are held at schools and community
centers around the country. The curriculum is similar to the lower level ABE literacy and
numeracy curriculum.
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8.3 Legal and policy context
The ALP, ABE and adult education programs are managed under the Alternative Education
(AE) Division 47 within the Bureau of Basic and Secondary Education. Each program is
managed by an Assigned Coordinator. Activities for ALP and ABE are guided by the
Accelerated Learning Program Policy (2007) and the Alternative Basic Education Policy
(2011) respectively. A draft harmonized policy is awaiting endorsement.
In the 2013 Joint Education Sector Review48, several recommendations were adopted by the
MoE and partners to: (i) address the provision of education for out of school youth; (ii) review
and harmonize policies to ensure access and quality educational delivery for this target
population; and, (iii) provide improved oversight and management of the sub-sector within
the Ministry. These recommendations, which were later integrated and reflected in the MoE
Operational Plan included, but were not limited to:
Providing a broad based inclusive range of learning options, so that school dropouts
and non-traditional learners could find a second chance to complete basic education
equivalency;
Improving access to AE service provisions at all levels (i.e. national, county and
district);
Developing annual milestones for strengthening capacity at the county and district
levels, based on joint planning at the county and district level for AE to be aligned
with the annual GoL/MoE budget allocation;
Promoting and strengthening the monitoring and evaluation mechanisms for ABE
service delivery;
47 This follows the recommendations included as a part of the 2013 JESR; this change to the organizational
structure was made in 2014.
48 Joint Education Sector Review Report (2013), Ministry of Education, Liberia.
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Additionally, it should be noted that there are several other sectoral policies and strategies
that also seek to support out of school children and youth as well as international
agreements to achieve universal primary education. Relevant GoL policies and plans
include:
National TVET Policy 2015 – 2020 (2015) which seeks to address issues relating to
workforce development and human capital through technical and vocational
opportunities for youth and marginalized groups (including women).
The Economic Stabilization and Recovery Plan (2015) which includes a strategic
intervention, called Strengthening Resilience and Reduce Vulnerability, to ensure
equitable access to free basic education for all children.
The National Policy on Girls Education (2013) that aims to address barriers to
education access and quality for girls, while also addressing issues around
enrolment, retention and completion.
The National Gender Policy (2009) which seeks to ensure access to appropriate
education and skills training for children with disabilities, especially girl children.
8.4 Achievements
MoE achievements include49:
49 This includes achievements for both ALP and ABE programs which are currently operated as separate components.
133
Facilitation of Technical Working Groups (TWGs) to ensure stakeholder involvement
in critical areas, such as development of program quality standards, development
and review of curricula and teacher professional development
Training of master trainers, facilitators and administrators to support the delivery of
ALP and ABE
Piloting of teacher salary payments by mobile money in five counties50.
8.5 Challenges
8.5.1 Many children and young people are not in the correct grade
The problem of overage students is impacting on the quality of education and access to
early grades. With the closure of donor funding for the ALP, there is an urgent need to
address this problem and the root causes which drive overage enrolment. The learning from
the ALP program and other countries facing similar issues should be used to design cost-
effective, large-scale programs to accelerate the learning of overage students, move them to
the correct grade, and reduce the numbers of overage students enrolling into ECE and basic
education.
Current policies do not specify the pathways for learners to ensure a smooth transition back
into the formal education system (or the world of work in the case of older learners). Even at
the site/school level children and or youth who register and complete ALP or ABE can still be
denied entry into the same school system (e.g. entry into Grade 7), despite being taught by
the same teachers. Young people who enroll and finish their ABE program face challenges
in going to junior high school, as there is no policy direction for admittance into Grade 7.
Young people who also express an interest in continuing to vocational education are
constrained as TVET institutions will only accept learners with a Grade 9 level of education.
Currently, there is no policy directive and or framework within which districts and or counties
50 71% of schools report they have cell phone coverage (EMIS, 2015)
134
could be targeted for the provision of AE. Further consideration must be given to areas
where there are high concentrations of out-of-school and overage children.
Work has begun to conduct quality assurance of ABE and ALP service providers and sites
using new quality standards but the coordination and supervision of alternative education
remains a challenge, especially at the county and district level. At the national level, the AE
Division is constrained by lack of basic resources such as computers, printers and other
resources. Basic skills such as planning, budgeting and managing AE activities still need
support. Closer collaborations with the Teacher Education & Management Program, Student
Wellbeing Program and Curriculum & Assessment Program will be necessary to reduce the
isolation of AE activities.
Though Alternative Basic Education Supervisors have been included in the structure of
some county offices51, remaining counties lack these positions. It is unrealistic to expect that
one staff member can be responsible for overall monitoring at the district level. District
Education Officers have limited understanding of ALP and ABE activities, preferring to focus
instead on the more the formal education system. Even for existing ABE Supervisors, and
interested DEOs, transportation to sites for regular monitoring is problematic due to a lack
access to vehicles and general budgetary constraints to support supervisory visits. Close
coordination with the Education Management & Accountability Program and School Quality
Programs will be essential.
There is a lack of trained teachers to implement ALP and ABE programs. At present there is
no pre-service training offered for either group, and the current offerings from RTTIs do not
offer an opportunity to specialize in adult education or teaching ALP learners. Current
approaches include in-service training for MoE teachers already on payroll who then deliver
AE in addition to their regular classes for a small stipend paid by donors though projects.
The sustainability of this approach has been questioned.
AE in-service trainings are usually delivered by partners (in a few instances by or with the
MoE) and can be delivered over varying lengths of time, with no standardized model used by
partners. Training usually takes place during the long vacation periods, but there are little or
no opportunities for continuous professional development outside of these workshops. Site
51These positions have been filled in the counties where the USAID Advancing Youth Project currently operates – Bong,
Grand Bassa, Lofa, Margibi, Monsterrado and Nimba
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administrators/principals seldom receive specialized training in education management to
enable them to better support on-site staff in the delivery of the AE curriculum.
Available materials do exist for ALP and AE – including materials targeted for teachers and
learners. However, it is recognized that materials need to be revised to include more
appropriate learning activities, low-literacy strategies and content for the target ages in line
with the new national curriculum and student assessments planned in the Curriculum &
Assessment Program.
In the case of ABE, a total of forty eight titles52, including learner workbooks and facilitator
manuals have been developed. However, to date these materials have only been procured
for and distributed to a limited number of sites. Wider distribution networks for both ALP and
ABE materials is essential.
Historically, this is a sub-sector that has been donor funded and led which has sometimes
led to fragmentation of approaches. It has also caused inequity in the provision to different
counties. Little work has been done to engage private providers or large concessions to run
AE programs and few private schools offer ALP or ABE. GoL contributions to AE have been
limited with insufficient operational funds or development investment. ALP and ABE stipends
for teachers have not been sustained by MoE after donor funding ceased. However, MoE
and development partners have been encouraging more self-reliance for schools to see
whether alternative local models of funding ALP and ABE emerge.
52 Core areas include: literacy, numeracy, work readiness and life skills.
136
8.6 Overage & Out-of-School Program
Component 1: Increase capacity to plan, budget and manage AE
53 Alternative Education also provides education for adults and it is anticipated these activities will continue while the MoE
focus on the priorities of out-of-school children and overage enrolment.
137
6. Refine the role, qualifications and skill set of AE Supervisors.
7. Recruit, induct and deploy five new AE Supervisors to be based at county education
offices. Coordinate with Education Management Program.
8. Conduct quarterly coordination and refresher meetings for county-based AE
Supervisors (for example, in updated AE curriculum and instructional materials).
Ensure AE Supervisors attend School Inspector training in coordination with School
Quality Program. Explore the possibility of using adapted School Quality Assessment
tool adapted for AE provision.
Update AE national curricula for over-age children and out-of-school children and young
people
1. In partnership with AE providers, review existing ALP and ABE curricula and
instructional materials (including those currently offered by partners) in light of new
primary English and mathematics syllabuses and teacher guides, and in close
collaboration with the Curriculum & Assessment Program. Harmonize learning
outcomes for three levels with regular school curriculum to ensure children and
young people can re-enter successfully. Where necessary, update curricula and
instructional materials for learners.
2. Upload to MoE website and share with partners.
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Establish pre-service short course on AE
5. In coordination with the Teacher Education & Management Program, select 1-2
reputable institutions to develop, trial and implement a low-cost elective or stand-
alone short course in AE for qualified teachers. This should be aligned with any MoE
in-service modules and contain content on AE teaching, learning and management
strategies, AE Policy, quality standards, curriculum and learning from programs.
6. Work with Teacher Education & Management Program and RTTIs to include AE
module in pre-service ‘C’, ‘B’ and ‘ECE’ certificates and in the planned Accelerated
‘C’ certificate.
7. Conduct an analysis of the costs, salary implications and demand for a longer pre-
service AE specialism ‘C’ certificate (12-18 months) for future AE teachers and
facilitators.
Component 3: Overage student program
1. Conduct an analysis of the root causes of overage enrolment in collaboration with the
Education Management and ECE Programs. Review available EMIS data and trends
(for example, to enable prioritization of projects and target areas).
2. Conduct a rapid assessment of evidence and learning from ALP and other
interventions locally and internationally on how to reduce overage enrolment.
3. Working with partners, design, fund, trial, evaluate and implement targeted and
staged interventions to reduce the proportion of overage children and improve
learning outcomes for overage students by targeting at least 100,000 overage
students in the most disadvantaged areas. For example,
a. Measures to address root causes of overage enrolment such as policy
enforcement, parental mobilization, incentives and sanctions to encourage at-
age enrollment
b. School readiness booster classes for overage students in ECE
c. Accelerated Learning Programs
d. Policy changes such as reducing ECE fees
4. Ensure clear messaging to schools, parents and communities on need for overage
children to stay in school and receive appropriate accelerated education. Information
campaign for correct age ECE and G1 enrollment needs to be launched at least two
months prior to start of school year. Accelerated learning option needs to be
available for start of academic year.
5. Continue to encourage, coordinate and share learning with non-government partners
running over-age student programs.
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Component 4: Out-of-school children and young people program
1. Conduct a rapid assessment of evidence and learning from ABE, AYP and other
interventions locally and internationally which reduced the proportion of out-of-school
children and young people (8-15 years).
2. Review available household and research data to define geographical areas and
populations most at need. Coordinate with the Student Wellbeing and TVET
Programs to ensure deep understanding of the root causes.
3. Working with stakeholders, design, fund, trial, evaluate and implement targeted
projects to reduce the number of out-of-school children and young people and
improve their learning and employment outcomes targeting 120,000 out-of-school
children and young people in the most disadvantaged areas. For example,
a. Alternative Basic Education with pathways back into school or employment
b. Interventions to prevent children and young people dropping out of school
c. Measures to reduce the root causes of dropping out or never attending school
4. Continue to encourage, coordinate and share learning with non-government partners
running over-age student programs.
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Chapter 9 Teacher Education & Management Program
9.1 Summary
G2B priority Qualified, motivated and supported teachers with the skills to
improve learning outcomes
141
9.2 Introduction
9.1.1 Teaching workforce
The teacher workforce has increased rapidly in recent years from 44,297 54 in 2010/11 to
approximately 55,000 teachers across ECE, primary and secondary in 201555. Fewer than
50% of teachers are in the public schools although the majority of junior high and senior high
school teachers are in private or faith-based schools (Table 9-1).
56
Table 9-1 Teacher workforce by sector and type of school, all schools, unadjusted for multi-grade teachers
Junior Senior
Sector ECE Primary TVET & AE Total
High High
Female teachers are significantly under-represented in the workforce across all sectors. 20
percent of primary school teachers are female and less than 10 percent of junior high and
secondary school teachers are female (Table 9-2).
142
Table 9-2 Teacher workforce by gender and level of school, all schools
Nearly 26 percent (6,910) of teachers at government and community schools (ECE to senior
high) are volunteer or “household” teachers who are not formally remunerated for their work.
These community schools were established in the reconstruction period or during the
continuing expansion of ECE. There are also approximately 6,000 supplementary teachers
who are due to transition to the full teacher salary scale if resources are available.
An estimated 15% of the teachers on the government payroll are “ghost” teachers who do
not attend to their classes. Recent efforts (Chapter 6) to verify the payroll have been
successful in identifying ghost teachers, those lacking the minimum qualifications and
teachers who are being incorrectly paid57.
Approximately 51 percent of all teachers have the correct minimum qualification for the
grade58 they are teaching (Table 9-3), with approximately 4,200 teachers in government and
community schools without any teaching qualification. Additionally, there are at least 700
teachers who do not have a high school certificate.
57 Ministry of Education (2015) Teacher Verification Report for Montserrado, Bong and Nimba Counties
58Minimum teaching qualifications are: C’ certificate for ECE and primary; ‘B’ certificate for junior high school; degree or
equivalent for senior high school.
143
Table 9-3 Number and share of qualified teachers by level, all schools, 2015
Liberia has been successful in increasing the teaching workforce but the large number of
unqualified teachers has meant that the Pupil-Qualified Teacher Ratio (PQTR) in public
primary schools is 40:1 (EMIS, 2015). However, this masks significant disparities in teacher
deployment across counties (Figure 9-1). Nearly half of Liberia’s teachers work in rural
areas. These teachers face limited access to services (water, banks, health care etc.) and
arduous and expensive travel. In addition, many teachers posted to rural areas are not
familiar with local language, communities and customs.60
60 Ministry of Education (MoE) (2011c). Policies for Reform: Liberian Administrative and Management Policies Guide, Volume
5. Monrovia: MoE. Ministry of Education (MoE) (2015). Educator Management Policy (draft). Monrovia: MoE.
144
Figure 9-1 Pupil-Qualified Teacher Ratio (PQTR) in public primary schools, 2015
Qualified teachers are also less likely to be willing to work in more disadvantaged districts,
increasing the learning problems for children in those remote or poor communities (Figure
9-2).
145
9.1.4 Teacher training
Pre-service ‘C’ teacher education is concentrated at three Rural Teacher Training Institutes
(RTTI) which may also provide in-service professional development. Additional pre-service
teacher education courses are run by public and private universities. The ‘C’ certificate is the
minimum qualification for Grade 1-6 teachers. It was initially re-established as a 9 month-
long pre-service course, currently run as a 12 month course. It will be extended to 18 months
for 2017/2018 and future cohorts. Currently the MoE is trailing the new ‘B’ in-service
certificate for junior high specialist teachers at one RTTI. A bachelor’s degree or equivalent
is the minimum qualification for senior high school teachers. There is no national certificate
for ECE teachers (although around 50% of ECE teachers hold a ‘C’ certificate).
High unit costs at the RTTIs (Table 9-4) are due to the residential programs, relatively low
enrollment of students, the recruitment of lecturers from the Liberian diaspora at relatively
high salaries, and high running costs such as food and maintaining dormitories (World Bank,
2010). In Kakata Rural Teacher Training Institute (KRTTI), the “B Certificate” pilot program
was launched in 2015/16 with a USD 400,000 one-off special allocation besides paying
regular salaries for 100 in-service teachers.
“B Certificate” Pilot
Program at Kakata In-service 592,000 100 24% 76% 5920
RTTI
From 2008 to 2012/13, RTTIs and other programs graduated between 700-1,000 ‘C’
certificate teachers annually for a total of 2,554 pre-service and 1,607 in-service graduates.
146
Of the over 4,000 new graduates, just 15% were female. 61 Nearly 1,158 graduates from
cohorts in 2011-12 and 2012-13 are not yet employed – in part because of a CSA hiring
freeze which disallows the MoE from hiring new teachers. There is no statutory probation
period for new teachers.
The Partnership Schools for Liberia (PSL) partners will trial innovative solutions to the
challenges of managing, training and supporting teachers at 94 ECE and primary schools
between 2016 and 2019. School operators in the PSL trial have been encouraged to
implement a range of different strategies for teacher in-service training and performance
management within the overall direction of the ESP. The rigorous evaluation of the PSL will
inform wider reforms around teacher education and management.
Teacher minimum qualifications are established in the Education Act (2011) for each level of
education aside from ECE. The Act also prescribes the MoE role in teacher recruitment,
certification (licencing), registration and teacher policy. DEOs are responsible for recruiting
teachers to vacant positions and ensuring the quality of education of schools in their district.
County Education Officers are responsible for ensuring adequate payroll positions for their
schools, although these are currently not assigned to a particular institution.
Currently the MoE classifies and pays teachers based only on the level of their professional
qualification. The Medium Term Pay and Benefits Reform, a national civil service initiative is
61
Morris, E., Goyee, O., Hatch, R., Tuowal, D., and Ginsburg, M. (2014). Tracer Study of C-Certificate Program Graduates.
Monrovia: USAID-Liberia Teacher Training Program.
62
King, Korda, Nordstrum & Edwards (2015). ENDLINE ASSESSMENT OF THE IMPACT OF EARLY GRADE READING AND
MATHEMATICS INTERVENTIONS. Monrovia: USAID-Liberia Teacher Training Program.
63
Tubman, Winnehl & Kpelewah, Joshua (2010). Principals Training Assessment & PTA Training Assessment: Final Report.
Monrovia: USAID-Liberia Teacher Training Program.
147
expected to replace the current salary scale with one based on promotion (over a series of
grades) and performance (along a series of steps). Currently, teachers interested in career
advancement or promotion seek to improve their formal qualifications which allows them to
receive higher pay and become more competitive for senior positions. The MoE has drafted
an Educator Management Policy 64 which is expected to guide reform in this area. This
includes policy direction on:
Qualifications and eligibility for each level and type of teacher and education
administrator
Standards for teacher education courses (i.e. ‘C’, ‘B’, ‘A’ and degree level)
The school principal is directly responsible for the oversight and support of teachers. This
support includes providing annual performance reviews of teachers, supporting staff
professional development and helping teachers address issues in the classroom. In most
schools, a Vice-Principal for Instruction (VPI) plays a key supporting role in this activity.
The National Teachers Association of Liberia is a body which represents the interests of
teachers. At the school level, teachers participate in school governance through the PTA.
9.4 Achievements
MoE achievements in Teacher Education and Management include:
64 Ministry of Education (MoE) (2015). Educator Management Policy (draft). Monrovia: MoE
65
Ministry of Education (MoE) (2014) Code of Conduct for Teachers and School Administrators in Liberia.
