70595 AFRICA HUMAN DEVELOPMENT SERIES Education in the Republic of South Sudan Status and Challenges for a New System Education in the Republic of South Sudan STATUS AND CHALLENGES FOR A NEW SYSTEM AFRICA HUMAN DEVELOPMENT SERIES Education in the Republic of South Sudan STATUS AND CHALLENGES FOR A NEW SYSTEM AFRICA HUMAN DEVELOPMENT SERIES © 2012 International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank 1818 H Street NW Washington DC 20433 Telephone: 202-473-1000 Internet: www.worldbank.org Some rights reserved 1 2 3 4 15 14 13 12 This work is a product of the staff of The World Bank with external contributions. Note that The World Bank does not necessarily own each component of the content included in the work. The World Bank therefore does not warrant that the use of the content contained in the work will not infringe on the rights of third parties. The risk of claims resulting from such infringement rests solely with you. 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Under the Creative Commons Attribu- tion license, you are free to copy, distribute, transmit, and adapt this work, including for commercial purposes, under the following conditions: Attribution—Please cite the work as follows: World Bank. 2012. Education in the Republic of South Sudan: Status and Challenges for a New System. Washington, D.C.: World Bank. DOI: 10.1596/978-0-8213-8891-4. License: Creative Commons Attribution CC BY 3.0 Translations—If you create a translation of this work, please add the following disclaimer along with the attribution: This translation was not created by The World Bank and should not be considered an official World Bank translation. The World Bank shall not be liable for any content or error in this translation. All queries on rights and licenses should be addressed to the Office of the Publisher, The World Bank, 1818 H Street NW, Washington, DC 20433, USA; fax: 202-522-2625; e-mail: pubrights@worldbank.org. ISBN (paper): 978-0-8213-8891-4 ISBN (electronic): 978-0-8213-8892-1 DOI: 10.1596/978-0-8213-8891-4 Cover photo: School in Warrap State. Photo courtesy of Education Management Informa- tion System Unit, Republic of South Sudan, Ministry of Education. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Education in the Republic of South Sudan : status and challenges for a new system. p. cm. ISBN 978-0-8213-8891-4 -- ISBN 978-0-8213-8892-1 1. Education--Republic of South Sudan. I. World Bank. LA2090.S68E38 2012 370.9629--dc23 2012013540 Contents Foreword xiii Acknowledgments xvii Abbreviations xix EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 1 Is Everyone Getting a Chance at Education? 1 How Much Are Students Learning? 5 What Is the Situation of Schools and Service Delivery? 6 What Is the Republic of South Sudan Investing in Education and How Is It Using These Resources? 6 Are the Resources Well Deployed and Managed to Ensure Efficient Functioning of the Education System? 8 Conclusions 10 Notes 12 CHAPTER 1. BACKGROUND AND CONTEXT 13 Background 13 Demographic, Geographical, and Political Context 14 Macroeconomic Context 17 Poverty and Social Development Context 19 Trends in Government Revenues and Expenditures 20 Organization of the Education Status Report 22 Report Limitations 23 Notes 24 CHAPTER 2. OVERALL ENROLLMENT PATTERNS 25 Structure of the Education System 25 Trend in Student Enrollments 26 v vi • Contents The Gross Enrollment Ratio 27 The Formal Education System: School Network and Organization 29 Alternative Education System 37 Key Findings 39 Notes 39 CHAPTER 3. PATTERNS OF STUDENT FLOW 41 Repetition and Schooling Profile in the Formal System 41 Cohort Access and Multicohort Effects 45 Student Flow in the Alternative Education System 47 Current Schooling Status of All Children and Youth 47 Key Findings 49 Notes 50 CHAPTER 4. DISPARITIES IN SCHOOL PARTICIPATION 51 Socioeconomic Disparities 51 Regional Disparities 55 Out-of-School Children 58 Nonliterate Youth and AES 60 Key Findings 61 Notes 62 CHAPTER 5. STUDENT LEARNING AND SERVICE DELIVERY 65 Data Sources 65 Student Learning Outcomes in Primary Education 65 Service Delivery in Primary Education in Four States 71 Student Learning Outcomes in Secondary Education 83 Service Delivery in Secondary Education 84 Key Findings 86 Notes 87 CHAPTER 6. EDUCATION SPENDING 89 Trend in Public Education Spending since 2006 89 Analysis of Public Education Spending in 2009 92 Public per Student Spending in 2009 103 Household Spending on Education 107 Key Findings 108 Notes 109 CHAPTER 7. TEACHERS AND TEACHER MANAGEMENT 111 Establishing a Teacher Workforce 112 Teacher Workforce and Salary Grades 114 Contents • vii Teacher Preparation and Qualifications 115 Teacher Management 119 Key Findings 125 Notes 126 CHAPTER 8. CONCLUSIONS 127 Notes 134 APPENDIXES 135 Appendix A: Data Sources 137 Appendix B: School-Age Population in the Republic of South Sudan, 2000–09 140 Appendix C: Comparison of Enrollment Data from Different Sources 143 Appendix D: Methodology for Calculation of Indicators of Student Flow 146 Appendix E: Decomposition of Recurrent Education Spending in the States 150 Appendix F: Educational Profile by State 152 REFERENCES 173 MAP 1.1. The Republic of South Sudan 14 FIGURES 1 Cross-Sectional Schooling Profile Based on EMIS, 2009 2 2 Disparities in Primary School GER across States, 2009 3 3 Youth Cohorts by Level of Schooling in Urban and Rural Areas, 2009 5 4 Trend in Spending Effort: Public Education Spending per Child (Ages 6–16), 2006–09 7 5 Consistency between Number of Teachers and Pupils in Government Primary Schools, 2009 9 1.1 Raw Census Data on Population by Age in the Republic of South Sudan, 2008 16 1.2 Age Structure of Population (Ages 2–24), the Republic of South Sudan, 2009 17 1.3 Trend in Sudan’s GDP per Capita, 1975–2009 18 1.4 Literacy Rate by Age and Gender, 2009 19 1.5 Trends in GoRSS Revenues and Expenditures, 2006–10 22 2.1 Trend in Primary School Enrollments, School-Age Population and GER, 2000–09 28 2.2 Primary Schools by Ownership and Funding, 2009 30 2.3 Share of Primary Schools that Offer Each of the Primary Grades, 2009 32 viii • Contents 2.4 Secondary Schools by Ownership, 2009 33 2.5 Enrollments by Academic Area at the Juba Campus of Juba University, 2008–09 36 2.6 Enrollments in the BSc Program by Academic Area at the Northern Sudan Campuses of Juba, Bahr El Ghazal, and Upper Nile Universities, 2009–10 37 2.7 AES Enrollments by Type of Program, 2009 38 3.1 Cross-Sectional Schooling Profiles Based on EMIS, 2009 43 3.2 Enrollments at University of Juba, Juba Campus 44 3.3 Retention Profile Based on EMIS, 2009 45 3.4 Probability of Ever Enrolling in Primary Schooling, 2009 46 3.5 Enrollments and Nonrepeaters by Grade in AES, 2009 47 3.6 Schooling Status by Age, 2009 48 4.1 Disparities in Access to and Retention in Primary Education, 2009 52 4.2 Reasons for Not Attending School, Boys and Girls, Urban and Rural, 2009 53 4.3 Female Share by Level of Education Based on EMIS Data, 2009 54 4.4 Female Share by Educational Attainment and in Literate Population, 2009 55 4.5 Disparities in Primary School GER across States, 2009 56 4.6 Youth Cohorts by Level of Schooling in Urban and Rural Areas, 2009 59 4.7 Out-of-School Children by State, 2009 59 4.8 Population, Ages 15–40, by Gender and Literacy Status, 2009 60 4.9 Comparison of Nonliterate Population and AES Enrollments, by State Where They Live, 2009 61 5.1 Distribution of Test Scores for Grade 6 Students in Mathematics and Language, 2009 67 5.2 School Average Test Score Distribution, Mathematics and Language, 2009 69 5.3 Pupil Performance in Mathematics and Language according to Household Wealth 70 5.4 Teachers’ Syllabus Coverage, 2009 Household Wealth 79 5.5 Teacher Leave—Reasons and Length of Absence, 2009 81 6.1 Trend in Public Education Spending per Child (Ages 6–16), 2006–09 91 6.2 Comparison of Public Education Spending per Child (Ages 6–16), in Northern Sudan and the Republic of South Sudan, 2006–09 91 6.3 Number of Staff on Payroll in All States, by Workplace, 2009 98 6.4 Distribution of Paid Staff and Enrollments across the 10 States, 2009 99 6.5 Illustration of Categories of Staff Included in the Payroll versus the EMIS Databases, 2009 103 7.1 Distribution of Teachers by Salary Grade, 2009 115 7.2 Teacher Performance in Mathematics and Language in Four States, 2010 116 7.3 Primary Teachers’ Academic Qualifications, 2009 116 7.4 Secondary Teachers’ Academic Background, 2009 117 7.5 Teachers’ Professional Qualifications, 2009 117 Contents • ix 7.6 Consistency between Number of Teachers and Pupils in Government Primary Schools, 2009 122 7.7 International Comparison of Degree of Randomness (1−R2) in Teacher Allocation to Public Primary Schools, 2009 122 7.8 States with Highest Predictability (Central Equatoria) and Lowest Predictability (Upper Nile) in Teacher Deployment, 2009 123 B.1 Population by Age in Lakes State, Raw Data and Smoothed Population, 2008 140 D.1 Cross-Sectional Schooling Profiles Based on EMIS and NBHS, 2009 146 D.2 Adjusted Cross-Sectional Schooling Profile Based on EMIS, with the Repetition Structure of NBHS, 2009 147 D.3 Comparison of the Primary School GER across States Based on Two Sources, 