Monrovia: MoE
148
Operation of three semi-autonomous RTTIs which graduate around 528 pre-service
‘C’ certificate primary teachers annually and plan to graduate 100 ‘B’ certificate in-
service teachers in 2018
Standardized ‘C’ certificate teacher training materials used across all three RTTIs
Planned extension of ‘C’ certificate pre-service course to 18 months and drafting of
revised extended curriculum
Re-establishment of ‘B’ certificate teacher training at one RTTI
Development of CPD curriculum
Educator Management Policy66 drafted including proposed teacher job descriptions
Published the Code of Conduct for Teachers and School Administrators in Liberia
(2014)
Teacher payroll verification in six counties (Chapter 6)
Commencement of teacher testing process to target unqualified teachers for
professional development or retrenchment
MoE, UNESCO and CEFIT (China Education Fund in Trust) ICT integration into ‘C’
certificate curriculum
Begun standardization of private teacher training institutions
Pilot of teachers’ salary payment by mobile phone in two counties
9.5 Challenges
9.5.1 Teacher payroll has large numbers of missing, unqualified and incorrectly paid
teachers
The MoE payroll is the largest component of the MoE budget at approximately $35 million
(USD) annually – an average of 80% of MoE’s total expenditure. There are significant
problems with the payroll including:
66 Ministry of Education (2015) Educator Management Policy for the Republic of Liberia (draft)
149
Problems in payroll management have a serious negative ripple effect though-out the
system including:
These challenges are addressed in detail in the Education Management and Accountability
Program.
9.5.2 Many teachers do not have the correct qualifications and foundation skills
Prior to 2011, many teachers who entered the workforce did not complete a basic teaching
qualification. Some of these teachers lack foundational skills in literacy and numeracy
themselves and may not have completed high school. Other teachers are teaching at high
school and ECE with just the ‘C’ certificate qualification.
9.5.3 Most teachers do not receive structured and scheduled Continuous Professional
Development
There is also a pressing need to re-train unqualified teachers to reach the minimum ‘C’
certificate standard in a cost-effective way. Improving CPD systems, modules and
resourcing will improve teacher morale, build the human capacity of the workforce and target
improved teaching at children’s learning outcomes.
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9.5.4. Teacher performance management systems are inadequate
Effective teacher performance management is constrained by three key issues: the absence
of agreed on teacher performance metrics and measurement tools, an employment system
does not link salary and promotion to teacher performance, and difficulties in upholding
professional standards. Particular problems include:
Absent and incompetent teachers have a major impact on student learning outcomes and
waste resources. If schools do not deal immediately with abusive teachers, there are serious
consequences for the children in their care. A salary system linked solely to level of
qualification encourages ambitious teachers to leave for additional studies and drains the
brightest teachers from early grades into high school.
Schools in poor, rural and remote areas are less likely than those in urban areas to have a
sufficient number of qualified teachers. To add to the difficulty facing rural and remote
districts, these same areas also face great difficulties in attracting newly qualified teachers,
who may not want to return to their counties. Rural areas’ limited access to basic services
and amenities and limited opportunities for economic and career advancement also act as a
disincentive to teachers. Snyder et al, notes (2011) “in many rural settings there is no
housing. Some schools have shut down because of inadequate housing to attract qualified
teachers. This is particularly acute for female teachers, who need safe and secure dwellings
near their schools” (p. 21).67
Currently, once every month, a large number of teachers miss several days of school and
pay transport, lodging, and food costs (related to travel) in order to access their monthly
salary. The current situation exacerbates teacher absenteeism, disrupts student learning,
and reduces teacher take home pay. At present, there is no policy in place which
67Snyder, C.W., Hailesalassie, A. M., Chelleh, M., and Odharo, J. (2011). Females Teaching in Liberia:
Motivating, Recruiting, and Retaining Female Teachers in Basic Education. Monrovia: USAID-Liberia Teacher
Training Program.
151
incentivizes teachers to work in rural and remote areas or reduces the burden facing
teachers posted to rural and remote areas.
Women make up less than 30% of the teaching profession (in both the public and private
sectors). The largest proportion of women can be found in early childhood education, with
very few in high schools. There are particular shortages of women teachers in science,
technology and mathematics. A significant number of women have been trained as teachers
but are not working in schools and female enrollment at the RTTIs was 20% in 2015/16
Women teachers report experiencing sexual harassment, and facing difficulties when being
assigned to schools in rural areas.68
68Stromquist et al., ‘Women teachers in Liberia: Social and institutional forces accounting for their
underrepresentation’, International Journal of Educational Development 33:5 (September 2013), pp 521–530.
152
5. In coordination with the Education Management & Accountability Program, ECE
Program and TVET Program, regularly review and model teacher workforce data and
projections.
Training and tools for principals and DEOs in teacher performance management
6. Train DEOs in teacher performance management (Education Management &
Accountability Program, Chapter 6).
7. Train principals in teacher performance management (School Quality Program,
Chapter 5).
National dissemination of the teacher Code of Conduct to teachers, parents and students
13. Publish and widely disseminate the Code of Conduct through pre- and in-service
teacher training.
14. Produce and disseminate a child-friendly version of the teacher Code of Conduct for
parents and students.
Component 2: Increase the proportion of qualified and trained teachers
Sustain and expand ‘C’ and ‘B’ certificate teacher training for unqualified teachers
1. Expand ‘B’ certificate in-service (600 graduates over four years) and sustain ‘C’ pre-
service (1,000 graduates) program at RTTIs. Ensure that newly qualified teachers
153
are bonded with a written agreement and conditions (for example, to serve in remote
areas for a certain number of years) if MoE is funding their training. Conduct regular
tracer studies of newly qualified teachers to inform policy. Explore recruitment of
recent graduates and National Volunteer Service volunteers to address gaps.
2. Explore options for gradually introducing user-pay for residential pre-service
programs being mindful of risks of excluding women and teachers from remote
areas.
3. Develop an Accelerated ‘C’ certificate in-service program for counties too remote
from RTTIs. Ensure both ‘C’ programs include substantial instructional modules on
literacy, numeracy, health (including comprehensive sexuality education), AE and
special education and are based on the new English and mathematics syllabuses
and instructional materials.
4. Pilot the Accelerated ‘C’ certificate in-service program (up to six weeks residential
plus CPD and self-study).
5. Scale up program to disadvantaged counties first. Target teachers identified in
previous teacher testing.
6. Ensure sufficient budget for additional payroll costs from certifying supplementary or
unqualified teachers. Refer to Education Management & Accountability Program.
7. Coordinate with ECE, TVET and AE on certification and teacher training.
In-service CPD teacher training program for qualified basic education teachers
1. Review existing in-service training modules from Liberia and overseas. Work in
conjunction with the Curriculum and Assessment Program and ECE Program to
design an in-service CPD teacher training program with modules that focus on
teaching English, mathematics, school health and special education for primary
teachers.
2. Coordinate with ECE, TVET and AE programs to ensure coherence with their
planned teacher training activities.
3. Add mandatory CPD days to school calendar.
4. Arrange schools into CPD clusters (6-7 schools per cluster) based on geography.
5. Train 20 Instructional Supervisors at the county and district level for one week
annually (total of 300 Instructional Supervisors).
6. Conduct one week of cluster-based in-service training for 12,000 lower basic
teachers annually on English and mathematics. Target training at most
disadvantaged schools first.
154
7. Ensure that the CPD teacher training program includes a government approved CPD
Certificate for teachers that successfully complete their CPD course. Ideally this
should be worth credit points at respected institutions.
8. Pilot CPD program, including learning from the PSL trial and other evaluations and
studies in the region, review and scale up CPD teacher training, initially targeting
districts with the greatest need.
155
Chapter 10 Curriculum & Assessment Program
10.1 Summary
G2B priority Schools and teachers have the resources to improve learning
Early grade assessment national roll-out
SDG target 4.1 By 2030, ensure that all girls and boys complete free,
equitable and quality primary and secondary education leading to
relevant and effective learning outcomes
156
10.2 Introduction
10.2.1 Curriculum
The national curriculum is compulsory for all schools and widely used (Table 10-1). At higher
grades, schools also use the West African Examination Council (WAEC) syllabus in
preparation for the WAEC examinations (Table 10-2). There is a new ECE curriculum which
MoE plans to integrate into the national curriculum. AE and TVET curriculum have
historically been developed independently, although the ALP curriculum has been revised to
harmonize with the 2011 national curriculum. AE and TVET curricular are discussed in their
relevant chapters.
Table 10-1 Percentage of primary and high schools using the national curriculum, 2015
Public 63.9%
Private 79.8%
Faith-based 80.2%
Community 58.3%
Total 75.9%
157
The national curriculum was approved in 2011 (Table 10-3) and consists of subject syllabus
documents 69 supported by various supplementary material. WAEC publishes syllabuses
annually for the end of Grade 9 and 12 examinations in a wide range of subjects.
Table 10-3 National curriculum & WAEC curriculum, by grade, subject and date revised
2. Mathematics
3. Science
5. Physical Education
1. Language Arts
2. Mathematics
3. General Science
4. French
7-9 Feb 2011
5. Social Studies
6. Physical Education
158
1. English Language
2. Literature in English
3. Mathematics
4. Biology
6. Physics
7. History
8. Geography
9. Economics
West
WAEC Grade 12 African Senior
Various examinations
examination Secondary Certificate
(WAESSC)
The school day is 5 hours divided into 45 minute periods. The school year is a minimum of
200 days divided into two semesters and six marking periods (a total of 900 hours annually).
Some schools operate double shifts and others provide alternative education night classes.
The 2015/16 education calendar states that schools should prioritize reading and literacy
practice. However, minimum contact hours per week for primary numeracy and literacy are
approximately three hours and 45 minutes per week which is low by international
standards70.
Instructional materials for teachers were developed for early grade reading and mathematics
for the EGRA Plus interventions between 2009 and 2015. EGRA Plus was based on a
randomized control trial71 (60 treatment primary schools) of a comprehensive intervention
designed to improve student literacy in early grades. It consisted of a package of scripted
70For example, international recommendations are for at least one hour of reading instruction daily (USAID
(2009) First Principles for Early Grades Reading Programs in Developing Countries)
71
Piper & Korda (2010). EGRA Plus: Liberia Program Evaluation Report. Monrovia: USAID
159
lesson plans (110 lessons per grade), teacher guides, levelled and decodable reading
materials, student workbooks, regular training for Grade 1-3 teachers, and instructional
coaching organized around core components of early reading and mathematics acquisition
72
.
Between 2011 and 2015, the Liberia Teacher Training Program (LTTP) project continued the
EGRA Plus intervention in around 1,200 schools in five counties (Bong, Lofa, Margibi,
Montserrado, and Nimba) which continued to have a positive impact on the reading and
numeracy skills of grade 2 and grade 3 students73. There are no other recent, widespread
Government-developed instructional materials or teacher guides for G1-12 but commercial
teacher guides for grade 5-9 were included in last supplementary material distribution.
In 2015-16 there was a major procurement of school textbooks for primary and junior high
schools by the Ministry of Education and Global Partnership of Education. This included one-
million supplementary readers (for grade 1-4 students); 340,000 levelled readers, one million
textbooks in mathematics, science, social studies and language for Grade 5-9 students and
200,000 teachers’ guides in these subjects. The procurement also provided over 1.4 million
pieces of supplementary material related to language, social studies, and the sciences. The
distribution reached 2,489 schools and benefited 373,845 students. As a consequence, the
current textbook to student ratios are closer to MoE standards (Table 10-4) but still not ideal.
72 RTI. (2011). EGRA Plus: Liberia. Understanding the Causal Mechanisms: EGRA Plus’s Effectiveness. Note, the full
treatment intervention was implemented in 60 schools in 15 districts across 7 counties.
73King, Korda, Nordstrum & Edwards (2015). ENDLINE ASSESSMENT OF THE IMPACT OF EARLY GRADE READING
AND MATHEMATICS INTERVENTIONS. Monrovia: USAID-Liberia Teacher Training Program.
160
Table 10-4 Student/textbook ratio in primary and secondary schools, Language Arts and Mathematics, 2015
Mean Mean
student/textbook student/textbook
Level and type of school ratio ratio
Primary (all)
10.2.5 Assessment
Students are supposed to be tested at the end of every marking period, semester and school
year. Most curriculum statements do not offer explicit guidance on best practices associated
with such tests. Additionally, many schools reportedly set entrance examinations74, despite
this practice being prohibited at grade 1 for all Government schools. This excludes many
students and has a major impact on grade repetition and overage enrolment, particularly in
early childhood classrooms.
National examinations are selective and occur at grade 9 and 12. A pass on the Grade 9
West African Examinations Council (WAEC) Liberia Junior High School Certificate
Examination (LJHSCE) is a pre-requisite for promotion to grade 10. High school students
pay approximately USD 20 and USD 28 for grade 9 and 12 examination registration
respectively with MoE contributing to the administration of the examination.
74 UNICEF. (2012). Liberia Country Study. Profiles of Children out of school. UNICEF Liberia.
161
In 2014, around 33,000 grade 9 and 28,000 grade 12 students sat the LJHSCE and senior
high school examinations (LSHSCE) respectively. Due to Ebola there were no examinations
in 2015. However, examination results are poor (pass rates of 60% in grade 9 and 47% in
grade 12 in 2014 75 ) and there are wide variations in performance across schools and
counties (Figure 10-1and Figure 10-2). Pass rates have seen significant declines. In 2007,
over 95% of examinees passed the exam compared to 84% in 2012 and 60% in 2014. The
reason for the decline in scores is unclear. Female students generally underperform and
public schools perform worse, on average, than private schools.
Figure 10-1 Grade 9 pass rates by type of provider, disaggregated by gender, 2014
75 WAEC (2014) Presentation on the West African Examinations Council, July 16, 2015
162
Figure 10-2 WAEC LSHSCE pass rates by county, 2014
There is currently no system-wide learning assessment in Grades 1-6 so the MoE lacks a
diagnostic tool to identify literacy and numeracy performance at a nationally representative
scale where results can be disaggregated by gender, county, urban- rural status, school
ownership, etc. There are no standardized tests for diagnostic use in schools although
EGRA and EGMA assessments are developed for Liberia. Two literacy diagnostic baselines
in 200876 and 201477 found significant weaknesses in the reading proficiency among grade 2
and 3 students.
As part of the PSL trial, school operators will use different support strategies for improving
children’s performance. All PSL schools will deliver the national curriculum (including ECE)
and work within the G2B-ESP framework for curriculum and assessment reform, with
operators encouraged to explore more effective, low-cost teaching and learning approaches
and support materials (for example, tablet based curriculum and assessment). Evaluation
data from the PSL trial and PSL annual assessments will be shared and feed into the
development of national curriculum and assessment materials.
76 RTI. (2009). EGRA Plus Liberia. Data Analytic Report: EGRA Plus: Liberia Baseline Assessment.
77Hobbs, J. and Davidson, M. (2015). Expanding EGRA: The Early Grade Literacy Assessment and its
contribution to language instruction in Liberia. Presentation at UKFIET 2015.
163
10.3 Legal and policy context
The Education Reform Act (2011) calls for the establishment of a Center for Curriculum
Development and Research, which would be responsible for developing curriculum and
instructional materials for all schools, including, if sought, developing local language
curricula. The Act also confirms the Center as leading in the area of textbook policies, as
well as in curriculum for “teaching of national languages, human rights, citizenship and civil
responsibilities, health and hygiene, agricultural and other educational programs” (MoE
2011: 19). This Centre is not yet established.
In the absence of the Center, the Bureau of Curriculum, Research and Textbooks retains
responsibility for the development of the national curriculum. Guidelines for Textbook
Origination, Provision and Management 78 provide guidance on textbook selection and
approval, publishing, procurement, distribution, use, safekeeping, inventory and storage as
well as roles and responsibilities of key stakeholders. The syllabuses list textbook
recommendations on a subject-by-subject basis. Textbook procurement does not appear to
be included in the annual budget submission and currently schools cannot use their grants to
purchase textbooks. Currently, there are no national policies for curriculum development or
assessment.
While English is identified as the national language of instruction, the proposed Center would
be responsible for developing curriculum for local languages. There are over 18 different
language groups and the Act allows County School Boards to select a local language which
may also be taught in primary schools. To date no local language curriculum has been
approved.
The Act identifies the West African Examination Council (WAEC) as responsible for
promotional examinations of the students. WAEC examinations are based on syllabi
developed by WAEC. Most SH schools in Liberia follow the WAEC curriculum but there is
some concern among stakeholders about the extent to which the content, pacing and
sequencing of the national curriculum and WAEC curriculum are aligned. An expert group –
the Public Examinations Review Committee - has recently been formed to review issues
around the WAEC results.
164
10.4 Achievements
MoE achievements in Curriculum and Assessment include:
10.5 Challenges
10.5.1 Student learning outcomes are low, especially in literacy
Literacy is a national priority throughout the education system. Two diagnostic assessments
of early grade literacy have been conducted:79 an EGRA baseline completed in November
2008 (RTI 2009)80 and an Early Grade Literacy Assessment (EGLA) assessment completed
in 2014 (Hobbes and Davidson, 2015)81. The evaluations tested non-representative samples
of grade 2 and grade 3 students in letter naming, phonemic awareness, unfamiliar word
decoding, oral reading fluency, reading comprehension, and listening comprehension.
In both assessments, grade 3 students’ mean scores in oral reading fluency came in below
25 correct words per minute. International benchmarks identify an oral reading fluency of
79
The documents referred to for this section include:
RTI. (2009). EGRA Plus Liberia. Data Analytic Report: EGRA Plus: Liberia Baseline Assessment.
Piper, B. and Korda, M. (2010). EGRA Plus: Liberia. Program evaluation report.
Hobbs, J. and Davidson, M. (2015). Expanding EGRA: The Early Grade Literacy Assessment and its
contribution to language instruction in Liberia. Presentation at UKFIET 2015.
Hobbs, J and Ajoku, L. (2014). Lost for Words: An Analysis of Early Grade Reading Assessments in the
Most Vulnerable Communities in Five of the Worlds’ Poorest Countries from 2012-2014. Concern.
80
In November 2008, RTI conducted a baseline literacy assessment using EGRA. The assessment collected
EGRA data from nearly 3,000 Grade 2 and Grade 3 students in Liberia.
81In 2014, Concern implemented an EGRA-like assessment (called EGLA) and evaluated 940 Grade 2 and
Grade 3 students in Grand Bassa county.
165
between 45-65 correct words per minute to be strongly associated with comprehension82.
Nearly 35% of grade 2 students and 17% of grade 3 students were unable to read a single
word. Of grade 3 students assessed, 17% had zero scores in oral reading fluency and 40%
had zero scores in reading comprehension (RTI 2009). Both studies found slightly lower
baseline scores for girls than for boys. Unsurprisingly, national WAEC examination results
are also poor.
Worryingly, high poverty households and households in rural or remote areas are more likely
to be headed by an individual with lower levels of literacy and educational attainment than
the general population83. Children from these households are also likely to score lower on
reading assessments. As reading is essential for the rest of the curriculum, the
consequences for individuals and for the nation’s economic and social development are
severe and long-lasting.
10.5.2 Curriculum documents do not provide enough support and guidance for
teachers
One of the contributory causes of the poor learning outcomes is the limited structure
provided by the curriculum. 84 The Language Arts English curriculum for grades 1-6, for
example, only contains limited content in English language spelling, grammar, composition
and reading 85 . The syllabus does not emphasize important instructional information (i.e.,
sequence of phonological and vocabulary acquisition, pace of reading acquisition, national
standards etc.) or provide adequate guidance on pedagogy for teaching reading
Many basic education teachers have either one year of post-high school teacher education
or are untrained. Teacher guides with detailed scripted lesson plans such as EGRA Plus
show the potential of additional instructional scaffolding to improve reading and mathematics
outcomes. These instructional materials are most effective when coupled with sufficient
decodable reading books and targeted teacher training.
While, the use of external funding has filled a critical gap, limited progress has been made in
ensuring enough Government resources are allocated to replenish and update student
82 RTI International and the Liberian Education Trust (2010) EGRA Plus Evaluation Report; USAID
83 Liberia Institute of Statistics and Geo-Information Services (2013) Demographic Household Survey
84Most subject curricula identify a few opportunities for group work, but for the most part curriculum statements
emphasize lecture as the primary mode for delivering subject matter knowledge.
85 MoE (2011) Language Arts English Syllabus
166
textbooks. More work needs to be done on costing a sustainable plan for textbook
procurement.86
A review of the primary curriculum could also increase the minimum lesson time for literacy
and numeracy to ensure these are prioritized in schools and introduce improved classroom
and national assessments to track students’ progress. The new curriculum and teacher
guides (with scripted lesson plans and sample assessment tasks) will need to be used by
both pre- and in-service teachers for maximum impact so close collaboration with the Bureau
of Teacher Education is essential.
10.5.3 MoE and teachers do not have strong systems for assessing primary student
progress
There are no systems in place for measuring student learning outcomes in grades 1-6 aside
from end-of-chapter tests or end-of-semester school-based tests. It is not possible to: (i)
determine the level of student learning in early grades or (ii) track system progress in terms
of learning outcomes. A national assessment system for literacy and numeracy would help
MoE identify key challenges to meeting national goals and learn whether interventions
designed to improve student learning are having an impact.
Previous reading assessments have been conducted by external organizations and MoE will
need to increase its technical expertise to design, implement and analyze such
assessments. Existing EGRA and Early Grade Mathematics Assessment (EGMA) periodic
assessment materials are still valid for Grades 1-3 and could be incorporated into a national
assessment system.
At the classroom level, learning assessment tools should be included in teacher guides to
enable teachers to evaluate students and identify which students may require additional
support. This is especially important for identifying children who have special educational
needs for early intervention.
The recent Joint Education Sector Review87 identifies “establish and implement a national
reading strategy” as a key priority. The MoE 2015 Annual Report states the MoE will
“…invest further in early grade reading and math, including teacher training, learning
materials and national assessments 88 .” As a response to issues around the WAEC
86 A recent World Bank study Getting Textbooks to Every Child in Sub-Saharan Africa speaks to some of these
issues seen in Liberia and identifies some ways forward. World Bank (2016). Getting Textbooks to Every Child in
Sub-Saharan Africa: Strategies for Addressing the High Cost and Low Availability Problem.
87 Ministry of Education (2016) Joint Education Sector Review; p15
88 Ministry of Education (2015) Annual Report 2015; p29
167
examinations, a Public Examinations Review Committee was established in September
2016.
89 Commercial teacher guides for grade 5-6 textbooks were distributed as part of the GPE project in 2016.
168
4. In partnership with the Teacher Education and Management Program CPD and pre-
service activities, develop additional teacher training modules for the new syllabus
and teacher guides including videos demonstrating effective teaching strategies.
5. Approve and procure sufficient copies of new materials for pre- and in-service
teachers.
6. Evaluate the impact of the materials on student learning and teacher practice using
the national assessments (Curriculum & Assessment Program) and inspections
(Education Management Program).
Develop primary textbooks and reading book criteria
1. Develop student textbook and reading book criteria in line with framework, syllabuses
and teacher guides. Update Textbook Policy – Textbook Development and
Distribution Policy for Kindergarten, Primary, Junior and Senior Secondary Education
produced in 2008.
2. Agree on arrangement for developing Grade 1-4 Textbooks based on the new
Curriculum Framework, focusing on mathematics and English. Inform commercial
publishers of new requirements. Inform schools of approved textbooks which meet
these requirements.
3. Develop costing models for textbook and reading book procurement and prioritize
early grade English and mathematics.
169
Chapter 11 Student Well-being Program
11.1 Summary
SDG targets 4.5 By 2030, eliminate gender disparities in education and ensure
equal access to all levels of education and vocational training for
the vulnerable, including persons with disabilities, indigenous
peoples and children in vulnerable situations
4.a Build and upgrade education facilities that are child, disability
and gender sensitive and provide safe, non-violent, inclusive and
effective learning environments for all
170
2. Counter school-related Assistant Minister for Basic &
gender-based violence Secondary Education
171
11.2 Introduction
Inequality, especially gender inequality, and poor health status disadvantages students in all
parts of the education system. Improving access to education and learning outcomes
requires interventions to improve student well-being through:
ensuring that male and female students from all communities, especially
disadvantaged communities, can start school on time and complete education (ECE
Program, Chapter 7, and Overage and Out-of-School Program, Chapter 8)
improving the skills of teachers and principals to include male and female students,
informing parents of the Code of Conduct and increasing the number of women
teachers, especially in high schools (Teacher Education & Management Program,
Chapter 9);
developing curriculum and instructional materials which show that both girls and boys
have the same rights and the same potential (Curriculum & Assessment Program,
Chapter 10);
revising the curriculum and developing instructional materials and teacher training
modules that can deliver culturally appropriate, gender sensitive and age specific
Comprehensive Sexuality Education;
building sufficient toilets and water systems (School Quality Program, Chapter 5);
training principals, inspectors and district education officers in student well-being
management and responsibilities (Education Management & Accountability
Program, Chapter 6)
ensuring that schools are safe places where students are not harassed or exploited;
providing effective reporting and support systems for students;
ensuring that students are healthy and well-fed; and,
implementing targeted programs which improve education access and learning
outcomes for girls and young women, especially in upper basic and high school.
This chapter addresses the latter four issues for student well-being across all levels of
education.
Girls and young women are less likely than boys to complete basic or secondary education
(Figure 11-1). This is due to a range of issues including:
There is marked regional variation in girls’ access to education which is noticeably better in
Montserrado County (in Montserrado there are 130,726 girls in primary school, compared to
119,541 boys). However, both at-age enrollment rates for both genders and gender
disparities are worse in other counties: net intake rates are very low (for instance, in River
Gee and Sinoe) and disparities in net intake rates are wide in many counties (notably
Gbarpolu and Grand Bassa) (Figure 11-2).
Figure 11-2 Primary school net intake rate (NIR) by county and gender, 2015
173
Gender inequality in the education system is linked to inequality in wider society. Wealth,
economic security and decision-making power are all unevenly distributed. 90 Persistent
gender biases and gendered beliefs are widespread both in the education sector and across
society. A survey of school students, for instance, found that 75% of male students agreed
that ‘men are superior to women’.91
Liberia has already seen significant progress in extending education to women. Comparing
schooling for men and women of different age groups illustrates that change (Figure 11-3).
Within the public education sector, the Gender Parity Index (GPI) has improved from 0.76 in
2012 to 0.84 in 2015 in primary and secondary education. Nonetheless, girls still attend
school at lower rates than boys and access to secondary education is a particular problem.
100%
90%
80%
70%
60%
50%
40%
30%
20%
10%
0%
Male Female Male Female Male Female Male Female Male Female
Age 15-24 Age 25-34 Age 35-44 Age 45-54 Age 55-64
No education Incomplete Primary Complete Primary
Incomplete JS Complete JS Incomplete SS
Complete SS Higher
Source: HIES 2014
90See the Global Gender Gap Index report for 2015, which ranks Liberia 112th out of 145 countries, with inequality especially
pronounced in the political and economic spheres. http://reports.weforum.org/global-gender-gap-report-
2015/economies/#economy=LIB
91 Postmus et al., ‘Examining gender based violence and abuse among Liberian school students in four counties: An
exploratory study’, Child Abuse Neglect 44 (June 2015), 76-86. See also ‘Passing the test – the real cost of being a student’,
IBIS, Concern, the Norwegian Refugee Council and Save the Children, 2014, available via http://ibis-
global.org/publications/passing-test-real-cost-being-student/ .
174
11.2.2 The gender gap in learning outcomes
Girls are also less likely to succeed in education. The differences in education outcomes
emerge at the early grades, and become more pronounced as students grow older. By
Grade 9 and Grade 12, fewer girls are sitting the WASSCE and WAEC exams, and fewer
girls are passing. Though the gap is steadily narrowing, in 2016 47% of candidates sitting
the examinations were female. Of the female candidates, 39% passed, compared to 41% of
male candidates.92 There are also significant gaps in learning outcomes across the wider
population who do not complete Grade 12: Young women’s learning outcomes are
significantly poorer than those of young men: 38% of young women aged 15–24 are unable
to read a basic sentence, compared to just 17% of young men. In rural areas, 67% of young
women cannot read a simple sentence, compared to 32% of young men in rural areas.93
These disparities in school achievement continue after secondary school, and are replicated
in the teaching profession. Far too few Liberian women study science, technology,
engineering and mathematics fields at the tertiary level. In 2012, for instance, just 4.8 per
cent of women graduating from tertiary education had completed science programs (and
women constituted only 38.2 per cent of graduates). Women are less likely to enter the
teaching profession (Table 11-1) and become a principal (Table 5-4), and those who do face
discrimination and multiple obstacles. 94 Just 20% of trainee teachers at the RTTIs are
women.
Table 11-1 Teacher workforce by gender and level of school, public schools, 2015
Teachers
Male 3409 10,447 3568 1520 573 15,894
92Calculation of gender ratio of candidates and gender-disaggregated pass rate, using results for 2012 – 2016
WASSCE and WAEC examinations, 2012-2016. In 2016, 38.80% of female candidates passed; 41.36% of male
candidates passed.
93 World Inequality Database on Education.
94 Stromquist et al., ‘Women teachers in Liberia: Social and institutional forces accounting for their underrepresentation’,
International Journal of Educational Development 33:5 (September 2013), 521-530.
175
Though there are gender disparities in learning outcomes, successful interventions have
demonstrated that these can reduced and eliminated. Notably, over the past decade,
women’s literacy rates have increased more quickly than those of men 95. Additionally, a
recent EGRA intervention shows that, while Grade 2 and Grade 3 girls may start off behind
boys in reading skills, the intervention allows them to catch up: at the conclusion of the
intervention, girls’ scores were no different from those of boys.96
The Gender-Equitable Education and Achievement Program (GEEAP) enrolled 60% girls,
and saw marked improvement in learning outcomes. Between 2012 and 2013, the program
of grants, classes and community programs obtained an 86% promotion rate for the 1,122
Grade 7 and 8 students (580 girls and 542 boys) enrolled. The Girls’ Opportunities to Access
Learning (GOAL) Plus reached a total of 8,000 students in Grades 1-6, providing wide-
ranging support for students and community members.
Meanwhile, the Special Girls’ Education Initiative provided night school classes for pregnant
girls, young mothers, and mothers who wished to return to school. Childcare and other
support facilitated a return to education for girls and young women whose education had
been interrupted. Implemented in Montserrado, Bomi and Lofa counties, the program offered
alternative education, up to the equivalent of Grade 6. Though initially targeted at girls and
young women whose education had been disrupted by pregnancy and parenting
responsibilities, the SGEI attracted women of all ages who had dropped out or never begun
school.
95 UNESCO Institute of Statistics: literacy rate for male population over 15 years of age increased from 61% to
62% between 2004 and 2015; during the same period for female population over 15 years of age, literacy rate
increased from 26% to 33%.
96Benjamin Piper and Medina Korda, ‘EGRA Plus: Liberia, Program Evaluation Report’, RTI International and the
Liberian Education Trust, for the United States Agency for International Development, 2009.
97 Postmus et al., ‘Examining gender based violence and abuse among Liberian school students in four counties:
An exploratory study’, Child Abuse Neglect 44 (June 2015), 76-86. See also ‘Passing the test – the real cost of
being a student’, IBIS, Concern, the Norwegian Refugee Council and Save the Children, 2014, available via
http://ibis-global.org/publications/passing-test-real-cost-being-student/ .
176
homosexual sex is strongly taboo, which may discourage reporting, especially of
transactional sex and sexual exploitation involving boys.
‘Sex for grades’ (the rape of students by teachers engaging in transactional sex or
threatening students with failure) is probably commonplace. ‘Sex for grades’ is often
represented as a form of bribery, but the relationship of power that a teacher has over a
student means that students, even if they are above the age of consent, cannot freely
consent. In MoE surveys and focus groups, students report teachers explicitly or implicitly
threatening them with fail grades if they do not ‘offer’ sex.98
Efforts have been made to train school-based counsellors to support young men and
women. A manual and six-day training program have been developed but issues around
counsellors’ roles, time and allowances remain and most schools do not yet have a trained
counsellor of either sex. There are plans to provide a helpline for students to report cases of
abuse, and the teachers’ Code of Conduct has been updated, with a student-friendly version
being planned (Teacher Education & Management Program). It is important that there is an
inter-ministerial response: MoE will not be able to achieve measurable improvements alone,
without the support of law and justice agencies.
Pregnancy interrupts the education of too many Liberian girls and young women. 31% of
young women will have get pregnant before the age of 20 (LDHS, 2013) a very significant
proportion of the school-age population, especially as nearly all students are overage for the
grade in which they are enrolled.
98Ministry of Education focus group (with girls from four schools), July 2015; Ministry of Education survey of
university students (survey included questions on whether students had been asked for sex in exchange for
grades during their schooling), February 2016. Note that these were small-scale, qualitative surveys and not
designed to collect representative samples.
99Liberia Country Study: Profiles of Children Out of School, Subah-Belleh Associates, UNESCO Institute of
Statistics and UNICEF, 2012.
100‘In their Own Words: Girls from Liberia Speak on Sexuality, Pregnancy and Services’, International Planned
Parenthood Federation, Foundation for Women’s Health, Research and Development (FORWARD) and Planned
Parenthood Association of Liberia, 2012.
101 ‘In their Own Words’, 2012; MoE scoping study, 2015.
177
their families feel ashamed, choose to withdraw from school and are reluctant to return.
Principals and teachers often remove the young woman from education, sometimes to night
school, increasing the risk she will drop out of school. The National Policy on Girls’
Education does not explicitly protect the right of pregnant girls to continue attending the
school of their choice, nor does it strongly affirm their right to reasonable flexibility on
attendance and assessment requirements.
The education sector is also an important part of efforts prevent early pregnancy.
Comprehensive sexuality education (CSE) is built around teaching life skills, including
decision-making and negotiation skills, discussions of gender roles and relationships. The
Division of School Health has developed a CSE curriculum in partnership with UNFPA,
which is now being integrated into the national curriculum. Additionally, school health clubs
have been established (approximately 500-600 were set up during 2015/16) in partnership
with UNICEF and menstruation guidelines and activities included in health club and WASH
guidelines.
In other areas, work undertaken in Bureaus and Divisions across the Ministry has
contributed to gender objectives. For instance, staff working on water, sanitation and
hygiene have ensured that guidelines have incorporated girl-friendly measures. School
construction and renovations undertaken under the Global Partnership for Education
program incorporated facilities for menstrual hygiene.
Over 400,000 students are fed daily in ECE and basic education schools. Liberia has been
providing school feeding since the 1960s and the national school feeding program now
covers 14 counties through two providers: World Food Program (nine counties, 270,000
students) and Mary’s Meals (520 public and non-government schools, 157,000 students).
MoE plays a monitoring and supervisory role and leads a monthly coordination meeting. As
levels of child stunting remain high (42% of five-year old children according to recent
UNICEF estimates) and many communities are food insecure the program will need to
continue, although there are efforts to introduce home grown school feeding using locally
procured foodstuffs (a WFP pilot at 12 schools in Nimba is currently underway).
The school deworming program targets 6-15 year old children (in school and in the
surrounding community) across all counties. The MoE, in collaboration with the Ministry of
Health (MoH), aims to provide deworming medicines at the start of each academic year and
children should receive two doses of deworming medication annually. Deworming medicines
are usually donated by international development partners, and then warehoused by the
MoH; then funds for transportation and distribution are required. The medicines are
178
distributed in both public and private schools based on the National Worm Control in School-
Age Children - Guide for County and District Managers and Teacher Training Kit. At the
beginning of the 2016/2017 school year, deworming medicines were distributed to about 1.2
million basic school-aged children.
Few children and young people with disabilities attend school (Overage & Out-of-School
Program, Chapter 8) and those that are enrolled face significant challenges: poor
infrastructure, lack of toilets, distance from school and teachers who lack the skills and
knowledge to teach effectively. Although there are a small number of schools for children
with physical disabilities, MoE has not been able to regularly conduct quality assurance of
their programs. There is an urgent need to include special education in pre-service and in-
service teacher training (Teacher Education & Management Program, Chapter 9) and school
management and inspection (School Quality Program, Chapter 5, and, Education
Management & Accountability Program, Chapter 6).