2009 149 TABLES 1 Public per Student Spending by Level of Education, 2009 8 1.1 Population of the Republic of South Sudan by State, 2008 15 1.2 Population and Poverty Incidence by State, 2009 21 1.3 GoRSS Revenue and Expenditure, 2006–10 21 2.1 Average Growth in Student Enrollments, by Level, 2000–09 27 2.2 International Comparison of Educational Coverage, 2009 28 2.3 Evolution in the Number of Primary Schools and School Size, 1980–2009 31 2.4 Trend in the Organization of Primary Schools, 2007–09 31 2.5 Organization of Secondary Schools, Public and Private, 2009 34 2.6 Higher Education Enrollments at the Republic of South Sudan’s Universities (and Ownership, Campus Location), 2009 35 3.1 Repetition in Primary Schools Based on EMIS and NBHS, 2009 42 3.2 Gross Intake and Completion Rates, Primary Education, 2009 43 3.3 Trend in Gross Intake and Completion Rates, Primary Education, 2009 44 3.4 Students Skipping Grades, 2009 46 3.5 Share of Primary School Pupils Five or More Years Overage for Their Grade, 2009 49 4.1 Disparities in Primary School Entry, Attainment, and Retention Rates across States and by Gender, 2009 57 5.1 Student Performance in Grade 8 Examinations, 2009 66 5.2 Student Performance in Mathematics and Language, 2009 68 5.3 Performance according to Gender, 2009 69 5.4 International Comparisons: Mathematics Average Score, 2009 71 5.5 International Comparison of Student Performance in Language by Content Area, 2009 71 5.6 Status of Primary School Classrooms, 2009 72 5.7 Village Schools in Unity, Warrap, and Northern Bahr Ghazal, 2009 73 5.8 Drinking Water and Toilets in Primary Schools, 2009 74 x • Contents 5.9 Availability of Chalkboards and Storage in Classrooms in Four States, 2009 74 5.10 Availability of Mathematics and Language Textbooks, 2009 75 5.11 Pupil to Textbook Ratio, 2009 75 5.12 Availability of Mathematics and Language Notebooks and Writing Instruments, 2009 76 5.13 Share of Schools Reporting Functioning Months, 2009 77 5.14 Percentage of Schools Maintaining Records, 2009 78 5.15 Type of Curricula Used in Grade 4, by State, 2009 78 5.16 Teachers’ Arrival and Departure, 2009 79 5.17 Regular Teachers’ Average Hours per Week, 2009 80 5.18 Teacher Monitoring by the Head Teacher and County Inspector, 2009 81 5.19 Education Council Participation in Schools, 2009 82 5.20 Types of Support Provided by Education Councils, 2009 82 5.21 Examination Results in Secondary Education, 2009 83 5.22 Secondary School Infrastructure, 2009 84 5.23 Libraries, Laboratories, and Computers in Secondary Schools, 2009 85 5.24 Curricula in Secondary Schools, 2009 86 6.1 Trend in GoRSS Education Spending, 2006–10 90 6.2 GoRSS Education Spending by Spending Category and Level of Government, 2009 92 6.3 Approximate Breakdown of Public Recurrent Education Spending by Level of Education, 2009 94 6.4 Regional Comparison of Public Spending by Level of Education, LAY 95 6.5 Revenues and Expenditures of the Republic of South Sudan’s Public Universities, 2009–10 96 6.6 Composition of Public Recurrent Spending at Each Level of Education, 2009 97 6.7 Consistency between Distribution of Paid Staff and Enrollments across the States, 2009 99 6.8 Number of Staff on Payroll in Each State, by Workplace, 2009 100 6.9 Distribution of Paid Education Staff in the States, by Staff Category, 2009 101 6.10 Estimated Average Salaries in Primary and Secondary Education by State, 2009 102 6.11 Public per Student Spending by Level of Education, 2009 104 6.12 Decomposition of Primary School per Student Spending by State, 2009 105 6.13 Decomposition of Secondary Education per Student Spending by State, 2009 105 6.14 International Comparison of Public per Student Spending as Percentage of per Capita GDP, by Level of Education, LAY 106 6.15 Household Education Spending by Level of Education, Total and per Student, 2009 108 7.1 Status of Payroll System Implementation in the 10 States 113 7.2 Share of Female Teachers in Primary and Secondary Schools, 2009 114 Contents • xi 7.3 Preservice Programs Organized by GoRSS, 2009 119 7.4 In-service Programs Offered in the Republic of South Sudan, 2009 119 7.5 Pupil-Teacher Ratios in Public Primary Schools, with and without Volunteers, 2009 121 7.6 Teacher Deployment: Coefficient of Determination across States, 2009 123 7.7 Distribution of Schools across Payams in States, 2009 124 7.8 Leave Regulations for Government Officials—1975 125 A.1 Sample Schools for the Service Delivery Study 138 B.1 Estimated Population Figures for the Republic of South Sudan, 2000–09 141 B.2 Estimated Primary School-age Population by State in the Republic of South Sudan, 2009 142 C.1 Sample Schools for the Service Delivery Study 144 C.2 Data on Student Enrollments in the Republic of South Sudan, 2005–09 145 D.1 Gross Intake and Completion Rates, Primary Education, 2009 147 D.2 Promotion Rates and Retention Profile Based on Two Years of EMIS Data 148 E.1 Preprimary: Number of Staff on Payroll and Average Salary, 2009 150 E.2 Primary: Decomposition of Recurrent Spending by State and by Level of Education, 2009 150 E.3 Secondary: Decomposition of Recurrent Spending by State and by Level of Education, 2009 151 E.4 Alternative Education System: Decomposition of Recurrent Spending by State and by Level of Education, 2009 151 Foreword he January 2011 referendum—in which an overwhelming majority T of the people of South Sudan voted for independence—was a major rallying point in the establishment of a new relationship between the state and the people. As with any such relationship, there are respon- sibilities and expectations. In the brand new country of the Republic of South Sudan, one of the most important areas where government and citizens will converge closely is education. This Education Status Report (ESR),1 prepared at the request of the Government of South Sudan (GoSS), provides a comprehensive snapshot of an education sector that is emerging from a long period of civil strife. It confirms the strong appetite among the people for education; in turn, more educated citizens are needed to provide the bedrock of the new country and its prospects. The purpose of this report is to enhance the knowledge base for policy development in the education sector and, more broadly, create a platform for engaging a diverse audience in dia- logue on education policies in the new country. The ultimate aim is to help develop a shared vision for the future of the education system among government, citizens, and partners in Africa’s newest nation. The report clearly shows that the education system in South Sudan faces all the challenges of a new nation that is making a visible effort to catch up quickly from a very low base by rapidly increasing student enrollment. These challenges include a concentration of students in the early grades; a high proportion of overage students, repetition, and dropout; and weak levels of student learning. With an estimated one mil- lion out-of-school children and a primary school completion rate of only 26 percent, South Sudan needs to expand the capacity of the education system, but in an increasingly selective and strategic manner—the out-of- school children increasingly have a particular profile: poor, rural, female, xiii xiv • Foreword and overage. Further, the report indicates that South Sudan is beginning to feel the effects of its success at increasing enrollment at the primary level with growing demand for secondary and higher education. A key finding of the report is that resources made available to the edu- cation sector could be allocated and deployed more efficiently. Although significant progress has been made toward establishing a functioning pay- roll system for teachers and other education staff in the states, staff are not distributed equally across schools in proportion to enrollment. South Sudan will need more teachers and more pedagogical inputs, but these must be better managed. The report also highlights the low overall qual- ity of education, and emphasizes that quality of education and accounta- bility of the education sector should become central considerations early on in the development of the education system. Finally, the report emphasizes the importance of South Sudan’s unique Alternative Education System (AES), which will continue to play a central part in the education system for years to come. The majority of youth and adults in the country today may never benefit from formal basic education, but their learning needs must be met if South Sudan is to build a solid state and society. The AES is currently offering accelerated learning programs to more than 200,000 youth and adults and holds sig- nificant promise. The report was prepared when the education system was undergoing rapid change. Since April 2005, when the Joint Assessment Mission for Sudan prepared a framework that described the capacity building neces- sary in South Sudan to provide adequate services and improve progress toward the Millennium Development Goals, the GoSS has made remark- able progress in building institutions and improving service delivery, including in education. When we received the government’s request for assistance with the preparation of this report, an Education