The Liberian Constitution (1986) states that “all persons are born equally free and
independent and have certain natural, inherent and inalienable rights” including the “right to
equality and non-discrimination” (Article 11). Referring specifically to education, Article 6 of
the Constitution sets out a commitment to “provide equal access to educational opportunities
and facilities for all citizens” with an emphasis on “the elimination of illiteracy”. These
commitments to equality are affirmed by the Education Reform Act of 2011, which provides
the central strand in Objective 1.5.g, to “Promote gender equity and equality throughout the
educational system and opportunities for education”. In addition, Liberia is a signatory to
several international conventions and commitments.102
The main policy on gender and education is the National Policy on Girls’ Education (2013).
The Policy sets out an ambitious agenda to reduce economic, social and cultural barriers to
girls’ education. Within MoE, the Division of Girls’ Education, part of the Bureau of Basic and
Secondary Education, takes the lead on many policy and program areas. Several other
Ministries are also involved in gender equity and girls’ education: the Ministry of Gender,
102The commitments and conventions include the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the Convention on the
Rights of the Child, Education for All (EFA) Goals, the Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of
Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), and the Beijing Platform for Action and subsequent declarations.
Regular reports on progress on international commitments, including CEDAW, are required.
179
Children and Social Protection; the Ministry of Justice; the Ministry of Internal Affairs; the
Ministry of Youth and Sports; and the Ministry of Health.
The Education Reform Act (2011) identifies sexual offences under the penal law as criminal
matters, to be referred immediately to the appropriate authorities. In 2014, the MoE
published a Code of Conduct for Teachers and School Administrators in Liberia. The Code
of Conduct clearly sets out that SGBV will be punished. Consultations with MoE staff,
however, indicate that knowledge of referral pathways for students and staff who experience
violence is limited.
The School Health Division, under the Department of Instruction and Bureau of Student
Personnel Services, are responsible for school health related issues. These include WASH,
HIV and reproductive health education, deworming, and nutrition and physical education.
Within the same Bureau, the Division of School Feeding is responsible for school feeding,
and the Division of Guidance and Counselling for counselling and mentoring. A School
Health Policy has been drafted, but is yet to be validated and disseminated. There is a
national WASH in Schools Protocol, specific guidelines for deworming and a School Feeding
Policy. Nine counties have staff given responsibilities as School Feeding County
Coordinators and District Focal Points to provide coordination and supervision of activities.
However, school health programs utilize existing CEO and DEO personnel and, except for
the Monrovia Consolidated School System, there are no school counsellors in public
schools. The school health program works closely with the Ministry of Health and Ministry of
Gender, Children and Social Protection.
The Division of Special and Inclusive Education has overall responsibility for managing and
monitoring special education provision. The Director reports to the Assistant Minister for
Science, Technology, Vocational and Special Education. Currently there is no national
education policy on children and young people with disabilities.
11.4 Achievements
Strong policy framework for Girls’ Education with specific directives for action
Clear messages on sexual gender based violence in the Education Reform Act
(2011), policy and Code of Conduct
Draft CSE curricular – one for Grades 3-9, and a parallel one for children who are
physically out-of-school – currently being piloted and planned for inclusion in national
curriculum
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Deworming programs for the last two years for 600,000 funded and delivered
WASH in school protocol approved along with construction of over 1,000 toilets and
hundreds of water points and handwashing stations
Approximately 320,000 children fed daily in 14 counties
School-based counsellor training manual developed and 42 master trainers prepared
500-600 school health clubs established
Nationwide school health hotline set up in 2016
11.5 Challenges
11.5.1 Girls’ retention and completion rates are lower
Girls’ access to education, learning outcomes and dropout rates are poorer than boys. This
is especially marked in rural districts. The root causes of this problem include cultural values,
poverty and school fees, distance to school, sexual violence, early pregnancy and lack of
girl-friendly teaching and infrastructure. The education impacts are in poorer learning
outcomes and, ultimately, a lack of female teachers and principals. Not completing school
severely impacts a woman’s economic potential. Although girls and women are increasingly
likely to go to school, this problem needs continued interventions, particularly at high school.
Specific activities to increase the number of female teachers are needed (Teacher Education
& Management Program, Chapter 9).
One of the drivers for poor female enrolment and attainment is the high levels of sexual and
gender-based violence in schools. Driven by cultural values, attitudes which blame the
young woman rather than the teacher, and a lack of accountability and prosecution, the
problem reduces student enrolment and increases drop-out rates. The G2B-ESP will
implement multiple and interrelated activities to reduce the abuse of students: Code of
Conduct implementation and publicity, a helpline, teacher blacklist, community engagement,
school-based counsellors, strengthened referral pathways, regular school inspections and
increasing the number of female teachers.
11.5.3 The National Policy on Girls’ Education is not being disseminated, fully
implemented, or monitored.
The National Policy on Girls’ Education is strong and has specific directions to address
access, quality and safety issues affecting girls and young women. However,
implementation, monitoring and reporting at the school and system level needs
strengthening. Additionally, coordination with other quality improvement programs must
improve (for example, in school inspection/supervision).
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11.5.4 School health programs need to be strengthened and sustained
Students’ learning outcomes are dependent on their health and nutritional status. It is critical
that targeted health programs such as improving WASH infrastructure in schools (School
Quality Program, Chapter 5), reproductive health, deworming and school feeding continue.
There are concerns that these programs are donor supported with little investment by GoL.
To complement and enhance these programs, there needs to be school-based resourcing
such as school health clubs, male and female school-based counsellors and a strong health
and comprehensive sexuality education curriculum.
11.5.5 Children and young people with disabilities need more support in school
Children and young people with disabilities who attend school will need additional support to
ensure they do not drop out and can learn effectively. Social support from school-based
counsellors and health advisers, trained teachers and child-friendly school management are
essential. Currently, special educational needs are not mainstreamed into teacher education,
principal’s training, curriculum design and school supervision and inspection.
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7. Incorporate indicators of a girl-friendly and gender-sensitive environment into
monitoring of school quality (under the School Quality Program).
8. Build on partnerships with international and local partners to share data and program
evaluations.
Build Ministry capacity to address gender equality issues
9. Train 120 staff in Central Office and counties on girl’s education issues. Train staff to
use gender mainstreaming tools such as gender audits, making use of the expertise
of the Ministry of Gender, Children and Social Protection and partners.
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protect students. Include county-based meetings with Police and other stakeholders.
Collect and report data in Girl’s Education Gender Report Card.
3. Publicize MoE telephone hotline, and develop anonymous (SMS and web-based)
reporting channels, to complement improved monitoring under the Education
Management & Accountability Program. Establish teacher blacklist of convicted
teachers.
Roll out comprehensive sexuality and health education and psychosocial training for
school-based counsellors
1. Continue to expand and support school health clubs and school counselling services,
with training for Instructional Supervisors, school-based counsellors and school
health advisers and provision of school health kits. Work in close collaboration with
MoH. Include school-based counsellors in Educator Management Policy.
2. Finalise full integration and undertake national roll out of syllabus and teacher guides
for gender-sensitive, culturally-appropriate and age specific Comprehensive
Sexuality and health education for grade 3-9. Working with Curriculum & Assessment
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Program and Overage & Out-of-School Program, include in national curriculum
framework and alternative education modules at relevant levels.
3. Develop and nationally distribute instructional materials to support delivery of
comprehensive sexuality and health education in schools.
4. Conduct training of in-service teachers to deliver quality comprehensive sexuality
education integrated in the curriculum for the identified grades as part of the Teacher
Education & Management Program.
5. Work with Teacher Education & Management Program and RTTIs to include
Comprehensive Sexuality Education as a component of in new (pre-service) teacher
training courses. Share with partners and on MoE website.
6. Continue to expand and support school health programs through clubs and school
counselling services
185
2. Ensure new syllabuses and instructional materials take into account children and
young people with disabilities (Curriculum & Assessment Program).
3. Improve teacher preparation and CPD with a compulsory module on teaching
children with disabilities (Teacher Education & Management Program).
4. Train principals in effective management strategies to include children with
disabilities in school (School Quality Program).
5. Include special education in school quality assessments and reporting, including
regular inspections of schools for the physically disabled (Education Management &
Accountability Program).
6. Improve data collection on children and young people with disabilities by updating the
school census form and auditing special education schools (Education Management
& Accountability Program).
7. Include children and young people with disabilities in interventions to improve school
attendance (Overage & Out-of-School Program).
8. Train school-based counsellors and school health advisers in special education
socio-emotional support.
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Chapter 12 Technical and Vocational Education and
Training Program
12.1 Summary
G2B impact Young people have the necessary skills for livelihoods and
employment
SDG target 4.3 By 2030, ensure equal access for all women and men to
affordable and quality technical, vocational and tertiary education,
including university
103 Financing will be addressed in the Education Management & Accountability Program.
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information base Technology, Vocational and
Special Education
12.2 Introduction
Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) provides an important avenue for
the acquisition of employment-oriented and life coping skills and attitudes. While a variety of
TVET training institutions exist, the TVET delivery system remains largely fragmented,
supply-driven and under-resourced. As the GoL is pursuing a revitalization of TVET as a
response to the youth employment challenge, MoE will work in partnership with relevant
Ministries, institutions and employers to prioritize, streamline and coordinate efforts in the
sector. Responsibilities for TVET are shared across a number of Ministries.
The TVET system in Liberia is complex and fragmented in terms of providers and data.
There are broadly two types of TVET providers:
(i) Formal TVET programs that provide class-room based training in both vocational
and technical skills;
While the MOE and Ministry of Youth and Sport (MYS) are key training providers, other
Ministries, NGOs and private sector providers play a substantial role.
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operates vocational training centers which offer TVET courses at the basic and intermediate
levels targeting students who have finished high school at or before Grade 10. Some
Community Colleges, which are semi-autonomous MoE-responsible government institutions,
offer TVET post-secondary education and have strong linkages to the tertiary education
level.
At the tertiary level, students can either attend junior college which offers technical training
for middle level managerial positions, or regular full-time college granting degrees in
professional disciplines. Given that a grade 9 certificate is the minimum entry requirement
into formal TVET a large proportion of the population are excluded from this level.
Private TVET providers target mainly basic skills acquisition for different categories of
learners (including urban poor, early school leavers and girls and women with no livelihood
skills). The courses offered are generally of shorter duration and relate more to the business
and service sectors.
TVET provision is divided between public, private, faith-based and community providers.
Currently, 148 TVET institutions in the country are formally registered with the MoE and
MYS, which is an increase of 16 from the 132 TVET institutions registered in 2012. However,
the 2015/2016 EMIS data collection revealed that far fewer institutions actively offer courses
and have enrolled students. 65 active institutions were captured in the 2015/2016 EMIS
105 Constraints on Youth Skills Development in the Informal Sector in Liberia (2016), World Bank.
189
data106 where the majority were private (63%) followed by public (20%), faith-baed (11%)
and community-owned (6%). The large majority of TVET institutions are in the more urban
and densely populated areas including Montserrado (43%), followed by Nimba (23%) and
Margibi (12%), which highlights the need to consider the imbalance in TVET access. Data
regarding access to TVET is limited. Estimates from 2010 indicate that 255,000 people,
representing 14 percent of those aged 15 and over, had completed some formal vocational
training107. Administrative data confirms that only a small proportion of young people (10 %)
participate in vocational training. These young people have relatively high levels of
education, having completed secondary education, or even university108.
Enrollment in TVET institutions seems to be evenly divided between public and private
institutions (Table 12-1). Although TVET provision is dominated by private providers, public
TVET schools appear to be larger in size. Enrollment in TVET institutions is therefore evenly
divided between public and private institutions. A total of 11,871 students are currently
enrolled in a TVET institution of whom 46,73% are female109. This is a marked decrease in
total enrollment from 16,884 in 2012 and 18,032 in 2006.
106It is estimated that at least three relatively large institutions offering only technical and vocational education as
well as a few TVET institutions falling under the purview of the MYS may not have been captured in the school
census.
107 Report on the Liberia Labour Force Survey 2010, ILO.
108 Constraints on Youth Skills Development in the Informal Sector in Liberia (2016), World Bank.
109A comparison of TVET enrollment numbers from institutions present in both EMIS and the registered TVET
unit lists has led to limited congruence. EMIS numbers for TVET institutions must therefore be treated with
caution.
190
Fewer females are enrolled in public TVET institutions than in private institutions. While
enrollment figures overall suggest a fairly equal gender distribution, far fewer females
(34.75%) are enrolled in public institutions than male (65.25%). For private institutions,
female enrollment proportions tend to be higher (57.01%) than for male (42.99%).
Geographically, TVET students are concentrated in the more urban and densely populated
counties. 84.34% of the enrolled students are studying in Montserrado, Margibi or Nimba.
Computer Science is the significant concentration of interest in TVET institutions with nearly
30% of candidates choosing it as their primary specialization. The area of specialization with
the second highest number of enrolled students is agriculture (8%). Courses offered in the
formal TVET institutions are mainly in the traditional areas or fields, such as carpentry,
masonry, plumbing, cookery, tailoring, soap making, and secretarial services.
Vocational training subjects are somewhat segregated along traditional gender roles,
although computer training is popular with both young men and women (Table 12-2). Areas
which are strongly divided on gender lines include ‘Electricity,’ ‘Auto Mechanic,’ ‘Building’
and ‘Carpentry’ with more than 80% of the enrolled students being male. On the other hand,
‘Pastry,’ ‘Home Arts,’ and ‘Tailoring’ are dominated by females. This division may be largely
driven by social norms and perceptions and highlights the need for further analysis and use
of incentives.
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Business Education 571 240 42% 331 58%
A distinction is made between technical and vocational skill and general job and “life” skills
acquisition. The latter category tends to include general business skills, socio-emotional
skills, literacy and IT skills. There is a growing demand and interest in adding job-skills to
technical and vocational skills programs. Job-skills are particularly relevant for the more
vulnerable and marginalized groups including Not in Education, Employment, or Training
(NEET) youth, young women and ex-combatants. Training programs in non-formal and
informal settings tend to focus on these.
Information about the TVET teaching workforce is sparse. 2015 EMIS figures estimate that a
total number of 507 teachers are currently active although this may be an underestimate
given the large number of private providers. 80% of the teachers are male and in line with
enrolment figures, 78.3% of teachers are based in Monstserrado, Margibi or Nimba. EMIS
data indicates that the average age of TVET teachers is 45.8 which is similar to the average
age across education levels.
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There is currently no dedicated vocational teacher training center or certification standards
for TVET teachers. Development partners including the EU and UNESCO have suggested
programs to train and re-train TVET teachers.
The current pathways in the education system to TVET and from TVET to the labor market
are summarized in Figure 12-1 below. The large majority of employment opportunities for the
Liberian youth currently lie in the informal sector, which is traditionally accessed through
informal and non-formal TVET programs110.
12.2.6 Resourcing
The public TVET institutions rely heavily on government funding, whilst the other providers
are financed mainly through tuition fees, donations from external benefactors, and
production and sale of goods they produce. The MOE has allocated around 5% percent of
overall education expenditure on average to TVET for the period 2012-2015. Many TVET
institutions are not included in education budget, rather under MYS. Combining the different
sources of funding, TVET unit cost calculated is USD 1100 per year, more than 15 times that
of the primary level.
110 Constraints on Youth Skills Development in the Informal Sector in Liberia (2016), World Bank.
193
There are large disparities in financing and an on ongoing lack of sustainability. The GoL
provides some subsidy to selected TVET institutions, although subsidies appear to be
granted on an ad hoc basis. Students tend to pay a fee ranging between USD 50-100 to
enroll, which for many is difficult to meet. There have been no major procurements of
materials to TVET schools and no distribution of a national curriculum or teaching resources.
Legislation has been drafted to provide a legal framework for implementing the policy goals
and objectives of the Policy. In particular, the legislation seeks to establish a Liberia TVET
Commission (LiTCOM). The TVET legislation is in the process of submission for Cabinet
approval. In absence of LiTCOM, an Interim Governance Structure has recently been
proposed by the MoE. This governance system would be led by the IMTTF and a National
Technical Committee, comprising representatives from the MoE, MYS, Ministry of
Commerce and Industry, National Investment Committee, Ministry of Agriculture, Ministry of
Labor, NGOs and the private sector.
Under the MoE, the Bureau of Vocational and Technical Education is responsible for
implementing vocational and technical education programs at the pre-tertiary level in the
public school systems. It has a supervisory oversight responsibility of TVET in the private
sector as well as the responsibility to ensure that national standards are met. However, the
MoE is not the only entity responsible for TVET in Liberia; various ministries – notably, Youth
and Sports, Health, and Agriculture - are providing TVET training in an ad hoc manner, each
with different governance and management practices.
Additionally, there are several other GOL policies and strategies which refer to TVET
including among others:
● Liberia Rising: Vision 2030 provides the rationale and impetus for revitalizing the
TVET system in order to produce the skilled human capital that is required to spur
and sustain the growth and industrialization of the economy.
194
● Economic Stabilization and Recovery Plan (2015) states that investments in TVET
programs and improvement in the quality of secondary and tertiary education will
ensure that the youth have the skills to meet the labor market needs of the country.
● National Industrial Policy (2011) describes the labor force in Liberia as largely
unskilled and in need of training or re-training due to the introduction of new
technology.
● Employment Policy (2009) urges the systems for TVET to be reshaped to provide
the young generation with the education, knowledge and skills necessary to meet the
requirements of the labor market. It also highlights the discrimination of girls and
women in TVET, leaving women disadvantaged in terms of employable skills.
● National Youth Policy (2012-2017). Elaborated under the guidance of the MYS the
policy highlights education and training as one of the eight key priority themes and
strategic interventions.
12.4 Achievements
While the TVET sector is facing a number of challenges there have also been a number of
significant achievements:
Creation of an Inter-Ministerial TVET Taskforce demonstrating commitment for
reform;
Elaboration of the first National TVET Policy in Liberia with the establishment of
guiding principles for the TVET system, a detailed operational plan and costing
exercise;
A dedicated TVET legal framework which is under consideration;
The existence of a variety of TVET training institutions both in rural and urban areas;
An existing structure for formal skills development programs; and,
Growing interest and commitment to involve other stakeholders, including the private
sector.
12.5 Challenges
12.5.1 Outdated and limited equipment
Many TVET institutions lack the modern training equipment and facilities to provide the job-
ready skills demanded by employers. Moreover, most TVET schools have basic
infrastructural constraints including lack of power and insufficient access to water and
sanitation. Where limited equipment exists, improved management structures are needed to
ensure effective and appropriate use of equipment.
195
12.5.2 Lack of adequately trained and incentivized trained teachers
Assessment studies111 reveal that the TVET instructors and trainers are aging, unskilled,
poorly compensated and motivated. There is no training and recruitment plan to replace the
aging workforce and many current instructors do not have access to continued training and
exposure to more modern and advanced TVET technologies and capabilities. Furthermore,
modest salaries lead to low retention of teachers. At the same time, there is also an
overwhelming need for new teachers. Some schools have addressed this shortage by using
volunteers or contractors.
The absence of a credible institutional accreditation system and standardized TVET curricula
has prevented the development and implementation of a nationally certified qualifications
system. In some cases, TVET programs with similar titles have substantially different course
content and duration in different institutions. Often, the level at which the program is
delivered is not specified. Consequently, the certificates delivered alone are not enough to
evaluate the skills competence level attained by the trainee or certificate holder and thereby
limit employability.
12.5.4 Weak linkages between TVET curricula and the productive sectors of the
economy
A significant mismatch exists between the skills offered by training providers and those in
demand in the labor market or required by employers or self-employment. This is due to a
combination of factors including (i) Theory-dominated curricula leaving learners unprepared
for the labor market, (ii) Lack of skills-gap analysis and tracer studies; (iii) Lack of public-
private partnerships and; (iv) Lack of involvement of the private sector in TVET governance
or provision.
The current centralized structure leaves little autonomy to the public schools. Public TVET
institutions are often understaffed and the management staff is poorly skilled, with low
capacity in generating additional revenue and promoting local partnerships with the private
sector. A decentralized administration of TVET institutions with strong linkages with the
private sector could contribute to improve the management of the system. At the same time,
the capacity by line Ministries to monitor program interventions, planning and management,
111 Identification and formulation of the 11th EDF support to education sector in Liberia (2016).
196
including end user monitoring of supplies, and governing the teacher body needs to be
strengthened.
The TVET system is highly fragmented thereby compromising coherence and accountability.
The coordination of activities administered by different government ministries and agencies,
as well as private sector and NGOs, is not supported by an appropriate legal framework and
a strong relationship between the government and the private sector is lacking. While the
LiTCOM will be stablished as a semi-autonomous agency in the longer term to coordinate
and oversee all aspects of skills development in the country, there is an immediate need to
improve coordination for assuring standardization of provision and avoiding costly
duplication of training programs.
As a result of the lack of coordination in the TVET system, the pathways into and from TVET
in the education system are unclear. Information provided to students is either missing or
weak thereby contributing to low demand for TVET skills. There is currently a lack of clarity
and connection between the education system and TVET as well as between TVET and the
workplace. Ultimately, a flexible transition and clear pathways between basic and higher
level or specialized skills development programs and qualification will be crucial for the
TVET sector.
Although recognized in official policy documents for several years, TVET continues to have
negative perceptions to the public and is perceived to be a second-best choice for young
people. TVET is often perceived as a dead-end choice as skills attained are considered not
to be adaptable to other vocations and to lead to an inflexible employment position.
Challenging gender perceptions in TVET and providing incentives for women to opt for
traditionally ‘male’ training options is currently lacking. Young women from poor communities
face access constraints to TVET due to community or family beliefs that undermine the
potential role women can play to contribute to sustainable and productive livelihoods 112 .
Available training opportunities in Liberia are furthermore often confined to ‘feminine’ areas,
which may not necessarily lead to profitable work. Even when enrolled in training courses in
197
more male dominated areas, girls and women can face barriers, e.g. when the learning
environments are de-motivating and do not take into account their specific needs.
The lack of assured, predictable and sustained public financing of TVET is a major problem
to achieving robust outcomes in TVET development. The lack of a coherent and transparent
subsidy policy has further highlighted the disparities in TVET funding. Opportunities for
private financing for TVET and public-private partnerships remain untapped.
At the same time, TVET programs are deemed very costly with high unit costs
(notwithstanding that most of the TVET institutions need physical rehabilitation, new
equipment, and training of teachers).
199
7. Hold a forum to lay the foundation for a reform of the governance structure at the
level of provider including the consideration of decentralization measures and the
inclusion of the private sector.
Component 3: Lay the foundation for a national qualification framework for
agriculture and another area of high demand
Develop a TVET curriculum for agriculture for certificate levels 1 and 2 of the Liberian
National Qualifications Framework (LNQF)
1. Map and review existing Liberian TVET curricula in agriculture. Review best
examples and curriculum standards from ECOWAS and internationally.
2. Establish an expert group including experts from industry, training institutions and
relevant Ministries, for the design of a competency-based curriculum framework for
Agriculture including Certificate 1 and 2 levels. Coordinate with Curriculum &
Assessment and Overage & Out-of-School Programs.
3. Draft specialized agricultural training modules, including entrepreneurship and small
business skills.
4. Trial modules in a mixture of TVET institutions.
5. Consult, edit, approve, print and distribute modules which can be made publicly
available online for TVET institutions to download.
Establish pre-requisites for entering each qualification level in the LNQF for
agriculture
7. Map and review existing qualifications and standards.
8. Review best examples and qualification standards from ECOWAS and
internationally.
9. Draft, consult and approve qualification standards.
Identify another area of high demand and replicate above steps activities
10. As above.
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Chapter 13 Higher Education Program
13.1 Summary
G2B impact Young people have the necessary skills for livelihoods and
employment
Challenges The demand for higher skills and degrees are not
appropriately linked with the supply of higher education
study programs.
Quality of higher education programs are not
internationally validated.
Resources are not distributed based on performance,
public priorities (e.g. AfT) or equity considerations and are
not used efficiently or cost-effectively.
Higher education courses are not affordable for most of
the population.
SDG targets 4.3 By 2030, ensure equal access for all women and men to
affordable and quality technical, vocational and tertiary education,
including university
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3. Higher Education Act Director General, National
Commission on Higher
Education
13.2 Introduction
Liberia’s industries, especially the ones that depend on natural resources, have been
expanding quickly during the post-conflict period. While the firms can relatively easily recruit
low skilled labor, it is hard for them to hire Liberian professionals that possess advanced
skills. Preparing reliable and productive human capital is important for the country to benefit
from its abundant natural resources and develop the economy.
However, the civil wars took a heavy toll on the higher education system. The universities
experienced a massive brain drain of their most highly qualified faculty and administrators.
Institutions were shut down intermittently due to war and student unrest in the turbulent
political environment. Infrastructure (including equipment, facilities, libraries, laboratories,
and buildings) was severely damaged, looted, or destroyed (Diagnostic Paper for Higher
Education in Liberia, 2012). Rebuilding is further hampered by poor learning outcomes at the
earlier educational levels.
13.2.2 Enrolment
In 2012, the overall number of students enrolled in higher education reached 43,843, within
which the University of Liberia accounted for 54.4% of total enrollment. Only 16,258 female
113 National Commission on Higher Education (NCHE). (2012). Status of Higher Education: Census Survey of
Institutions.
202
students were enrolled as compared to 27,585 male students (Gender Parity Index (GPI)
0.59). However, GPI varies significantly across institutions and a number of private
institutions enrolled many more female students than male students such as Smythe
Institute of Management and Technology with GPI at 5.44 and Morris Community College of
Airline Studies with GPI at 4.76. Most institutions have increasing enrolment.
13.2.3 Courses
From 2009/10 to 2011/12, the major chosen by the largest number of students was
Business/Management while the major that was least pursued was Education Studies (Table
13-1). Overall number of students increased for all majors. The number of male students
decreased for Humanity/Art major and increased substantially for Education Studies. The
number of female students increased across all majors and has shown the biggest growth in
Agriculture/Forestry the major.
2009/10 2011/12
Male Female
growth growth
Male Female Total Male Female Total % %
Business/
management 10544 5381 15925 11443 7532 18975 9% 40%
Source: National Commission on Higher Education (NCHE). (2012). Status of Higher Education: Census Survey
of Institutions
203
13.2.4 Faculty
The student-faculty ratio differs widely across institutions with a continuing shortage of senior
faculty positions (Table 13-2).
Table 13-2 Student-Faculty Ratio, higher education institutions with more than 500 students, 2012
African Methodist
Faith-based 3,370 30.1
Episcopal University
United Methodist
Faith-based 3,290 12.3
University
African Methodist
Episcopal Zion Faith-based 2,836 19.2
University College
Smythe Institute of
Management and Private 1,707 32
Technology
Grand Bassa
Public 1,290 21
Community College
Nimba Community
Public 722 23
College
Stella Maris
Faith-based 555 Not reported
Polytechnic
Source: National Commission on Higher Education (NCHE). (2012). Status of Higher Education: Census Survey
of Institutions
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13.2.5 Funding
Higher education institutions receive funding through direct transfer (also known as
subsidies) from central government, and the amount is determined by the national budget.
There are additional institutions that receive budget allocation through Ministry of Education,
but the total amount is much smaller as compared to those receiving direct transfers. In
2015/16 budget, only USD 150,000 was channeled through MoE, while over 30 USD million
was directly transferred to institutions (Figure 13-1).
The University of Liberia dominates the share of transfers. Since 2010, the annual transfer to
University of Liberia has exceeded USD 10m and 2014/15 witnessed an over-execution of
the budget with a rate of 129%. In 2015/16, the funding to University of Liberia increased by
over USD 4m as compared to the 2014/15 budget. Salaries at the University of Liberia have
increased over the last few years from about $125/month to nearly $1,400/month at the top
levels and from $45/month to $780/month at the lower faculty levels.
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Figure 13-2 University of Liberia funding, 2013-16, USD
Additional support has come from oil and mining concessional contracts with prescribed
allocations to higher education in these important development areas, and these
contributions have been used to improve the quality of engineering and mathematics fields.
(Diagnostic Paper for Higher Education in Liberia, 2012).
13.2.6 Scholarships
Foreign scholarship is only targeted at graduate school education (minimum 3.0 grade point
average). Recipients have to sign a Memorandum of Understanding and agree to come back
and work for the government for two years. The program prioritizes certain strategic areas
such as science, agriculture and education. Advertisements of scholarship are broadcast on
newspaper, radio, national website to encourage students to apply. Interviews are conducted
to complement a written test. There is supervision of the students through academic reports
every semester. Scholarship varies based on the destination country. For example, for
students studying in Morocco, the government pays USD 4,000 per student, including
allowance and health insurance.
206
Gender imbalance in international scholarship recipients remains a major problem, and no
specific intervention has taken place to address this issue.
The local scholarship program covers both undergraduate and graduate levels but was
halted in 2012. No new scholarship has been given out to students studying in Liberian
universities, only to existing students who were enrolled in the program previously. In 2015
total number of students benefiting from the program is 1052, dropped from more than 5000
in previous years. The majority of the students are studying in STEM areas.
The scholarship covers 18 credits per students, and the cost per credit differs by
university/institution. On average one credit costs USD 25, totaling USD 450 per student.
The scholarship does not include social subsidies. In 2014/15, USD 0.5m was given out to
students currently benefiting from the program. However, there was USD 1.5m funding gap
to cover tuition for all students.
NCHE is also charged with licensing and accreditation of Higher Education institutions.
Before a university can become accredited, it must be licensed by NCHE which is under the
aegis of the Ministry of Education. Accreditation is a voluntary process. However, all public
institutions must be accredited. Private institutions that are not accredited cannot receive
government subsidies and their students are not eligible for government scholarships or any
other government financial aid.
Currently only the colleges and universities are included under the regulations and oversight
of the NCHE. The other institutions are under the authority of the Ministry of Education,
reporting to the Deputy Minister for Instruction, such as Rural Teacher Training Institutes at
Kakata, Zorzor, and Webbo and TVET institutions such as Booker Washington Technical
Institute (Diagnostic Paper for Higher Education in Liberia, 2012).
207
13.4 Achievements
The first comprehensive census of institutions was completed in June, 2010, and
resulted in a report: A Transformative Higher Education for Sustainable Development:
2009/10 Statistical Report on Tertiary Institutions in Liberia.
The second census survey was completed in 2012 with a report: Status of Higher
Education: Census Survey of Institutions (National Commission on Higher Education
(NCHE), 2012).
13.5 Challenges
13.5.1 Recruitment and retention of quality faculty staff
After the conflict, the pool of talent is small. The low level of salaries for lecturers and
professors at many institutions means that they cannot generally afford to hold only one
position (although there have been substantial salary increases at the University of Liberia in
recent years). As over two-thirds of the HEIs are located in Montserrado County, and most
do not have more than 1,000 students, many of the institutions share faculty for common
courses (Diagnostic Paper for Higher Education in Liberia, 2012) which can reduce contact
time for teaching.
Due to the poor learning outcomes at the lower level, high school graduates are incapable of
handling the advanced educational programs at the higher education level. In 2013, nearly
25,000 school-leavers failed the admission test at the University of Liberia. As a result, the
product of HEIs can be very poor and much effort has to be expended in remedial programs.
114 Sumaworo, M. D. (2015). Challenges of Tertiary Education in Liberia and Possible Solutions.
208
13.5.4 Inadequate funding mechanism
Funding allocations are based on previous years’ budgets and the lobbying power of each
institution. The amount allocated to institutions can be volatile due to political or economic
changes or poor planning. As a result, the execution rate of higher education transfers is far
from being close to 100%. The 2013/14 fiscal year execution rate is 75% and that for
2014/15 fiscal year is 114%. Once approved in the national budget, the funding is for general
purpose, meaning that it can fund any type of expenditure.
Despite efforts by the GoL, a large number of young people cannot access higher education
due to long distances between their homes and institutions, poor infrastructure, cultural
norms and poverty. According to the 2014/15 Liberia Household Income and Expenditure
survey, the Gross Enrollment Ratio for tertiary education is 3.14%. Students from the richest
quintile account for 57.14% of higher education enrolment while students from the poorest
quintile accounts for only 0.71%. Current scholarships do not address these issues
adequately.
209
13.6 Higher Education Program
Component 1: Higher Education quality and relevance through partnerships and
accreditation
Program accreditation
1. Identify three diploma or degree programs at three universities in fields which align
with Liberia’s strategic and economic development priorities, including science,
technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM), to initiate program accreditation
activities.
2. Create program accreditation task team for each of the three selected programs to
design and begin implementation of accreditation process.
3. Integrate this activity with regional/international partnership activities.
210
4. Universities and colleges will develop strategic plans and institute annual reporting
exercises (i.e., Tubman University model).
211
Chapter 14 Financing the G2B-ESP
14.1 Introduction
The G2B-ESP focuses on strategic areas that have the most significant impact on the
quality of the education system and can most likely attract funds from various resources. It
adopts a realistic approach and focuses on programmatic budgeting to improve the
efficiency of operational and development budget of MoE. Programmatic budgeting ensures
clear responsibilities and accountability.
Financing for quality: Programmatic budgeting allows for improving the current
budget framework, targeting policy changes and strengthening sustainability of
program areas. It also allows external financing to be tapped where funding gaps are
identified.
Financing for efficiency and equity: The G2B ESP focuses on available resources
from efficiency gains such as subsidy policy reform and payroll cleaning. For
example, savings from the reduction in non-government subsidies will be directed to
equity related interventions such as school grants. Payroll cleaning releases a large
amount of available resources to improve teacher quality.
14.2 Budget projections
National budget reductions for FY2016/17 put serious financial constraint on the education
sector. The total government budget in 2016/17 is projected to drop to USD 556 million from
USD 623 million in 2015/16115. In FY 2016/17, the overall education sector is expected to
slightly decrease, however its share in total government expenditure will increase to 15%,
the highest level over the past five years. The education share of the national budget is
projected to be 14.5% from 2017/18 to 2019/21 (Table 14-1) with little variation in allocation
to MoE and other institutions (Table 14-3).
115 The national budget used for these projections was accessed on 12th September 2016 via
https://www.mfdp.gov.lr/index.php/the-budget. This budget was under revision in November 2016 at the time of writing.
212
Table 14-1 Education expenditure actual and projections, 2012/13-2019/21, USD
Education
83,473,764
Budget 76,928,436 70,942,476 64,156,410 83,832,003 84,369,510 87,089,246 92,314,601 97,
Total GoL
555,993,000
Budget 672,050,000 582,931,413 605,900,000 622,743,420 580,593,000 599,309,000 635,267,540 673
% of Edu in
11.45% 12.17% 10.59% 13.46% 15.01% 14.53% 14.53% 14.53% 1
GoL Budget
GDP (USD
1.75 1.96 2.01 2.04 2.11 2.26 2.47 2.72
billion)
Education
4.41% 3.62% 3.19% 4.12% 3.96% 3.73% 3.52% 3.39% 3
as % of GDP
The share of Ministry of Education in the total education budget is projected by MFDP as
equivalent to 55% over the next five years (Table 14-2). The rest of the budget is allocated to
Monrovia Consolidated School System (MCSS), higher education institutions, three rural
teacher training institutes, TVET colleges and institutions and WAEC.
Within the MoE budget, the salaries of teachers and education staff absorb the majority of
the resources. However, there are significant projections in the current budget for subsidies
and scholarships (Table 14-3). Although these are in the current budget projections, there
may be scope for more equitable and efficient use of these resources.
213
Table 14-3 Ministry of Education budget projections by expenditure type excluding higher education and
Monrovia Consolidated School System, 2016/17-2019/20, USD
Compensation
35,584,988 78% 36,101,603 78% 37,265,375 78% 39,501,298 78%
of Employees
Local
500,000 507,500 523,860 555,292
scholarship
Foreign
scholarship 2,000,000 2,000,000 2,064,472 2,188,340
Goods and 116
Services
Other Goods
4,212,135 4,271,132 4,408,816 4,673,345
and Services
Consumption
of Fixed 735,000 2% 746,025 2% 770,074 2% 816,278 2%
Capital
Capital
0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0%
Expenditure
Share in Total
55% 55% 55% 55%
Edu. Exp.