Management Information System (EMIS) had already been set up and a population census had just been launched, so some of the information needed for system diagnostics was starting to become available. Data analyzed in this report have been collected and triangulated from various sources, includ- ing the population data from the 2008 census, the payroll database for the education sector for 2009, and the first National Baseline Household Survey of 2009. This report has been prepared with funding from the Education Pro- gram Development Fund, a multi-donor trust fund established within the framework of the Education For All Fast Track Initiative (now Global Part- nership for Education) to help low-income countries accelerate progress toward universal primary completion. The ESR was prepared with signif- Foreword • xv icant collaboration with the Ministry of Education and development part- ners. It currently serves as a key input to the development of a compre- hensive education sector strategy. Besides contributing to ongoing discussions on education between the government and its development partners, the report is a comprehensive resource for all who are interested in education in the Republic of South Sudan. Furthermore, it has contributed to the development of national capacity for education sector analysis. Our hope is that these contribu- tions will help the Republic of South Sudan develop the well-educated cit- izenry that is necessary for all nations in the twenty-first century. Ritva Reinikka Director Human Development Department Africa Region The World Bank NOTE 1. The ESR is part of a series of Education Country Status Reports prepared for more than 30 countries in the Africa Region since around 2000. The ESR follows a structure developed by the World Bank, which allows easy comparisons between countries. Education Country Status Reports for other countries can be accessed at www.worldbank.org/afr/education. Acknowledgments his report benefited from financial support from the Global Part- T nership for Education’s (GPE’s)1 Education Program Development Fund (EPDF) and from the Multi-Donor Trust Fund for Southern Sudan. The report was prepared jointly by a national team and a World Bank team. The national team was led by Mr. Hakim Dabi, Deputy Director of Data and Statistics, Government of the Republic of South Sudan (GoRSS) Ministry of Education (MoE), and included other staff from the MoE as well as from the state ministries of education: Esther Akumu, John Lujang, Mangbi Atanasio, Duku Azaria, Odur Nelson, Mading Manyok, Anthony Lopirto, Peter Oyech Martin, Martin Manyang, Mario Alex, Manoah Machile Milla, Gideon Kuc, and Sami Musuku. Shadrak Chol, Director General of MoE, provided overall guidance to the Education Status Report (ESR) team. The Service Delivery Study was carried out by Juba University and the Southern Sudan Centre for Census, Statistics and Evaluation (SSCCSE) in close collaboration with the World Bank team. The team from Juba Uni- versity that braved the difficult and often unsafe terrains in the four states surveyed was led by Lino Gwaki and included Joseph Badys, Peter Diaak, Victor Fifa, Otim Gama, Dominic Jada, James Koma, David Mawa, and Sandra Mekele. Data entry was performed by the SSCCSE. The World Bank team consisted of Ramahatra Rakotomalala (Task Team Leader), Prema Clarke, Kirsten Majgaard, and Koffi Segniagbeto. Ryoko Tomita Wilcox assisted the team in completing the report. Michel Welmond, the World Bank Education Cluster Leader for the Republic of South Sudan, provided overall guidance to the team. Ian Bannon (Coun- try Director) and Peter Materu (Sector Manager) ensured management xvii xviii • Acknowledgments oversight. Chris Kenyi and Getahun Gebru, the World Bank’s education team in Juba, facilitated the team’s interaction with government and donor representatives in country. Joyce Gamba and Rosario Aristorenas provided administrative support. The team would like to acknowledge the contribution of a number of other people to the Education Status Report: the director generals of the state ministries of education, most of whom interacted with the team dur- ing workshops in Juba or during visits to the states; members of the Edu- cation Management Information System (EMIS) Unit, in particular Fahim Akbar, Lene Leonhardsen, Bosun Jang, and Moses Olaki; George Monga and Martin Luther Luduku from MoE; Martin Abucha and other staff from the National Bureau of Statistics; Grace Akukwe from the Academy for Educational Development (AED) Technical Assistance Program for the Republic of South Sudan; Charles Goldsmith and Simon Lewis from Booz & Company; Charles Nabongo from the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF); and representatives from all development partners who shared their insights or interacted with the team in workshops or other meetings. At the concept note stage, the report benefited from comments from Laurence Clarke, Peter Buckland, Sanjeev Ahluwalia, Peter Darvas, and Linda English. The United States Agency for International Development (USAID) also provided valuable comments at the concept stage. During preparation, Bill Battaile and Deepa Sankar provided expert advice. Eliza- beth Ninan, Shwetlana Sabarwal, and Nathalie Lahire provided comments to an initial draft. Peer reviewers were Lianqin Wang, Joel Reyes, Flora Kel- mendi, and Luis Crouch. All contributions are gratefully acknowledged. NOTE 1. The GPE was formerly known as the Education For All (EFA) Fast Track Ini- tiative (FTI). Web site: www.globalpartnership.org. Abbreviations AED Academy for Educational Development AES Alternative Education System ALP Accelerated Learning Programme CEC Cluster Education Center CGS Community-based Girls’ Schools CPA Comprehensive Peace Agreement CR Completion Rate ECD Early Childhood Development EFA Education For All EMIS Education Management Information System EPDF Education Program Development Fund ESR Education Status Report FTI Fast Track Initiative FTTP Fast Track Training Program GDP Gross Domestic Product GER Gross Enrollment Rate GIR Gross Intake Rate GoNU Government of National Unity GoRSS Government of the Republic of South Sudan GPE Global Partnership for Education GPS Global Positioning System IDP Internally Displaced Person IEA International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement IEC Intensive English Course IOM International Organization for Migration IRI Interactive Radio Instruction xix xx • Acronyms JAM Joint Assessment Mission LAY Latest Available Year MDG Millennium Development Goal MDTF Multi-Donor Trust Fund MENA Middle East and North Africa MoE Ministry of Education MoEST Ministry of Education, Science and Technology (title of MoE until 2010) MoGE (Federal) Ministry of General Education MoHEST Ministry of Higher Education, Science and Technology NBHS National Baseline Household Survey NGO Nongovernmental Organization PCR Primary Completion Rate PIRLS Progress in International Reading Literacy Study PSTC Primary School Leaving Certificate PTA Parent-Teacher Association PTR Pupil-Teacher Ratio R2 Coefficient of Determination in Statistical Analysis RALS Rapid Assessment of Learning Spaces RoSS Republic of South Sudan SBA School-Based Assessment SDG Sudanese Pound SDS Service Delivery Study SHHS Sudan Household Health Survey SMoE State Ministry of Education SPLM/A Sudan People’s Liberation Movement/Army SSA Sub-Saharan Africa SSCCSE Southern Sudan Centre for Census, Statistics and Evaluation (now the Republic of South Sudan National Bureau of Statistics) TIMSS Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study TTI Teacher Training Institute UN United Nations UNICEF United Nations Children’s Fund UPC Universal Primary Completion USAID United States Agency for International Development WDI World Development Indicators Executive Summary ith the signing of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) in W 2005 came the establishment of a new education system specifically for the Republic of South Sudan.1 Before the CPA, the relatively few schools operating in South Sudan were not part of a coordinated edu- cation system. During the second civil war, for example, most schools were run by missionaries, communities, or nongovernmental organizations (NGOs). Schools differed widely on almost all counts: duration of the pri- mary and secondary cycles; curriculum (Ethiopian, Kenyan, Sudanese, or Ugandan); language of instruction (English, Arabic); and mode of organi- zation. Toward the end of the second civil war, the Sudan Peoples’ Libera- tion Movement started organizing schools, often with demobilized soldiers as teachers (who received no formal pay). Since the signing of the CPA and implementation of its power- and wealth-sharing protocols, the educa- tion system is now under significant transformation. For the first time, a coordinated education system is being put in place supported by public resources to serve the entire population of South Sudan. This Education Status Report (ESR), Education in the Republic of South Sudan: Status and Challenges for a New System, provides a diagnostic of the education system in South Sudan and sheds light on such questions as the following: Is everyone getting a chance at education? How much are stu- dents learning? What is the situation of schools and service delivery? What is the country investing in education and how is it using these resources? Are the resources well deployed and managed to ensure effi- cient functioning of the education system? IS EVERYONE GETTING A CHANCE AT EDUCATION? The education system in South Sudan has been in a “catch-up phase� of development over the past decade. School enrollments have risen spectac- 1 2 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan ularly since around 2000. Primary school enrollments approximately doubled between 2000 and 2005 from 0.3 million to 0.7 million, and then again between 2005 and 2009 from 0.7 million to 1.4 million. As a result, the primary school gross enrollment rate (GER) increased from an estimated 21 percent in 2000 to 72 percent in 2009, an impressive feat by any measure that speaks to the commitment of the people of South Sudan to educating their children. Although data are less complete for second- ary education, enrollments at this level have at least doubled since 2005. As a result of the expansion in enrollments, access to education has improved dramatically, although many children are still out of school. Currently, 60 percent of 13-year-olds report having attended formal schooling, up from 40 percent a decade ago. The recent rapid growth after a long period of stagnation has resulted in a concentration of students in the early grades, a high proportion of overage students, repetition, and dropout. The schooling profile, based on data from the Education Management Information System (EMIS), shows that few students attend the upper primary grades, resulting in a primary com- pletion rate that is still very low at only 26 percent for grade 6 and 8 per- cent for grade 8 (figure 1). Overage enrollment is a widespread feature of the education system: in primary schools, as many as 44 percent of stu- dents are five or more years overage for their grade. Further, many primary school students repeat grades. In grade 1 in particular, as many as 23 per- Figure 1 Cross-Sectional Schooling Profile Based on EMIS, 2009 160 145 GIR 140 120 101 100 85 Percent 80 66 60 42 40 26 PCR 20 15 8 7 5 3 1 0 P1 P2 P3 P4 P5 P6 P7 P8 S1 S2 S3 S4 Grade Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009 and population data. Note: The data points of the schooling profiles are calculated as nonrepeaters divided by population of relevant age. Executive Summary • 3 cent could be repeaters. Based on EMIS data, retention of students is fairly good until grade 4 (70 percent), but after grade 4, dropout is steep and only 18 percent of those who enrolled in grade 1 are still in school by grade 8. Although overage enrollment will be a feature of the system for the next several years, over time this is likely to self-correct as children start enrolling closer to the official age and the “multicohort� effect diminishes. Other aspects are more at risk of becoming permanent features of the edu- cation system, such as the high repetition and dropout rates. With a primary completion rate (PCR) for the first six years of school- ing of 26 percent, there is a very long road ahead to attaining universal pri- mary completion (UPC). The PCR is a key indicator of progress toward UPC, a Millennium Development Goal (MDG). UPC usually refers to completion of a primary cycle of around six years, generally deemed nec- essary to provide children with basic skills, including lifelong literacy. Furthermore, disparities in school participation rates are quite substan- tial in South Sudan. The widest disparities are associated with the urban- rural and rich-poor dimensions, but there are also strong gender disparities. Recent survey data indicate higher primary completion rates than EMIS data, but confirm wide disparities. Based on survey data, the chance of completing the eight-year primary cycle is currently 30 percent for boys but only 17 percent for girls. Regional disparities are also very wide as shown in figure 2, which divides the 10 states into three groups based on Figure 2 Disparities in Primary School GER across States, 2009 120 106 100 96 91 80 68 67 65 Percent 60 56 51 50 46 40 20 0 WEQ Upper CEQ WBG Unity NBG Lakes Jonglei Warrap EEQ Nile State Source: Analysis of the 2009 National Baseline Household Survey (NBHS). Note: CEQ = Central Equatoria; EEQ = Eastern Equatoria; NBG = Northern Bahr Ghazal; WBG = Western Bahr Ghazal; WEQ = Western Equatoria. 4 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan the primary school gross enrollment rate. The chance of completing the primary cycle averages 35 percent in the three “high enrollment� states shown but only 14 percent in the four “low enrollment� states. Although the gap between boys’ and girls’ enrollment still affects all levels of edu- cation, it has diminished greatly, resulting in a much smaller gender gap in the current generation of children than among adults. This shows that girls are among the main beneficiaries of the recent expansion in educa- tional coverage. Gaps in school participation remain, however, and girls are also affected by higher repetition and dropout rates than boys. The secondary and higher education subsectors are relatively small in South Sudan. Despite a rapid growth in secondary enrollments, the sec- ondary school gross enrollment rate, at 6 percent, is still much lower than the average for Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Few schools actually operate with the official four-year secondary cycle, but rather run either three-year or six- year cycles. This shows that many schools still operate under a foreign cur- riculum, for example, following the Kenyan or Ugandan system. Repetition in secondary schools may be significantly higher than the 6 percent reported by EMIS. In 2009, higher education enrollments totaled 23,968, most of whom were enrolled at the Khartoum campuses of South Sudan’s three public universities: Juba, Bahr El Ghazal, and Upper Nile University. Only about 6,500 students were enrolled in higher education at South Sudan campuses in 2009; 83 percent of these are enrolled in public institu- tions and 17 percent in one of five newly established private universities. The Alternative Education System (AES) is the second largest part of the education system, with more than 200,000 students (equal to approxi- mately 18 percent of the enrollment of primary school). It offers learning opportunities to children and adults who either have never attended for- mal education or have attended school but dropped out and are not likely to reenroll. It offers a variety of learning programs, including some tar- geted to active and demobilized Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA) and other security forces. Seven main components are currently being implemented, often in partnerships with other organizations and with the support of the development partners: Accelerated Learning Pro- grammes (ALPs), Community-based Girls’ Schools (CGS), Adult Educa- tion, Intensive English Course (IEC), Interactive Radio Instruction (IRI), Pastoralist Education, and Agro-forestry Education. ALPs account for more than 75 percent of reported AES enrollments. South Sudan has an estimated 1 million out-of-school children, 925,000 of whom live in rural areas. Clearly, children in urban areas are much more likely to be enrolled in any level of education than rural children (figure 3). For this reason, and because most of the population live in Executive Summary • 5 Figure 3 Youth Cohorts by Level of Schooling in Urban and Rural Areas, 2009 Urban Rural 100 100 90 90 80 Share of age group (%) 80 Share of age group (%) 70 70 60 60 50 50 40 40 30 30 20 20 10 10 0 0 5 8 11 14 17 20 23 26 29 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 27 29 Age Age Primary Secondary Higher Not currently enrolled but have attended school Not currently enrolled and have never attended school Source: Analysis of the 2009 NBHS. rural areas, by far most out-of-school children—that is, children who should be in primary school but are not attending school—are rural: 27 percent are out of school in urban areas compared to 58 percent in rural areas, for a South Sudan average of 53 percent out of school. This trans- lates into 1 million out-of-school children. HOW MUCH ARE STUDENTS LEARNING? A test of student learning of sixth-graders in a sample of mostly urban schools in four states finds weak levels of learning in both language and mathematics.2 In language, students got 35 percent of test questions right, while in mathematics, students answered correctly 29 percent of the time. (To give an idea of the range, both tests were composed of multiple choice questions that each had four possible answers, so a randomly completed test questionnaire would give an average score of around 25 percent. Fourth-graders in Singaporean schools score around 80 percent in a sim- ilar test.) These results are no surprise, given the history of education in South Sudan and considering that many other low-income csountries in both SSA and other parts of the world are struggling to achieve acceptable levels of