The G2B-ESP assumes that modest amounts of development funding (USD 19,397,779
over the lifetime of the G2B-ESP) can be found from within the existing budget projection
envelope utilization of non-recurrent budget (Table 14-4). In addition, there are projected
efficiency gains which can be redirected to priority areas. These will require negotiation with
MFDP and stakeholders.
116 These are budget projections from draft 2016/17 budget. The G2B-ESP plans to redirect scholarship funds to priority
activities (see below).
117 The subsidy projections are from the draft 2016/17 budget. G2B-ESP efficiency savings and draft Subsidy Policy redirect
subsidy funds to priority development activities (see below). These are not yet reflected in 2016/17 budget and require further
discussions with MFDP.
214
Table 14-4 Development expenditure projection, 2016-2021, USD
The G2B-ESP assumes that the payroll cleanup (Education Management & Accountability
Program, Chapter 6) will result in projected annual savings of USD 4m from the removal of
ghost and unqualified teachers. In addition, the retirement and retrenchment of teachers and
public servants will result in annual savings of USD 2m. In total, MoE estimates that USD 6m
will be available annually to partially fill the fiscal gap from bringing additional trained
teachers onto the regular payroll (for example, from the volunteer teacher pool, newly
qualified teachers or Accelerated C certificate program).
Currently the Ministry of Education is drafting a subsidy policy and listing the qualifications of
schools eligible for subsidies, such as no school fees and no entrance test. If schools that
are not eligible for subsidies are removed from the budget, approximately USD 2m per year
is estimated to be achieved in subsidy efficiency gains which will be directed to investment in
G2B-ESP programs (Education Management & Accountability Program, Chapter 6).
118 Non-recurrent expenditure would be consultancy fees, staff training, specialized materials, workshops and seminars and
gifts. Recurrent expenditure includes operational costs of running Central, county and district offices such as power,
communications, vehicle repairs, stationery etc.
119 Allowances are assumed to be used for education officer visits to schools and other travel. These allowances are included
in relevant G2B-ESP activity budgets (for example, school inspection and DEO supervisory visits).
215
14.3.3 Improved targeting of scholarships
International and local scholarships cost approximately USD 2.5 annually. Building on the
successful reduction of local scholarships and improving the targeting at the poorest
students (Higher Education Program, Chapter 13), MoE will reduce total expenditure on
scholarships to USD 1.5m annually, freeing up USD 1m for G2B-ESP activities.
14.3.4 More efficient use of higher education transfers
Moving to a value-for-money system of higher education transfers (Higher Education
Program) is projected to reduce the higher education budget allocation from USD 30m to
USD 29m annually, releasing an additional conservatively estimated USD 1m for G2B-ESP
activities. MoE will request that higher education budgets will be frozen in real terms for the
duration of the G2B-ESP.
In total, there is an estimated annual saving of USD 10m which can be redirected to G2B-
ESP priorities (Table 14-5).
Table 14-5 Annual efficiency saving projections redirected to G2B-ESP priorities, USD
MoE development activities and efficiency savings are modest (Table 14-6) and remain
vulnerable to the wider GoL fiscal trends. The efficiency savings rely on successfully
implementing public sector reform activities in the plan (such as retirement of staff and policy
implementation) and would require negotiation and agreement from MFDP. These could be
incentivized through development loan policy triggers, results-based financing or other
mechanisms.
120 MoE currently has limited authority over the higher education transfers outside of those to community colleges and RTTIs.
Efficiency savings will require dialogue with the legislature, Cabinet, Association of Liberian Universities and MFDP.
216
It is important to note that teacher payroll expansion is a significant budgetary challenge
which requires regular monitoring and modelling. Additionally, decision making in key budget
areas is strongly influenced by external stakeholders (including higher education, school
subsidy and payroll) which adds uncertainty as to the scope of efficiency savings. Failure to
implement G2B-ESP reforms has implications for other development activities such as
funding ECE, school inspections and teacher education.
Efficiency
savings from 4,000,000 4,000,000 4,000,000 4,000,000 16,000,000
policy reform
217
Development partner/donor Sub-sector priorities (selected)
In addition to these organizations, the education sector has the support of a wide number of
international and national non-governmental organizations.
For the purposes of G2B-ESP planning and implementation, development partner and
implementing partners are expected to align with the G2B-ESP priorities and coordinate with
MoE and other stakeholders. MoE recognizes that some externally funded activities have
been planned and implemented already and other projects are in planning or development
218
phase. As such development partner contributions fall into three categories within the G2B-
ESP budget:
Activities in G2B-ESP, costed and funded (included in component budget, Table
14-11)
Proposed and planned activities G2B-ESP but total contribution and scope not
known as yet (footnoted in Table 14-11)
Activities outside of the G2B-ESP or which will be completed by the G2B-ESP start
date (not included in G2B-ESP budgets but referred to in component text if relevant
(for example, teacher testing and payroll verification which will complete by June
2017))
The Government is committed to sustain the programs proposed in G2B-ESP and use its
own resources and savings from efficiency gains to fund the programs wherever possible.
The programmatic planning is one of the tools to achieve the ultimate goal of sustaining the
programs beyond the life of G2B-ESP by, for example, ensuring that each any new recurrent
expenditures has its own separate budget line. Hence a new chart of accounts will be
implemented.
Estimated costs of programs are comprised of several elements, such as consulting fees for
researching, developing and implementing pilot programs, cost to provide service to target
recipients of each intervention, materials to be distributed, training cost, and travelling cost.
219
14.5.1 MoE projected contribution to G2B-ESP
Source of Total
Detail FY2017/18 FY2018/19 FY2019/20 FY2020/21
funding Funding
Development budget available for G2B-ESP 4,525,607 4,671,495 4,951,785 5,248,892 23,873,410
Available be allocated to other G2B-ESP priorities123 8,525,607 8,671,495 8,951,785 9,248,892 39,873,410
122 Allocated in the Teacher Education & Management Program Component 2 budget. This envelope is estimated from the 2013-16 budgets. RTTIs will be required to reduce their unit costs and
explore user- pay. This total includes RTTI staff salary.
123 After additional payroll commitments and RTTI funding.
220
14.5.2 G2B-ESP program budget summary
MoE commitment - - - - -
Education Management & Accountability Total cost 15,223,175 11,848,800 13,243,800 16,414,300 56,730,075
Funding identified - - - - -
Early Childhood Education Total cost 4,296,450 4,241,450 4,141,450 3,891,450 16,445,800
MoE commitment - - - - -
Overage & Out-of-School Total cost 1,360,900 5,319,800 5,310,700 5,272,700 17,264,100
MoE commitment - - - - -
Funding identified - - - - -
221
Program Cost 2017/18 2018/19 2019/20 2020/21 Total Cost
Funding gap 1,360,900 5,319,800 5,310,700 5,272,700 17,264,100
Teacher Education & Management Total cost 1,947,650 4,533,550 4,500,550 4,420,550 15,402,300
Funding identified - - - - -
Curriculum & Assessment Total cost 238,413 1,078,497 919,497 104,833 2,341,240
MoE commitment - - - - -
Funding identified - - - - -
MoE commitment - - - - -
MoE commitment - - - - -
Funding identified - - - - -
222
Program Cost 2017/18 2018/19 2019/20 2020/21 Total Cost
Higher Education Total cost 114,900 87,900 232,900 207,900 643,600
MoE commitment - - - - -
Funding identified - - - - -
Table 14-10 Funding gap after MoE and partner program commitments
223
14.5.4 G2B-ESP component budget
School Quality Program 2017/18 2018/19 2019/20 2020/21 Total Cost Notes
2. School improvement
grants 3,110,600 3,235,918 4,287,926 4,417,563 15,052,006.94
3. Principals’ leadership
program 50,000 416,667 441,667 441,667 1,350,000.00
Funding gap
3,510,600 4,002,585 5,079,593 5,209,229 17,802,007
224
Education Management
& Accountability
Program
2017/18 2018/19 2019/20 2020/21 Total Cost
Of which is PSL
3,220,000 3,070,000 3,820,000 4,570,000 14,680,000
Payroll
Recurrent
3. School inspection
237,000 343,500 351,500 300,000 1,232,000
124 Payroll and retirement reforms will require CSA and MFDP agreement and are reflected in the G2B-ESP budget to indicate the estimated cost of improving the quality of teacher and education
officer workforce (for example, by certifying teachers). Includes recurrent costs of new B and C certificate graduates. Note that the estimate does not include the costs of ECE and TVET certification
which are yet to be modelled.
225
4. Support and
accountability at
decentralized levels 301,875 169,000 259,000 164,000 893,875
5. Sector planning,
monitoring, budgeting 103,700 73,700 73,700 73,700 324,800
and finance strengthening
Early Childhood
Education
2017/18 2018/19 2019/20 2020/21 Total Cost
125 The Early Learning Partnership will commission one service provider to deliver a series of interrelated studies into the ECE sector (Annex 4) in partnership with MoE.
226
2. Roll out ECE
certification and training
for teachers through
Rural Teacher Training
Institutes, colleges and
universities126 636,450 661,450 661,450 611,450 2,445,800
Funding gap
3,896,450 3,891,450 3,891,450 3,891,450 15,445,800
227
Overage & Out-of-
School
2017/18 2018/19 2019/20 2020/21 Total Cost
1. Increase capacity to
plan, budget and manage
alternative education (AE) 53,900 49,800 10,700 10,700 125,100
2. Professional
development for AE
teachers, facilitators,
principals and
administrators 12,000 20,000 50,000 12,000 94,000
3. Overage student
program 1,285,000 1,250,000 1,250,000 1,250,000 5,035,000
4. Out-of-school children
and young people
program127 10,000 4,000,000 4,000,000 4,000,000 12,010,000
Funding identified
0 0 0 0 0
Funding gap
1,360,900 5,319,800 5,310,700 5,272,700 17,264,100
127 USAID and EU have proposed large-scale programs for this G2B-ESP component.
228
Teacher Education &
2017/18 2018/19 2019/20 2020/21 Total Cost
Management
1. Improve teacher
registration, performance
128,100 207,500 150,500 90,500 576,600
management and
incentives
Curriculum &
2017/18 2018/19 2019/20 2020/21 Total Cost
Assessment
128 USAID is in the design phase for a large-scale reading program which could deliver some core CPD activities.
229
1. New English and
mathematics syllabuses
and teacher guides129 216,913 960,663 833,663 - 2,011,240
Funding identified - - - - 0
Funding gap
238,413 1,078,497 919,497 104,833 2,341,240
1. Implement National
Policy on Girls’ Education 225,500 209,500 209,500 9,500 654,000
Let Girls
129 USAID reading program may have synergy with the English syllabus and teacher guides (which would be based on EGRA+ instructional materials)
130 PSL will be developing literacy and numeracy assessments for operator schools. In addition, the USAID reading intervention may include assessment activities.
131 USAID’s Let Girls Learn will fund a number of NGOs to deliver interventions but the scale and scope was not confirmed at the time of writing.
230
2. Counter school-related
gender-based violence 22,000 15,000 25,000 15,000 77,000
132 Donations of deworming medication and continued support for school feeding have been assumed and would need additional costing and discussion with development partners. UNFPA may
support the roll out of the health curriculum. UNICEF have previously supported school-based counsellors and WASH. World Food Programme and Mary’s Meals provide school feeding.
133 Assumes USD 40 per year per child.
134 WFP aims to apply for McGovern-Dole support for school feeding for 2017/18 onwards. Mary’s Meals aims to expand provision using philanthropic donations and fundraising. MoE considers
school feeding funding at current levels to be likely.
231
2. Improve the quality of
TVET delivery135 - 54,300 1,070,300 1,057,900 3,235,100
Funding identified
- - - - 0
Funding gap
34,800 99,275 1,109,500 1,142,300 3,438,475
135 Both EU and UNESCO have proposed support for TVET quality, teacher training and resourcing.
232
Funding identified
- - - - 0
Funding gap
114,900 137,900 232,900 207,900 643,600
233
Annex
Annex 1 Intermediate results framework
The current capacity of the education system is taken into consideration when developing the intermediate results. The targets are based on
the best estimates of the resources available including both financial and human capital.
Program Outcomes or Indicator/s Baseline June 2018 June 2019 June 2020 June Data source
outputs 2021
234
Program Outcomes or Indicator/s Baseline June 2018 June 2019 June 2020 June Data source
outputs 2021
School Quality Improved WASH at Proportion of schools with access Student/functioning Annual school
to: (a) electricity; (b) the Internet for
ECE, basic and toilet ratio 100:1 census
pedagogical purposes; (c)
secondary schools computers for pedagogical (2016, all schools,
purposes; (d) adapted
WASH national
infrastructure and materials for
students with disabilities; (e) basic survey)
drinking water; (f) single-sex basic
sanitation facilities; and (g) basic
handwashing facilities (as per the
WASH indicator definitions), by
location and type of school (SDG
4.a.1)
Component 1 National school Standards developed and No Yes N/A
quality standards disseminated
Component 2 School Quality Policy and tools updated, approved No, using previous Yes N/A
Improvement Plan and disseminated policy
Guidelines and
template and
School Grant
Guidelines
approved
235
Program Outcomes or Indicator/s Baseline June 2018 June 2019 June 2020 June Data source
outputs 2021
School quality # and % of public ECE and basic To be calculated 90% or Annual school
grants provided to education schools receiving school 2500 census and
schools grants disaggregated by type, schools SQA
location and amount
Component 3 Principals certified # and % principals certified 0 500 1,000 1,750 2,500 Program reports
disaggregated by level, location principals
and gender certified
Construct VPL and # of toilets and water systems To be calculated 500 toilets 1000 1500 2,000 Annual school
water systems constructed disaggregated by toilets toilets toilets census and
250 water
location and level of school SQA
systems 500 water 750 water 1,000
systems systems water
systems
236
Program Outcomes or Indicator/s Baseline June 2018 June 2019 June 2020 June Data source
outputs 2021
Education Resourcing % and $ share of national budget FY 2015/16 To be set To be set To be set To be set MoE and GoL
Management & targeted on G2B- and GDP budget
13.46% of national
Accountability ESP programs
budget and 4.12%
of GDP
% and $ budget allocation to G2B- To be calculated To be set To be set To be set To be set MoE and GoL
ESP programs and education budget
levels
Education expenditure per student 2015 To be set To be set To be set To be set MoE and GoL
by level of education and source of budget
ECE: $24
funding (SDG 4.5.4)
Primary: $72
JHS: $79
SHS: $ 90
TVET: $1,100
HE: unknown
237
Program Outcomes or Indicator/s Baseline June 2018 June 2019 June 2020 June Data source
outputs 2021
Increased # and % of schools monitored 0 50% 90% 95% 100% SQA and
monitoring of disaggregated by frequency, level annual school
1,250 2,500 2,550 2,700
schools and location census
Component 1 EDU established, Share (%) of G2B-ESP programs - 75% 80% 85% 90% JESR
staffed and and components that are ‘on-track’
functioning
Component 2 Workforce reform # and % of teacher workforce who Oct 2016 To be set To be set To be set To be set Payroll and
are supplementary, volunteer, annual school
Vol. teachers
unqualified disaggregated by sex, census
3,779
level of school and location
Unqualified
teachers 20,387
Component 3 School quality # and % of schools monitored 0 50% 90% 95% 100% SQA and
assurance disaggregated by frequency, level annual school
1,250 2,500 2,550 2,700
inspections and location census
238
Program Outcomes or Indicator/s Baseline June 2018 June 2019 June 2020 June Data source
outputs 2021
Early Improved access to Net Enrolment Rate 29.4% To be set To be set To be set To be set Annual school
Childhood quality ECE census
Education
Reduced proportion Percentage of children over-age 74.7% To be set To be set To be set To be set Annual school
of overage children for grade (pre-primary, primary census
in ECE education, lower secondary
education), by sex and location
(SDG 4.1.6)
Increased Pupil-Qualified Teacher Ratio, by 77:1 To be set To be set To be set To be set Annual school
proportion of sex and location census
trained and
239
Program Outcomes or Indicator/s Baseline June 2018 June 2019 June 2020 June Data source
outputs 2021
qualified teachers
Component 1 Public awareness Number of parents receiving 0 50,000 100,000 150,000 200,000 Program report
campaign on messages, by location
benefits of ECE and
good parenting
skills
Component 2 ECE pre-service # of teachers, by sex and type of Not known 0 100 200 300 Program report
graduates certification
ECE teachers Percentage and # of teachers who To be calculated 750 1,500 2,250 3,000 Program report
receive CPD and received in-service training in the (UNICEF training) and annual
qualifications last 12 months by type of training, school census
by sex, type of school and location
(SDG 4.c.7)
ECE teaching and # and % of public ECE schools 0 To be set To be set To be set 2,700 SQA, program
240
Program Outcomes or Indicator/s Baseline June 2018 June 2019 June 2020 June Data source
outputs 2021
Overage and Reduced average Average overage gap per grade by 2.3 years To be set To be set To be set To be set EMIS
Out-of-School
over-age gap in sex and location
Program
targeted schools
Percentage of children over-age 74.7% To be set To be set To be set To be set Annual school
for grade (pre-primary, primary census
education, lower secondary
education), by sex and location
(SDG 4.1.6)
Reduced number of Out-of-school rate (primary To be calculated To be set To be set To be set To be set Annual school
out-of-school education, lower secondary census and
children and young education, upper secondary DHS
people education) by sex and location
(SDG 4.1.5)
Increased number # and % of out-of-school children To be calculated 20,000 40,000 80,000 120,000 Program reports
of out-of-school and young people in programs and annual
children and young returning to formal education school census
people returning to
formal education
241
Program Outcomes or Indicator/s Baseline June 2018 June 2019 June 2020 June Data source
outputs 2021
Regulate AE #, type and beneficiaries of AE To be calculated To be set To be set To be set To be set Annual school
providers providers licensed by MoE census
Component 2 CPD for district- # trained by sex, role and training To be calculated 500 1,000 1,500 2,000 Program report
based teachers, module (program reports)
officers and
principals
Component 3 Over-age students # and % of students enrolled and To be calculated 25,000 50,000 75,000 100,000 Program report
supported completing over-age programs and annual
school census
242
Program Outcomes or Indicator/s Baseline June 2018 June 2019 June 2020 June Data source
outputs 2021
Component 4 Out-of-school # of out-of-school children and To be calculated 20,000 40,000 80,000 120,000 Program reports
students supported young people successfully
completing programs
Teacher Increased Proportion of teachers in: (a) pre- Qualified teachers To be set To be set To be set To be set Annual school
Education & primary education;
proportion of – 34,331 (62%) census
Management
trained and (b) primary education; (c) lower