student learning. Comparing the South Sudan sample with results found in other developing countries that have used the same or similar tests, we find that the South Sudan school sample performed a lit- 6 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan tle better than Benin, approximately on par with the Republic of Yemen, but not as good as the Republic of Sudan in mathematics. For the test in language, the situation is similar. The same test was also administered to 160 teachers across the four states. The mean score for teachers was 63 percent in mathematics and 62 percent in language. WHAT IS THE SITUATION OF SCHOOLS AND SERVICE DELIVERY? Primary schools tend to be overcrowded, class sizes are large, and schools rarely offer the complete primary cycle. Between 2002 and 2009, the aver- age enrollment in a primary school doubled to 429 students, resulting in many overcrowded schools. In 2009, the average pupil-teacher ratio in primary schools was 52 when volunteer teachers are included and 81 excluding volunteers, and there were 129 pupils per classroom, on aver- age. Most of the primary schools (75 percent) and some of the secondary schools (22 percent) do not have permanent structures, which leads to the loss of school working days. High average class sizes make instruction a challenge, and there is a severe shortage of textbooks in both primary and secondary schools. In primary schools, the average pupil-textbook ratio is 3:1 in both mathematics and English. Two-thirds of the students surveyed in the Service Delivery Study, a school survey carried out by Juba University and Southern Sudan Centre for Census, Statistics and Evalua- tion (SSCCSE), did not have paper to write on and one-fifth of the stu- dents did not have pens or other writing instruments; this limits oppor- tunities for reinforcing what is taught. As many as 87 percent of primary schools do not offer students the complete eight-year primary cycle. Less than half of primary schools have grade 6 and only 13 percent of schools offered grade 8 in 2009. The high share of incomplete schools represents a principal constraint to attaining the MDG of universal primary comple- tion (six years of schooling or more). WHAT IS THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH SUDAN INVESTING IN EDUCATION AND HOW IS IT USING THESE RESOURCES? Due to a budgetary crisis, public education spending declined after its 2008 peak and is now lower than when the CPA was established. Since the school-age population is growing every year, this has led to a decline in public education spending per child (figure 4). The sector receives between 5 and 8 percent of total Government of the Republic of South Sudan (GoRSS) spending; a share that has remained more or less stable over the years. The primary cycle as a whole receives 55 percent of public recurrent education spending. Thus, the budget allocation to the first six Executive Summary • 7 Figure 4 Trend in Spending Effort: Public Education Spending per Child (Ages 6–16), 2006–09 140 120 118 120 113 Spending per child (SDG) 97 93 100 97 80 83 In current 60 SDG 40 In constant 2008 SDG 20 0 2006 2007 2008 2009 Year Source: Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning (MoFEP) budget books, 2007–10. Note: Data for 2006–08 are actuals, for 2009 provisional. years of primary education is approximately 45–50 percent, a level compa- rable to other countries in the region. Secondary education receives 18 per- cent and higher education 19 percent, when financing by the Government of National Unity (GoNU) is included. Salaries constitute the largest spending component, on average, 77 per- cent of total GoRSS education spending. There are about 51,000 education staff working in the 10 states; only 30,616 of these are on payroll, while some 20,000 are not. Almost half of staff working in the schools are volunteers. Little information exists about how they are funded or paid. Across states, the share of volunteers ranges from 16 percent (Eastern Equatoria) to 68 percent (Jonglei). The 10 states are the employers of the frontline staff and are therefore responsible for managing most of the public education spending. There are wide disparities in the resources available to the states, however. For example, staff are not distributed across the states consistent with enrollments, and it seems states are able to pay widely different average salaries with the resources they receive. The end result is widely different lev- els of average per student spending in both primary and secondary schools. Public per student spending is SDG 118 in primary school, SDG 349 in secondary school, and SDG 1,555 in higher education, on average (table 1). The primary per student spending, which corresponds to about 11 percent of GDP per capita, is comparable with the level of spending observed in other SSA countries that are at a similar level of income. This is also true for the other two levels of education. 8 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Table 1 Public per Student Spending by Level of Education, 2009 (SDG) Per student salary spending Total per student spending Per student Level of School-based Nonschool- operating Multiples of education staff based staff spending SDG primary Primary 67 (57%) 26 (22%) 25 (21%) 118 1 Secondary 181 (52%) 94 (27%) 74 (21%) 349 3 Higher education 1,555 (71%) 628 (29%) 2,183 19 Source: World Bank estimation. There are still primary school fees in some states, but not much is known about fees, or about whether parents are funding the many vol- unteer teachers. In the most recent household survey, parents reported fairly moderate amounts of yearly education spending. More information is needed to determine whether school fees are limiting access to school for some children. ARE THE RESOURCES WELL DEPLOYED AND MANAGED TO ENSURE EFFICIENT FUNCTIONING OF THE EDUCATION SYSTEM? School inputs are not distributed equally across states; this means that schools in some states receive far less school inputs than average for South Sudan. The average pupil-teacher ratio varies between 31 in Central Equa- toria and 84 in Jonglei (excluding volunteer teachers, the range is from 44 in Central Equatoria to 139 in Jonglei). Clearly, those attending school in Jonglei and Unity and several other states are not benefiting from even minimally adequate schooling conditions. The problem, however, is not so much the total level of schooling inputs as the distribution of them. The distribution of resources across schools is also poor. The average pupil-teacher ratio says very little about the actual situation in schools, as teachers are not distributed across schools proportionally to enrollments (figure 5). Excluding the outliers, schools with 500 pupils can have any- where between 1 and 20 teachers, and, similarly, schools with 6 teachers can have enrollments anywhere between 50 and 800 pupils. Textbooks and classrooms are also poorly distributed across schools. The teacher workforce is a critical component of primary and second- ary education. Significant strides have been made in establishing a func- tioning payroll system for teachers and other education sector staff in the states. Teachers’ knowledge of subject content is weak, which reflects the limited academic and professional training received. The number of ade- Executive Summary • 9 Figure 5 Consistency between Number of Teachers and Pupils in Government Primary Schools, 2009 30 y =0.007x +5.098 R² =0.21 25 Number of teachers 20 15 10 5 0 0 500 1,000 1,500 2,000 Number of pupils Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009. Note: The figure is based on government schools only. Each dot or observation represents a school. The number of teachers includes volunteer teachers. quately trained teachers in primary education is low in South Sudan. Forty-six percent of teachers have only a primary school education and another 45 percent have secondary certification. About 61 percent of teachers do not possess any professional training to be teachers. Upgrad- ing the disciplinary and pedagogical knowledge of teachers presents an urgent task for South Sudan. Of particular concern is the low proportion of female teachers in both primary and secondary education—less than 15 percent. Presently, women make up 24 percent of enrollments in the primary teacher training colleges, so the share of female teachers is only set to increase slowly. In addition, allocating teachers in a salary grade is a challenge because of the lack of verifiable information on teachers’ back- grounds. The academic and professional background for a small number of teachers is also unknown, which makes this exercise even more difficult. An effectively managed teaching force is critical to regular school func- tioning and instructional quality. Teacher management policies in South Sudan are evolving and will require concerted efforts to develop, pilot, and fine tune. Implementing clear recruitment, deployment, and transfer policies that can guide and strengthen the teaching force will be critical. In addition, establishing a supervision system that monitors teachers’ work will also serve to support and sustain good performance. Unclear