secondary education; and Teachers that
qualified teachers
(d) upper secondary education aren’t qualified –
who have received at least the 20,387 (37%)
minimum organized teacher
training (e.g. pedagogical training)
pre-service or in-service required
for teaching at the relevant level in
a given country, by sex, by sex and
location (SDG 4.c.1)
243
Program Outcomes or Indicator/s Baseline June 2018 June 2019 June 2020 June Data source
outputs 2021
approved
Reduce teacher # and % of teachers (current and To be calculated 5% total 10% total 20% total 50% total Payroll
time out of class newly qualified) receiving salary workforce workforce workforce workforce
via mobile money
50% newly 60% newly 75% newly 90%
qualified qualified qualified newly
qualified
244
Program Outcomes or Indicator/s Baseline June 2018 June 2019 June 2020 June Data source
outputs 2021
and students
Component 2 Pre-service ‘C’ and # of teachers graduating by sex 2016 cohort - 500 C pre- - 1,000 C Program report
‘B’ programs and location graduates service pre-
service
C 300 B in-
service 300 B in-
service
Accelerated In- # of teachers graduating by sex 0 - 870 1,740 2,600 Program report
service ‘C’ and location
certificate programs
for unqualified
teachers
In-service CPD Percentage of teachers who 0 - 12,000 12,000 12,000 Program report,
teacher training received in-service training in the annual school
program for last 12 months by type of training, census and
qualified teachers by sex, type of school and location SQA
(SDG 4.c.7)
245
Program Outcomes or Indicator/s Baseline June 2018 June 2019 June 2020 June Data source
outputs 2021
syllabuses syllabus
developed, trialed,
approved and
distributed for
Grades 1-6,
Component 2 National literacy Administration of a nationally- (a) No (a) Yes Program report
and numeracy representative learning
(b) No (b) Yes
assessments for assessment (a) in Grade 2 or 3; (b)
grade 3 & 6 at the end of primary education; (c) Yes (c) Yes
246
Program Outcomes or Indicator/s Baseline June 2018 June 2019 June 2020 June Data source
outputs 2021
Improved female Female student transition rates to To be calculated To be set To be set To be set To be set Annual school
student survival rate secondary education, by location census
Train Central Office # officers trained, by sex and 0 75 150 150 150 Program report
and county staff on location
gender issues
247
Program Outcomes or Indicator/s Baseline June 2018 June 2019 June 2020 June Data source
outputs 2021
Reports of SGBV Percentage of substantiated 0 25% 50% 75% 95% Program report
investigated and reports leading to MoE sanctions
acted upon and judicial referral, by sex,
location, type of report and status
of resolution
Component 3 WASH training # of teachers, principals and To be calculated 500 1,000 1,500 2,000 Program report
officers trained, by location, type of
school and sex
School health clubs # of schools with school health To be calculated 300 600 900 1,200 Program report
club, by location and type of school and annual
school census
School-based # and % of schools with one male To be calculated 250 500 750 1,000 Program reports
counsellors and one female trained counsellor, and annual
by sex, location and type of school school census
CSE & health Percentage of schools that provide 0 25% 50% 95% 95% Annual school
life skills-based HIV and sexuality
curriculum being census and
education, by location and type of
248
Program Outcomes or Indicator/s Baseline June 2018 June 2019 June 2020 June Data source
outputs 2021
Deworming # of children receiving deworming To be calculated 1,200,000 1,200,00 1,200,000 1,200,000 SQA and
annual school
census
School feeding # of children receiving daily meal 360,000 (Oct 400,000 400,000 400,000 400,000 Annual school
2016) census and
program reports
Technical and Increased Pupil-Qualified Teacher Ratio 33:1 To be set To be set To be set To be set Annual school
Vocational
proportion of (TVET sub-sector) census
Education and
Training trained and
Program
qualified teachers
Participation rate in technical and To be calculated To be set To be set To be set To be set Annual school
vocational programmes (15- to 24- census or HIES
year-olds), by sex and location
(SDG 4.3.3)
Gross enrolment ratio for tertiary To be calculated To be set To be set To be set To be set Annual school
education by location and type of census
education (SDG 4.3.2)
249
Program Outcomes or Indicator/s Baseline June 2018 June 2019 June 2020 June Data source
outputs 2021
studies developed,
approved and
shared
Increase the share Number of TVET providers 65 75 95 115 130 Annual school
of TVET providers captured each year, by location census
providing annual and type
EMIS information
based on the new
form and improve
the utility of data
provided
Component 2 Selected training # of TVET qualified teachers 0 60 120 180 240 Program reports
institute provided graduate, by sex and type of
with TVET teacher specialism
training support and
training TVET
teachers
250
Program Outcomes or Indicator/s Baseline June 2018 June 2019 June 2020 June Data source
outputs 2021
institutions
251
Program Outcomes or Indicator/s Baseline June 2018 June 2019 June 2020 June Data source
outputs 2021
252
Program Outcomes or Indicator/s Baseline June 2018 June 2019 June 2020 June Data source
outputs 2021
Scholarships are Number of higher education To be calculated To be set To be set To be set To be set Program report
better targeted scholarships awarded by
beneficiary country by sex,
sponsoring country and area of
study (SDG 4.b.2)
253
Annex 2 Operational planning, monitoring and reporting process
An Annual Operational Plan will be developed for each year by the MoE based on G2B-ESP
programs, components and activities. Key features of the AOP are:
Clear responsibilities and accountability for delivery of activities with tasks allocated
to specific officers and departments
Quarterly reporting on activities and expenditure and public disclosure of data, audits
and reports under the Freedom of Information law
Review of risk matrix and mitigation strategies, including national disaster risk-
reduction plan
The Annual Operational Plan process will be led by the Deputy Minister for Planning,
Research and Development and facilitated by officers from planning, monitoring and
evaluation, and budgets. Key MFDP and CSA officers will be involved as required. Relevant
departments and bureaus will develop operational plans, targets and budgets for each
program and component based on a review of the previous year’s achievements.
Operational planning for Year 1 (2017/18) will begin in December 2016.
The Education Sector Development Committee will be actively consulted and involved to
ensure alignment of externally funded activities with G2B-ESP operational budgeting. A key
feature of the planning process will be the active involvement of MoE teams to maximize
ownership and accountability.
The Annual Operational Plan will be a public document, reviewed and reported quarterly
(including internal and external funding, expenditure and funding gaps), assessed annually
by the JESR and reported in the MoE Annual Report to the public and legislature (Table
0-2).
254
Table 0-2 Annual operational planning and reporting cycle (proposed)
May
August
For Year 1 the schedule for the development of the Operational Plan will begin immediately
(Table 0-3)
Table 0-3 Timetable for Year 1 Operational Plan development
255
CSA to ensure efficiency
savings and programmatic
budgeting
CEOs and DEOs develop End of February 2017 Assistant Minister, Planning,
county and district Research and Development
operational plans based on
G2B-ESP programs.
Approval by MoE.
Q3 review and reporting on End of March 2017 Deputy Minister for Planning,
G2B-ESP related areas Research and Development
and relevant program leads
Joint Education Sector End of April 2017 Deputy Minister for Planning,
Review and independent Research and Development
verification for 2016/17 to and ESDC chairperson
review targets and indicators
256
Final revisions to Operational End of May 2017 Assistant Minister, Planning,
Plan for 2017/18 Research and Development
Q4 review and reporting on End of June 2017 Deputy Minister for Planning,
G2B-ESP related areas Research and Development
and relevant program leads
257
Annex 3 Summary of teacher, principal and education officer professional development
School Quality ECE/Basic and Secondary Principals’ Training 1,500 over three years 500 WASH, school feeding &
school principals Program deworming, reducing
gender-based violence
(including counselors),
overage & out-of-school
children, quality ECE, early
grade literacy & numeracy,
school grants.
Education Management DEOs Regional training of CEO, 100 a year 210 Training of G2B-ESP
& Accountability DEO and other county priorities
level EO staff
School Inspectors Induction & annual 20 inspectors per year 2,067 20 trained per year x 3
refresher training years
Overage & Out-of-School Alternative education Teaching and TBD TBD To be included in the
teachers management of alternative program designs
and accelerated education
programs
Teacher Education & Pre-service ‘C’ residential ‘C’ certificate 1,000 over four years (500 4,800136 Update curriculum with key
Management teachers every two years) G2B-ESP priorities & use
18 months new early grade English,
math, CSE/health and
special education
136 Assumes total RTTI funding remains consistent at USD 600,000 annually per RTTI and unit costs are reduced for residential students from USD 5709 to USD 4,800 through user-pay and other
institutional reforms. C certificate will be lengthened to 18 months by time of ESP implementation.
258
Program/s Who What Target Unit cost (USD) per Notes
person trained
instructional materials
In-service junior high ‘B’ certificate 600 over four years (300 4,000137 Assumes any expansion
school teachers every two years) beyond 500 every two years
18 months is on a user-pay basis.
In-service unqualified Accelerated In-service ‘C’ 2,600 over four years 800 Focus on G2B-ESP
teachers certificate priorities including English
(870 per year) and math instruction using
3 weeks residential at new curriculum plus health,
district level with self-study gender, overage & special
& CPD education modules.
Delivered by RTTI lecturers
and Instructional
Supervisors.
Early grade basic CPD 12,000 annually for three 122 per teacher per year Modules that focus on
education in-service years teaching English, math,
teachers (USD 83 per year per gender, overage children,
teacher for cluster school health and special
workshop) education for primary
teachers.
Instructional supervisors Annual CPD modules 300 annually 610 per IS per year138 One-week county-based
training of trainers on CPD
modules (above).
Student Well-being Central office and county Gender Policy 75 annually 100 per officer
based staff implementation and data
collection
137 Includes estimate for additional training for lecturers and infrastructure and equipment to expand B certificate. B certificate is 18 month in-service.
259
Program/s Who What Target Unit cost (USD) per Notes
person trained
School-based counsellors School health clubs, CSE 2,400 over four years (600 75 per teacher Includes school health club
& school health advisers and school-based annually) kit including menstruation
(volunteer teachers) counselling and WASH guidance
County School Feeding Annual refresher training 15 annually 1,303 per officer Includes deworming
Coordinators
TVET TVET teachers and TVET teacher training 240 over four years 800 Short course, pedagogical
instructors program in an existing skills
training institution (60 annually)
260
Annex 4 Summary of research trials and studies
Education Management & Partnership Schools for Three years Funded IPA
Accountability Liberia impact evaluation
2016-19
School Quality Program Test the SQA tool One year 28,500 PSL
2017/18
ECE Early learning system One year 400,000 Possibly funded by Early
diagnostic Learning Partnership139
2017/18
Quality and learning
250,000
outcomes study
Parental perception
survey 100,000
Supply, demand, and
139 ELP will commission one service provider to deliver these interrelated diagnostic and systems evaluation studies in partnership with MoE.
261
projection study
ECE teacher training 25,000
costing study
25,000
200,000
262
which improve ECE quality
Pilot rural hardship incentive Two years 136,000 100 teacher positions
allowances receiving hardship
2019-2021
incentives
263
women to pre-service teacher 2019/20
training
Curriculum & Assessment Pilot National Assessment 2018 or earlier 20,000 Unit cost does not include
System for one grade cost of development of
materials. Included in PSL
evaluation costs.
Student Well-being Design, pilot, evaluate and Three years 2017-2020 200,000 per pilot Let Girls Learn as possible
scale-up 3 interventions to funding source
improve access and learning
outcomes for girls and young
women
TVET TVET student tracer study One year 20,000 Phone research
2017/18
Higher Education Comparative unit costs and Annually 30,000 10,000 per year
cost-effectiveness study for
2017-2020
three-five priority diploma and
degree programs
264
Annex 5 Sustainable Development Goal 4 targets and indicators
4.1 By 2030, ensure that all girls and boys complete free, equitable and quality primary and
secondary education leading to relevant and effective learning outcomes
4.2 By 2030, ensure that all girls and boys have access to quality early childhood development,
care and pre-primary education so that they are ready for primary education
4.3 By 2030, ensure equal access for all women and men to affordable and quality technical,
vocational and tertiary education, including university
4.4 By 2030, substantially increase the number of youth and adults who have relevant skills,
including technical and vocational skills, for employment, decent jobs and entrepreneurship
4.5 By 2030, eliminate gender disparities in education and ensure equal access to all levels of
education and vocational training for the vulnerable, including persons with disabilities,
indigenous peoples and children in vulnerable situations
4.6 By 2030, ensure that all youth and a substantial proportion of adults, both men and women,
achieve literacy and numeracy
4.7 By 2030, ensure that all learners acquire the knowledge and skills needed to promote
sustainable development, including, among others, through education for sustainable
development and sustainable lifestyles, human rights, gender equality, promotion of a culture of
peace and non-violence, global citizenship and appreciation of cultural diversity and of culture’s
contribution to sustainable development
4.a Build and upgrade education facilities that are child, disability and gender sensitive and
provide safe, non-violent, inclusive and effective learning environments for all
4.b By 2020, substantially expand globally the number of scholarships available to developing
countries, in particular least developed countries, small island developing States and African
countries, for enrolment in higher education, including vocational training and information and
communications technology, technical, engineering and scientific programmes, in developed
countries and other developing countries
4.c By 2030, substantially increase the supply of qualified teachers, including through
international cooperation for teacher training in developing countries, especially least developed
countries and small island developing States.
265
Table 0-4 SDG4-Education 2030 Indicators and Intended Reporting
No. Global SDG4-Education 2030 Indicators Mandatory Annual G2B-ESP Consider Notes
SDG EMIS indicator for future
annual reporting reporting
reporting
4.1.1 Proportion of children and young people (a) in Grade 2
or 3; (b) at the end of primary education; and (c) at the
end of lower secondary education achieving at least a
minimum proficiency level in (i) reading and (ii)
mathematics, by sex
4.1.2 Administration of a nationally-representative learning
assessment (a) in Grade 2 or 3; (b) at the end of primary
education; and (c) at the end of lower secondary
education
4.1.5 Out-of-school rate (primary education, lower secondary Using HIES data
education, upper secondary education)
4.1.7 Number of years of (a) free and (b) compulsory primary This indicator is similar to 4.2.5 on
and secondary education guaranteed in legal pre-primary education
frameworks
4.2.1 Proportion of children under 5 years of age who are Requires health data or specific
developmentally on track in health, learning and survey (e.g. Ministry of Health,
266
No. Global SDG4-Education 2030 Indicators Mandatory Annual G2B-ESP Consider Notes
SDG EMIS indicator for future
annual reporting reporting
reporting
psychosocial well-being, by sex UNICEF).
4.2.2 Participation rate in organized learning (one year before This will include overage students
the official primary entry age), by sex and affect international
comparability.
4.2.3 Percentage of children under 5 years experiencing These data are difficult to collect
positive and stimulating home learning environments and require collaboration with
Ministry of Health and relevant
surveys.
4.2.4 Gross pre-primary enrolment ratio This will include overage students
and affect international
comparability.
4.2.5 Number of years of (a) free and (b) compulsory pre- This indicator is similar to 4.1.7 on
primary education guaranteed in legal frameworks primary and secondary education
4.3.1 Participation rate of youth and adults in formal and non- Data on some formal and most non-
formal education and training in the previous 12 months, formal education and training is
by sex collected by the MYS. Should
include community-based and NGO
programs.
4.3.2 Gross enrolment ratio for tertiary education This includes all post-secondary
and tertiary including university.
4.3.3 Participation rate in technical and vocational Should include all technical and
programmes (15- to 24-year-olds) vocational education programmes,
including MoE, MoYS, MoL and
others.
4.4.1 Proportion of youth/adults with information and To be considered, along with data
communications technology (ICT) skills, by type of skill on other skills needed for the future
world of work. MoE, MYS, MoL and
267
No. Global SDG4-Education 2030 Indicators Mandatory Annual G2B-ESP Consider Notes
SDG EMIS indicator for future
annual reporting reporting
reporting
others
4.4.2 Percentage of youth/adults who have achieved at least a To be considered, along with data
minimum level of proficiency in digital literacy skills on other skills needed for the future
world of work. MoE, MYS, MoL and
others.
4.4.3 Youth/adult educational attainment rates by age group, Would require data on economic
economic activity status, level of education and activity (Ministry of Labour), youth
programme orientation and adults.
4.5.4 Education expenditure per student by level of education Further data would be required to
and source of funding cover all levels and types of
education.
4.5.5 Percentage of total aid to education allocated to low- n/a n/a n/a n/a
income countries
4.6.1 Percentage of the population in a given age group LISGIS has data on literacy, from
achieving at least a fixed level of proficiency in functional HIES Data on numeracy could be
(a) literacy and (b) numeracy skills, by sex collected
268
No. Global SDG4-Education 2030 Indicators Mandatory Annual G2B-ESP Consider Notes
SDG EMIS indicator for future
annual reporting reporting
reporting
4.6.2 Youth/adult literacy rate Adult literacy is not a strategic
priority in G2B-ESP but will be
reported in EMIS.
4.6.3 Participation rate of youth/adults in literacy programmes Adult literacy is not a strategic
priority in G2B-ESP but will be
reported in EMIS.
4.7.1 Extent to which (i) global citizenship education and (ii) Will require reviews of national
education for sustainable development, including gender education policies, curricula,
equality and human rights, are mainstreamed at all levels teacher education, and student
in: (a) national education policies (b) curricula (c) teacher assessments.
education and (d) student assessments
4.7.2 Percentage of schools that provide life skills-based HIV Data from UNFPA programs. Will
and sexuality education require additional EMIS question.
4.7.4 Percentage of students by age group (or education level) Data could be collected through
showing adequate understanding of issues relating to student assessments in coming
global citizenship and sustainability years.
4.7.5 Percentage of 15-year-old students showing proficiency Data could be collected through
in knowledge of environmental science and geoscience student assessments in coming
years.
4.a.1 Proportion of schools with access to: (a) electricity; (b) The G2B-ESP reporting includes
the Internet for pedagogical purposes; (c) computers for student/toilet ratio. Other data could
pedagogical purposes; (d) adapted infrastructure and be collected in due course with
materials for students with disabilities; (e) basic drinking additional school census data.
water; (f) single-sex basic sanitation facilities; and (g)
basic handwashing facilities (as per the WASH indicator
definitions)
269
No. Global SDG4-Education 2030 Indicators Mandatory Annual G2B-ESP Consider Notes
SDG EMIS indicator for future
annual reporting reporting
reporting
4.a.2 Percentage of students experiencing bullying, corporal Some data are collected and further
punishment, harassment, violence, sexual discrimination student surveys may be required.
and abuse
4.a.3 Number of attacks on students, personnel and Data are difficult to collect.
institutions
4.b.1 Volume of official development assistance flows for Data may be available.
scholarships by sector and type of study
270
No. Global SDG4-Education 2030 Indicators Mandatory Annual G2B-ESP Consider Notes
SDG EMIS indicator for future
annual reporting reporting
reporting
4.c.5 Average teacher salary relative to other professions Further data would be required in
requiring a comparable level of qualification cooperation with Ministry of Labour
4.c.7 Percentage of teachers who received in-service training Would require additional data.
in the last 12 months by type of training
271
Annex 6 G2B-ESP risk matrix
External
Not getting payroll savings Qualified teachers and Engage regularly with CSA
from redundancies and competent supplementary and MFDP; inform Cabinet
removal of ghost teachers and volunteer teachers and legislature; model impact
ring-fenced for education cannot be added to the on recurrent budget; target
payroll, reducing access and most disadvantaged areas
quality first; include as policy trigger
in development assistance
Not getting reduction in Larger funding gap; Engage regularly with MFDP,
subsidies and scholarships inequitable distribution of Cabinet and legislature;
scarce resources ensure development partners
provide adequate funding for
scholarships; reduce
international scholarships
and target disadvantaged
groups and key development
areas; communication
campaign to ensure public
know reason for reducing
subsidy; include as policy
trigger in development
assistance
Not able to reduce higher Larger funding gap; Engage regularly with MFDP,
education transfers inequitable distribution of Cabinet and legislature;
resources to tertiary level consult with Association of
Liberian Universities and
student bodies; replace GoL
funding with performance-
related development funds
272
displacement of population, contingency budget in MoE
disruption/damaging of programmatic budget line
school infrastructures) and chart of accounts;
engagement with ESDC
Funding gap not filled Critical components may not Prioritize critical components
be implemented in GPE grant application;
hold donor summit to ensure
commitments are known;
review funding position
quarterly; EDU fundraising
position; ensure
development partner
contributions are clearly
highlighted in budget; lobby
Cabinet and legislature
Internal
Key officers could be Some components may not Operational plan to break
overloaded with the number be implemented due to lack down responsibilities to lower
and scope of programs and of capacity ranking officers; establish
components quarterly review and
reporting to improve program
management; use EDU to
support key components;
outsource (e.g. teacher
training)
EDU may pose a risk to the High performing staff leave Recruit beyond MoE; ensure
efficiency of other MoE units MoE operational units transition plans and enough
(through secondment of high impacting on program time for handover; identify
performing staff) implementation new talent
Program-level
The funding available for More schools, toilets and Develop and use low-cost
improving the physical water systems needed than designs; use community
facilities is inadequate in the GoL and development mobilization and self-build
273
relation to need. partners can afford reducing approaches; engage private
access and quality sector, faith-based and NGO
groups; fundraising; targeting
disadvantaged areas; utilize
County Development Funds
Transferring large numbers Slow transfer will mean many Review systems and
of teachers onto payroll will children will not have a processes; dedicate enough
be challenging teacher and teachers will staff resources; close
lose moral when not paid collaboration with CSA and
MFDP; training for DEOs and
CEOs; helpline for teachers;
communication strategy;
target most needy areas first;
phased approach
User pay for pre-service may Uncertain prospects of Scholarships and other
impact on female and remote securing a teaching position measures to ensure women
teachers quickly & fewer poor people and people from remote
and women reduce areas apply; phased
enrollment into teacher approach with regular review
training, especially from and analysis; ensuring new
remote areas teachers are quickly on
payroll
School monitoring visits may Schools do not change Target poorly performing
not suffice to improve school practices and principals are schools and districts first; link
monitoring with incentives
274
quality not held to account such as school grants;
provide improved
communication with parents;
phase in gradually and
evaluate impact
275
Annex 7 Communication strategy
Communication with stakeholders and the wider public is integrated across the G2B-ESP’s
programs. For example, the theory of change for ECE and basic education (Figure 4-1 and
Figure 4-2) identifies pathways to change, and communication and community engagement are
key for four of these:
Engaged parents who can hold schools to account
Students who are in the right grade and ready for school
Safe and healthy environment
Effective systems and policies
Table 0-5 sets out major communications activities from the different programs. Resources for
these activities are included in those programs. In addition, there will be specific communication
activities to promote and launch the plan including the development of a simple information
booklet for parents and teachers.
276
School Report Card
Subsidy reform
Fundraising
Data transparency and
reporting to stakeholders
277
Student Well-being 1. Implement National Develop a simplified
Program Policy on Girls’ Education version of the Policy; print
and distribute
2. Counter school-related
gender-based violence Raise awareness of the
Policy’s provisions on non-
discrimination against
pregnant adolescents and
young mothers
Improve data collection on
gender issues; publish
Girls’ Education Report
Card
Publicize MoE hot-line and
develop anonymous
reporting channels
Higher Education Program 3. Update the Higher Revise the 1989 Act on
Education Act Higher Education Act
though support and
engagement of key
stakeholders
278
Annex 8 Student and teacher projections
Prior to development of the G2B-ESP, projections of key sectors were calculated. The G2B-
ESP development was informed by the projections and other sector data. The projection covers
Early Childhood Education, Primary (Basic), Junior High School, and Senior High School levels.
TVET and Higher Education levels are excluded from the projection due to the lack of quality
enrollment data.
The projection presents a realistic, low performance (status quo) scenario. Targets are set at a
moderate rate to reflect that the timeframe of the Education Sector Plan is over the next four
years. The methodology is to project enrollment in each level based on population growth and to
project teachers and classrooms requirement based on change in enrollment. 2014/15 is
chosen as the base year as it is the most recent year when the actual expenditure data is
available.
The projection identifies significant demand in teachers supply and infrastructure. According to
the current low capacity of three Rural Teacher Training Institutes(RTTI), there will be shortage
of trained teachers to cope with the population growth in order to keep the current Student-
Trained Teacher Ratio (STTR).
The same trend goes to the infrastructure development. In order to maintain the current
Student-Classroom Ratio(SCR), more than 200 classrooms each year need to be built from
2017. Assuming an average school has 12 classrooms, the number equals to more than 20
schools to be built. The Government of Liberia has allocated zero amount of budget to
education infrastructure over the past few years and this scenario is unlikely to change.
The public financing of education model was developed by the World Bank and adapted from
the Ghana education projection model. The model was re-run in September 2016 with updated
EMIS data.
279
Target 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2,021
Kids at age 3-5 enrolled 136,549 142,685 148,960 155,377 161,937 168,645 175,503
Gross Enrollment Ratio
(GER) 120.0% 133.1% 131% 129% 127% 124% 122% 120%
Net Enrollment Ratio
(NER) 40.0% 33.7% 35% 36% 37% 38% 39% 40%
Enrollment in private as
% of total enrollment 40.0% 41.3% 41.1% 40.9% 40.7% 40.4% 40.2% 40%
Total public school
enrolment 316,678 316,788 316,810 316,735 316,562 314,747 314,029
Teachers
280
Number of 'new' trained
teachers needed(attrition +
increase) 1,404 1,526 1,660 1,805 1,902 2,112
Number of upgraded
teachers required
(untrained to trained
based on % trained
teacher targets) 526 561 599 641 708 739
1. Employee Compensation
PTR in public and
community schools 50.00 53.10 52.58 52.07 51.55 51.03 50.52 50
Number of total teachers
needed in public and
community schools 5964 6024 6085 6144 6203 6231 6,281
Number of teachers paid
by government 3929 4079 4228 4377 4525 4641 4,781
Number of teachers in
public and community
schools paid by
nongovernment 1500 2035 1946 1857 1767 1678 1589 1,500
Average salary in multiple
of GDP per capita 3.96 3.96 3.96 3.96 3.96 3.96 3.96 4
GDP growth (real GDP+
inflation) 8% 11% 13% 13% 13% 13% 13%
Average salary 'unit cost'
per year (USD) 1,812 2,005 2,261 2,551 2,886 3,265 3,693
Total teacher salary (USD) 7,119,348 8,178,009 9,558,050 11,166,840 13,059,371 15,154,130 17,656,923
Number Non-teaching
staff at school level paid by
government 1,179 1,224 1,268 1,313 1,357 1,392 1,434
281
Average salary 'unit cost'
per year (USD) 1,692 1,872 2,111 2,382 2,695 3,049 3,449
Total non-teacher salary 1,994,360 2,290,926 2,677,520 3,128,194 3,658,354 4,245,164 4,946,277
Subtotal Employee
Compensation 9,113,708 10,468,934 12,235,569 14,295,035 16,717,725 19,399,294 22,603,200
2. Goods and Services 110,749 122,545 138,166 155,938 176,403 199,554 225,744
3. Consumption of fixed
capital 25,987 28,755 32,420 36,590 41,393 46,825 52,970
4. Investment
Unit cost of classroom 4,200 4,647 5,240 5,914 6,690 7,568 8,561
Total for ECE 9,250,000 11,430,000 14,220,000 17,560,000 21,560,000 21,560,001 21,560,002
Primary
Kids at age 6-11 enrolled 361,929 375,332 389,067 403,141 417,561 432,334 447,468
Gross Enrollment Ratio
(GER) 95.0% 88.4% 90% 91% 92% 93% 94% 95%
Net Enrollment Ratio 55.0% 48.8% 50% 51% 52% 53% 54% 55%
282
(NER)
Enrollment in private as
% of total enrollment 50.0% 42.8% 44.0% 45.2% 46.4% 47.6% 48.8% 50%
Total public school
enrolment 374,535 377,089 379,431 381,548 383,432 385,069 386,450
Teachers
Pupil Teacher Ratio 20.00 21.50 21.25 21.00 20.75 20.50 20.25 20
Number of teachers
required by PTR 30,467 31,699 32,980 34,313 35,700 37,143 38,645
Share of trained/qualified
teachers (%) 66.0% 62% 63% 64% 64% 65% 65% 66%
Number of Qualified
teachers 18,975 19,944 20,954 22,012 23,122 24,285 25,506
Number of Unqualified
teachers 11,492 11,755 12,027 12,301 12,578 12,858 13,139
Teacher attrition (only
trained teachers) 6.0% 6% 6% 6% 6% 6% 6% 6%
Number of 'new' trained
teachers
needed(attition+increase) 2,108 2,206 2,316 2,430 2,551 2,677
Number of upgraded
teachers required
(untrained to trained
based on % trained
teacher targets) 263 272 274 277 279 282
1. Employee Compensation
PTR in public and
community schools 25.00 27.80 27.33 26.87 26.40 25.93 25.47 25
Number of total teachers
needed in public and 13472 13796 14123 14453 14785 15121 15,458
283
community schools
Total teacher salary (USD) 18,011,280 21,257,409 25,471,557 30,453,812 36,388,470 43,364,649 51,553,433
Number Non-teaching
staff at school level paid by
government 2,982 3,181 3,380 3,581 3,782 3,985 4,187
Average salary in multiple
of GDP per capita 3.70 3.7 3.70 3.70 3.70 3.70 3.70 4
Average salary 'unit cost'
per year (USD) 1,692 1,872 2,111 2,382 2,695 3,049 3,449
Total non-teacher salary 5,045,544 5,954,890 7,135,410 8,531,101 10,193,591 12,147,845 14,441,789
Subtotal Employee
Compensation 23,056,824.0 27,212,299.5 32,606,966.4 38,984,913.5 46,582,061.2 55,512,494.1 65,995,222
2. Goods and Services 455,117 503,591 567,784 640,818 724,919 820,057 927,681
3. Consumption of fixed
capital 94,500 104,565 117,894 133,058 150,521 170,275 192,622
4. Investment
284
Number of classrooms
(public) 11,453.7 11,531.8 11,603.4 11,668.1 11,725.7 11,775.8 11,818
Number of new classrooms
needed 78 72 65 58 50 42
Unit cost of classroom 4,200 4,647 5,240 5,914 6,690 7,568 8,561
Total for Primary 23,606,440 28,183,492 33,667,805 40,141,768 47,842,782 56,881,841 67,476,987
Teachers
Pupil Teacher Ratio 12.90 12.90 12.90 12.90 12.90 12.90 12.90 13
Number of teachers
required by PTR 12,942 13,426 13,926 14,440 14,971 15,519 16,083
Share of trained teachers
(%) 38.0% 33% 34% 35% 36% 36% 37% 38%
Number of Qualified
teachers 4,284 4,554 4,837 5,134 5,445 5,770 6,111
285
Number of Unqualified
teachers 8,658 8,873 9,089 9,307 9,527 9,748 9,971
Teacher attrition (only
trained teachers) 6.0% 6% 6% 6% 6% 6% 6% 6%
Number of 'new' trained
teachers
needed(attition+increase) 527 556 587 619 652 687
Number of upgraded
teachers required
(untrained to trained
based on % trained
teacher targets) 214 216 218 220 222 223
1. Employee Compensation
PTR in public and
community schools 20.00 24.87 24.06 23.25 22.44 21.62 20.81 20
Number of total teachers
needed in public and
community schools 4374 4749 5160 5611 6108 6656 7,261
Number of teachers paid
by government 2805 3358 3947 4577 5252 5978 6,761
Number of teachers in
public and community
schools paid by
nongovernment 500 1569 1391 1213 1035 856 678 500
Average salary in multiple
of GDP per capita 3.96 3.96 3.96 3.96 3.96 3.96 3.96 4
GDP growth (real GDP+
inflation) 8% 11% 13% 13% 13% 13% 13%
Average salary 'unit cost'
per year (USD) 1,812 2,005 2,261 2,551 2,886 3,265 3,693
Total teacher salary (USD) 5,082,660 6,732,731 8,922,655 11,676,506 15,156,831 19,516,492 24,972,990
286
staff at school level paid by
government
Total non-teacher salary 1,423,818 1,886,057 2,499,525 3,270,968 4,245,920 5,467,203 6,995,745
Subtotal Employee
Compensation 6,506,478.0 8,618,788.0 11,422,179.8 14,947,474.8 19,402,751.6 24,983,694.8 31,968,735
2. Goods and Services 132,937 147,096 165,846 187,179 211,744 239,533 270,970
3. Consumption of fixed
capital 18,900 20,913 23,579 26,612 30,104 34,055 38,524
4. Investment
Unit cost of classroom 4,200 4,647 5,240 5,914 6,690 7,568 8,561
Total for JHS 6,658,314 9,311,832 12,241,369 15,917,528 20,555,007 26,353,439 33,598,279
Gross Enrollment Ratio 40.0% 35.6% 36% 37% 38% 39% 39% 40%
287
(GER)
Enrollment in private as
% of total enrollment 80.0% 86.8% 85.7% 84.5% 83.4% 82.3% 81.1% 80%
Total public school
enrolment 13,988 15,966 18,102 20,407 22,890 25,561 28,432
Teachers
Pupil Teacher Ratio 16.20 16.20 16.20 16.20 16.20 16.20 16.20 16
Number of teachers
required by PTR 6,535 6,871 7,221 7,586 7,966 8,362 8,775
Share of trained teachers
(%) 50.0% 34% 37% 39% 42% 45% 47% 50%
Number of Qualified
teachers 2,216 2,514 2,835 3,182 3,556 3,957 4,388
Number of Unqualified
teachers 4,320 4,357 4,386 4,404 4,411 4,406 4,388
Teacher attrition (only
trained teachers) 6.0% 6% 6% 6% 6% 6% 6% 6%
Number of 'new' trained
teachers
needed(attition+increase) 431 473 517 564 615 668
Number of upgraded
teachers required
(untrained to trained
based on % trained
teacher targets) 37 28 18 7 5 18
1. Employee Compensation
PTR in public and
community schools 15.00 8.03 9.19 10.35 11.51 12.68 13.84 15
Number of total teachers
needed in public and 1743 1738 1749 1773 1806 1847 1,895
288
community schools
Total teacher salary (USD) 3,158,316 3,484,142 3,953,730 4,522,517 5,212,226 6,031,244 7,000,850
Number Non-teaching
staff at school level paid by
government 523 521 525 532 542 554 569
Average salary in multiple
of GDP per capita 3.70 3.7 3.70 3.70 3.70 3.70 3.70 4
Average salary 'unit cost'
per year (USD) 1,692 1,872 2,111 2,382 2,695 3,049 3,449
Total non-teacher salary 884,747 976,021 1,107,568 1,266,904 1,460,114 1,689,547 1,961,165
Subtotal Employee
Compensation 4,043,062.8 4,460,163.5 5,061,297.4 5,789,420.9 6,672,339.9 7,720,791.1 8,962,015
2. Goods and Services 40,272 44,561 50,242 56,704 64,146 72,565 82,088
3. Consumption of fixed
capital 9,450 10,456 11,789 13,306 15,052 17,028 19,262
4. Investment
289
Number of classrooms
(public) 219.6 262.0 311.2 368.4 434.9 512.6 604
Number of new classrooms
needed 42 49 57 67 78 91
Unit cost of classroom 4,200 4,647 5,240 5,914 6,690 7,568 8,561
Total for SHS 4,092,785 4,712,359 5,381,101 6,197,378 7,196,660 8,398,387 9,842,892
290
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