policies and weak supervision effectively limit the instructional time offered to students. There is no clear policy on the number of work- ing days in a school year, and some schools function for less than eight months a year. Furthermore, there is no uniform record keeping associated 10 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan with enrollment, student performance, and teachers’ leave. The slow cov- erage of the syllabus in classrooms points to a shortage of instructional time, limiting what students learn each year. CONCLUSIONS This report points to the following priority areas that deserve the particu- lar attention of policy makers and the public: South Sudan will need to add capacity to the education system to reach UPC, but in an increasingly selective and strategic manner. For example, the government will need to weigh the relative value of building addi- tional classrooms for existing schools (because of the many incomplete schools) and building new schools. Furthermore, access to school is uneven by state and thus expansion strategies will need to be targeted. Achieving UPC will mean increasing retention. There are already a very large number of youth in South Sudan who will never receive formal edu- cation; another large group will not finish their basic education. Only about a third of children who enroll in grade 1 are still in school by the end of the primary cycle. Access to the early grades is steadily increasing, but overall UPC is not increasing in step. Some of this problem may be due to the absence of classrooms at higher grades. Improving retention within primary education will require adding more grades to schools, at least up to grade 6. However, there are certainly other causes that must be identified and addressed, particularly considering that girls and the poorer populations are most apt to drop out of school. The AES will continue to play a central part in the overall education sys- tem and deserves to be treated as such. The AES is a unique aspect of the education system. In the long run, it may become obsolete, if South Sudan is successful in achieving UPC. The chance that a child will sooner or later access some schooling is around 60 percent, up from about 40 percent a decade ago. However, this is still far from the 100 percent needed to attain UPC. For now and into the foreseeable future, AES will remain the second most important part of the education system. The tremendous number of out-of-school youths will continue to need edu- cational opportunities that can only be provided by the AES. Generally, the AES has gained a good reputation among partners and the popula- tion. Further reinforcement of the quality and measurement of outcomes of this part of the education system should be a key pillar of ongoing gov- ernment education strategy. Gender inequity is a central feature of South Sudan’s education system, particularly in the rural areas, but rural boys are also at a disadvantage. In Executive Summary • 11 urban areas where the educational coverage is relatively high, the gender inequity is diminishing. In rural areas, where educational coverage is much lower, all children are at a disadvantage compared with children in the cities, but girls more so than boys. Building more schools in rural areas closer to children’s homes will expand educational opportunities for all rural children, but those that have most to gain are the girls. In most SSA countries, policies to expand the supply of fee-free primary education have been successful at getting most children to school. Supply-side poli- cies, however, may not be sufficient to reach the most marginalized, such as children from very poor families. South Sudan will need more teachers and more pedagogical inputs, but these must be better managed. It is clear that government-paid teachers are not deployed in an objective manner, considering that there appears to be little relationship between the number of students and the number of teachers in a given establishment. This is also true of the distribution of textbooks in the country. Any strategy to lower student-teacher ratios or raise textbook-student ratios must ensure that each additional teacher deployed and each additional book distributed contribute to reverse this inefficiency. Although education expenditures on the whole are in line with interna- tional standards, the distribution of resources across states is uneven. The government has given due priority to the development of primary educa- tion, and current levels of per student spending are quite balanced. How- ever, analysis also shows that resources are not equitably distributed across states within South Sudan. It also finds that schools do not have sufficient numbers of paid staff but rely on a large number of volunteers. Government resources made available for the recruitment and deploy- ment of teachers do not appear to be equitably distributed. Student unit costs vary from one state to another, reflecting both the differential pay of teachers and the proportion of teaching staff that are volunteers (and thus paid “off-budget�). The quality of education in South Sudan must become a central consid- eration early on in the development of the education system. Low quality is not surprising considering the state of the education system at the time of the CPA. With the government racing to meet demand for schooling, quality may be temporarily sacrificed. However, continuing delays to increasing quality is a fundamental error committed by many countries as they expand their education system that is very difficult to reverse. The findings of different achievement tests are quite telling in this regard— both for students and for teachers. The determinants of poor achievement have yet to be identified for South Sudan. However, the undertraining of 12 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan the teacher corps, the lack of basic education materials at the school level, and the inequitable distribution of educational resources are evident con- tributing factors. The future development of the education sector in South Sudan will require greater accountability at all levels, which in turn means better and more widely available information about sector trends. This is not just a reflection of the analysts who conducted this exhaustive study of educa- tion in the country. It is evident that if policies are to be effectively devel- oped and implemented, much more reliable and detailed data will be needed in order to determine the trade-offs between policy options, measure results, and hold the education system accountable to the peo- ple of South Sudan. NOTES 1. In some instances in this report, Republic of South Sudan has been short- ened to South Sudan. 2. A test of student learning achievement in language and mathematics was administered to 1,800 students in primary schools in the states of Central Equa- toria, Lakes, Upper Nile, and Western Bahr Ghazal. The test was given to students in grade 6 in 107 schools across the four states in July/August of 2010. The sample included mainly urban schools. CHAPTER 1 Background and Context he purpose of this Education Status Report (ESR), titled Education in T the Republic of South Sudan: Status and Challenges for a New System, is to provide an overview of the education system in the Republic of South Sudan1 on the eve of independence. It describes the state and key recent trends of the education sector, with a particular focus on primary education. This report is the product of a collaborative process between the Min- istry of Education (MoE) of the Government of the Republic of South Sudan (GoRSS) and a World Bank team. The ESR was launched in 2009 and a first workshop to discuss preliminary results was held in Juba in February of 2010 with the participation of MoE and donor representa- tives. A second workshop, held in Juba in October of 2010, presented more elaborate results to the new administration following the April elec- tions. Finally, in February of 2011, shortly after the referendum, the team presented the close-to-final results at a large workshop in Juba that was chaired by the Minister of Education, and attended by more than 50 par- ticipants, who endorsed the results of the report. BACKGROUND Since Sudan’s independence from Anglo-Egyptian rule in 1956 and until the signing of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) in 2005, the Republic of South Sudan was at the center of two long-lasting civil wars (the first from 1955 to 1972 and the second from 1983 to 2005), which affected every aspect of Sudanese life, including educational opportuni- ties. At present, at only 27 percent (NBHS 2009), South Sudan has one of the lowest rates of adult literacy in the world today.2 Since the signing of 13 14 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan the CPA and implementation of its power- and wealth-sharing protocols, the education system has been under significant transformation. For the first time, a coordinated education system is being put in place supported by public resources to serve the entire population of South Sudan. DEMOGRAPHIC, GEOGRAPHICAL, AND POLITICAL CONTEXT The population of South Sudan was 8.3 million in the 2008 Census (SSCCSE 2008). The population of all of Sudan was 39.2 million, a four- fold increase from the 10.3 million inhabitants recorded in 1956, the year of Sudan’s first population census. The population growth rate in Sudan remains high, particularly in South Sudan, where it is likely between 2 and 3 percent per year, on average. Between 2004 and 2008, some 1.8 million internally displaced person (IDPs) and refugees returned to South Sudan, according to its first statistical yearbook, and more people are expected to return from abroad as a result of independence (SSCCSE 2010a).3 Map 1.1 The Republic of South Sudan 28˚E 30˚E 32˚E To 34˚E This map was produced by the Map Design Unit of The World Bank. Khartoum The boundaries, colors, denominations and any other information shown on this map do not imply, on the part of The World Bank Group, any judgment on the legal status of any territory, or any endorsement or acceptance of such boundaries. Renk 0 50 100 150 Kilometers SUDAN To To Kadugli Ed Damazin 0 50 100 150 Miles SOUTH To To Babanusa SUDAN Nyala Paloich Arab Bahr el ' 10˚N To 10˚N Nyala UPPER NILE ABYEI Kodok Abyei l Ghazal NORTHERN Ba h r e Malakal BAHR AL Bentiu Lol GHAZAL UNITY ETHIOPIA So Jur ba Aweil Nasser t f ara Raga Bahr ez Z I Meshra’ r Warab Waat o 8˚N n Ayod 8˚N s WARAB t o po o n S Wau N u b i a n Akobo e WESTERN Ak ob JONGLEI BAHR AL GHAZAL Ton o P P CENTRAL go l Shambe a LAKES Pon AFRICAN tt e Rumbek Pibor a REPUBLIC W u u Sue hite Bor Ka Nil ng e en 6˚N SOUTH SUDAN To Djema Tambura Li Yubu WESTERN CENTRAL EASTERN EQUATORIA EQUATORIA EQUATORIA SELECTED CITIES AND TOWNS 5˚N WILAYAH (STATE) CAPITALS Maridi JUBA Kapoeta Yambio NATIONAL CAPITAL Torit t o n g RIVERS I m o M t s . D.R. OF CONGO Kinyeti KENYA MAIN ROADS 4˚N 4˚N Yei (3187 m) RAILROADS IBRD 38572 Nimule To WILAYAH (STATE) BOUNDARIES Isiro UGANDA JULY 2011 INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARIES 28˚E 30˚E 32˚E 34˚E Source: World Bank. Background and Context • 15 South Sudan has a large territory with a low population density. At 644,000 square kilometers, South Sudan became the 42nd largest coun- try in the world and the 15th largest country in Sub-Saharan Africa upon independence. The population density is only 13 inhabitants per square kilometer, a comparatively low number from an international perspective (the world average is about 50). It is landlocked and shares borders with the Democratic Republic of Congo, the Central African Republic, Ethiopia, Kenya, the Republic of Sudan, and Uganda (see map 1.1). Administratively, South Sudan is divided into 10 states, which are sub- divided into counties and further divided into payams and bomas. Table 1.1 lists the population, area, and population density of each of the 10 states. The two most populous states, Central Equatoria—home to Juba, the capital of South Sudan—and Jonglei, each have more than 1 million inhabitants. Central Equatoria is the most densely populated state. With only a little over 300,000 inhabitants, Western Bahr Ghazal is the state with the smallest population and the lowest population density. The signing of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement in 2005 led to the formation of the GoRSS, which has governed the region for the past six years with extensive autonomy over the country’s affairs. Following the independence referendum of January 2011, the Republic of South Sudan became an independent state on July 9, 2011. GoRSS has gradually estab- lished own institutions, including a Ministry of Education, Science and Table 1.1 Population of the Republic of South Sudan by State, 2008 % of total Area Population State Population population (km2) density Jonglei 1,358,602 16 122,581 11 Central Equatoria 1,103,592 13 43,033 26 Warrap 972,928 12 45,566 21 Upper Nile 964,353 12 77,283 12 Eastern Equatoria 906,126 11 73,472 12 Northern Bahr Ghazal 720,898 9 30,543 24 Lakes 695,730 8 43,595 16 Western Equatoria 619,029 7 79,343 8 Unity 585,801 7 37,837 15 Western Bahr Ghazal 333,431 4 91,076 4 Total 8,260,490 100 644,329 13 Source: SSCCSE (2010a). 16 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Technology (MoEST), which was reorganized as two ministries in 2010: the Ministry of Education (MoE) and the Ministry of Higher Education, Science and Technology (MoHEST). States, through their state ministries of education (SMoEs), have direct responsibility for operating public primary and secondary schools and Alternative Education System (AES) centers. Their responsibilities include, among others, hiring of teachers and other school-based staff, payroll administration, and disbursement of salaries. The funds for teachers’ salaries are received from GoRSS in the form of the “conditional educa- tion transfer.� These are funds dedicated to salaries for education sector staff. The funds received from GoRSS are not sufficient to pay all staff in the public schools, which continue to employ many staff who are not on government payroll. Often referred to as volunteers, these staff are likely paid from fees collected from parents. Figure 1.1 zooms in on the population aged 24 and younger based on the raw 2008 population census data. The uneven pattern of the data reflects that many parents report the approximate age of their children (which tends to be easier, rounded numbers such as 10, 20, and so forth) rather than their exact age. For the purposes of this report, the raw 2008 population data were smoothed as explained in appendix B, which also provides tables with the resulting population data used in the report. Figure 1.1 Raw Census Data on Population by Age in the Republic of South Sudan, 2008 350,000 300,000 250,000 Population 200,000 150,000 100,000 50,000 0 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 Age Source: 2008 Population Census. Background and Context • 17 Providing basic education for all under strong demographic pressure is a real challenge. In South Sudan, 33.1 percent of the population was between the ages of 5 and 16 in 2008. This makes the demographic con- text of South Sudan on par with many Sub-Saharan African countries (average of 34.4 percent). However, as figure 1.2 shows, the population is growing rapidly: there are about twice as many 2-year-olds as 21-year-olds. This has clear implications for the education system, because the growth of the education system will need to accommodate increasingly larger age cohorts. The many returnees add to the demographic pressure and to the challenge of providing basic services of an acceptable quality to all. In terms of expected demographic growth in the next few years, the ESR team estimates that total population growth will be around 2.4 per- cent per year, with the primary school-age population growing at about 2.2 percent per year.4 MACROECONOMIC CONTEXT At the time of writing, macroeconomic indicators, such as GDP, are not yet available for South Sudan. Data for Sudan before the 2011 indepen- dence of South Sudan point to strong economic growth since the mid- Figure 1.2 Age Structure of Population (Ages 2–24), the Republic of South Sudan, 2009 24 22 20 18 16 14 Age 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 50,000 100,000 150,000 200,000 250,000 300,000 Age structure Source: World Bank projection based on 2008 Population Census. 18 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan 1990s, particularly since 1999 when Sudan started exporting oil in signif- icant amounts (World Bank 2009). Between 1995 and 2008, Sudan’s GDP grew by a factor of 2.5 from US$22 billion to US$55 billion (in con- stant 2009 U.S. dollars). Over the same period, the GDP per capita—a measure of average income per person—almost doubled in real terms, from US$708 per capita in 1995 to more than US$1,294 per capita in 2009 (both in constant 2009 U.S. dollars) (figure 1.3). South Sudan’s economy was traditionally less developed than that of the north, but economic growth has picked up since the CPA as a result of peace and reconstruction efforts, oil revenue, and donor support (although data documenting these trends are scarce). South Sudan is a predominantly rural economy with 83 percent of the population residing in rural areas. Agriculture (crops and livestock) is the main source of livelihood for 78 percent of the country’s households. The war left the region with virtually no infrastructure (World Bank 2009), but substantial construction and rehabilitation have taken place since the CPA, despite considerable capacity issues in the construction sector (Hjort 2008). Fur- ther, essential institutions have been established, such as government institutions and banks, and many small businesses have been set up, mainly in the 10 state capitals (SSCCSE 2010b). For this report, a rough estimate of South Sudan’s GDP per capita was calculated.5 This was estimated at SDG 1,114 for 2009 (equivalent to US$484 per person).6 GDP for the oil and non-oil sectors was estimated separately based on GoRSS revenues from oil and non-oil, respectively. For the oil sector, it was assumed that GoRSS’ oil revenues make up 50 Figure 1.3 Trend in Sudan’s GDP per Capita, 1975–2009 1,400 1,200 1,294 1,000 800 US$ 600 GDP per capita (constant 2009 US$) 400 200 0 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 Year Source: Data from World Bank’s World Development Indicator (WDI) database (http://data.worldbank. org/data-catalog/world-development-indicators). Background and Context • 19 percent of South Sudan’s oil sector GDP to account for the cost of oil extraction (50 percent) that would be deducted before revenue payout. For the non-oil sector, it was assumed that GoRSS’ non-oil revenues are 10 percent of South Sudan’s non-oil GDP—that is, that the tax pressure in the non-oil sector is 10 percent. POVERTY AND SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT CONTEXT South Sudan is one of the least developed countries in the world and poverty is widespread. The recently completed poverty assessment (SSCCSE 2010c) estimates that the monthly per capita consumption in South Sudan was SDG 100 in 2009 (corresponding to US$43 per month or US$522 per year).7 On average, 51 percent of the population falls below the national poverty line of SDG 72.9 per person per month (in 2009). Most of the population is illiterate, although younger generations are much more likely to be literate than older generations, as illustrated in figure 1.4. This is a result of the expansion of educational coverage over the past decade or so. On average for those 15 and older, the literacy rate is 39 percent for men and 15 percent for women, for an average adult lit- eracy rate of 27 percent. The literacy rate peaks at about 60 percent for boys and at about 40 percent for girls. South Sudan has some of the worst indicators of health and human development of any country. In 2005, there were an estimated 2,054 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births, which places South Sudan along- Figure 1.4 Literacy Rate by Age and Gender, 2009 70 60 50 Percent 40 Male 30 20 10 Female 0 0 10 20 30 40 –10 Age Male literacy Female literacy Poly. (Male literacy) Poly. (Female literacy) Source: Analysis of NBHS 2009. Note: The figure shows survey observations and the polynomial (Poly. in the above figure) curves that best fit the data. 20 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan side Sierra Leone, Afghanistan, and Niger as the places with the highest maternal mortality rates in the world. This is likely associated with the comparatively low coverage of professional care during delivery in South Sudan. The country’s under-five mortality rate is also high and did not show any sign of improvement between 1980 and 2005. An estimated 14 children out of every 100 will not survive to their fifth birthday, most of them dying from preventable causes. A recent World Bank report found striking variations in these mortality rates across states and quintiles of wealth in South Sudan (World Bank 2011c). In the health sector, existing public health infrastructure collapsed dur- ing the war and health services were delivered mainly through non- governmental organizations (NGOs) and UN agencies operating emer- gency relief programs. Although significant progress has been made in terms of strengthening the health system since the CPA, in particular the creation and staffing of the central and state ministries of health and the development of key policy documents (including the central govern- ment’s Basic Package of Health Services) that provide the vision and val- ues underpinning the health system, much work remains. The 2009 National Baseline Household Survey (NBHS) showed that 69 percent of households have access to some health services, but also that many of those that do visit a health facility pay out of pocket for care (World Bank 2011c). Table 1.2 provides some key data for each of the 10 states in South Sudan. The table shows considerable disparities across the states with respect to poverty incidence, from 26 percent in Upper Nile to 76 percent in North Bahr Ghazal. It also shows substantial variation in the adult lit- eracy rate, from 15 percent in Jonglei to 45 percent in Upper Nile. Simi- larly, the maternal mortality rate varies between 1,844 in Eastern Equato- ria and 2,326 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births in Western Equatoria. In North Bahr Ghazal, 23 out of 100 children will not survive to their fifth birthday, while this is the case for 7 children out of 100 in Unity. Finally, the table shows a moderate variation in the share of the population that is between the ages of 5 and 16, from 30 percent in West- ern Equatoria to 36 percent in Eastern Equatoria. TRENDS IN GOVERNMENT REVENUES AND EXPENDITURES GoRSS has fairly large domestic revenues for a postconflict country, mostly from oil (World Bank 2009). Table 1.3 shows total GoRSS revenue and expenditure between 2006 and 2010.8 Revenue totaled SDG 4.2 bil- lion in 2009 or about SDG 501 per person (equivalent to US$218 per capita). This fairly high level of domestic revenue for a postconflict coun- Background and Context • 21 Table 1.2 Population and Poverty Incidence by State, 2009 Population and Upper incidence CEQ EEQ Jonglei Lakes NBG Unity Nile Warrap WBG WEQ Total Population age 32 36 34 33 32 34 33 33 31 30 33 5–16 as share of total pop. (%) Consumption per 128 103 98 108 60 71 144 69 114 107 100 person per month, 2009 (SDG) Poverty incidence, 44 50 48 49 76 68 26 64 43 42 51 2009 (%) Under-five 112 142 134 144 229 74 97 162 128 211 135 mortality, 2005 (per thousand) Maternal mortality, 1,867 1,844 1,861 2,243 2,182 1,732 2,094 2,173 2,216 2,327 2,054 2005 (per 100,000) Adult literacy 44 19 15 17 21 26 45 16 34 33 27 (age 15+) Sources: Population data are from the 2008 Census. Poverty, consumption, and literacy data are based on NBHS 2009. Under-five mortality rates are from World Bank (2011b), based on the 2006 Sudan Household Health Survey (SHHS). Maternal mortality rates are from SSCCSE (2010a), also based on the 2006 SHHS. Note: CEQ = Central Equatoria; EEQ = Eastern Equatoria; NBG = Northern Bahr el Ghazal; WBG = Western Bahr el Ghazal; WEQ = Western Equatoria. Table 1.3 GoRSS Revenue and Expenditure, 2006–10 (in current SDG millions) 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Source Actual Actual Actual Provisional Draft budget Total GoRSS revenue 2,736.1 2,977.8 6,789.6 4,239.8 4,502.8 Oil revenue 2,732.9 2,964.5 6,670.9 4.121.5 4,401.8 Non-oil revenue 3.2 13.3 118.7 118 101 % from oil 100% 100% 98% 97% 98% Total GoRSS expenditure 3,581.5 2,936.5 5,712.7 4,234.7 4,482.8 Recurrent 2,623.9 2,538.2 4,100.7 3,232.7 3,492.6 Capital 957.6 398.3 1,611.9 1,002.0 990.2 % recurrent 73% 86% 72% 76% 78% Memo item: Transfer to states 525.5 631.6 637.6 1,089.9 1,227.9 % of expenditure 15% 22% 11% 26% 27% Source: MOFEP budget books. 22 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan try is mainly funded by the oil revenue, which accounted for 97 percent of GoRSS’ total revenue in 2009. The high dependency on oil renders GoRSS’ budget very vulnerable to fluctuations in production levels and oil prices. Figure 1.5 shows the trend in GoRSS revenue and expenditure in real terms (in constant 2009 SDG million). With the exception of 2008, when a spike in oil prices resulted in exceptionally high revenue and expenditure, these have both remained relatively flat over the five- year period. Flat revenue and expenditure are painful in an environment of strong population growth, as they translate into lower per capita expen- ditures. In 2009, in particular, GoRSS revenues were hard hit by the global financial crisis, although they recovered somewhat in 2010. Figure 1.5 also shows that a considerable share of GoRSS expenditure is transferred to the 10 states, and that this share has generally been growing since 2006, reaching 26 percent in 2009 and 27 percent in the 2010 budget. The states receive both block transfers to cover the cost of local government administration and earmarked, or “conditional,� transfers for sectors such as education, health, infrastructure, natural resources and rural development, and others. Education receives one of the largest conditional transfers. ORGANIZATION OF THE EDUCATION STATUS REPORT Chapter 2 looks at overall patterns of student enrollments, while chapter 3 provides a more detailed analysis of student flow patterns. Chapter 4 Figure 1.5 Trends in GoRSS Revenues and Expenditures, 2006–10 (in constant 2009 SDG million) 8,000 7,000 constant 2009 prices 6,000 SDG millions, 5,000 4,000 3,000 2,000 1,000 0 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Year GoRSS revenue GoRSS expenditure Source: Analysis of MOFEP budget books. Background and Context • 23 analyzes disparities in school participation across states and for boys and girls, urban and rural, and rich and poor. Chapter 5 analyzes service deliv- ery and student learning achievement based on survey data. Chapter 6 focuses on the cost and financing of education in South Sudan. Chapter 7 provides an analysis of teacher policies and management, and chapter 8 offers some conclusions. Appendix F provides two-page data sheets with key indicators for each of the 10 states. REPORT LIMITATIONS This report has been prepared while a new education system has been in formation. By definition this means that current data were not always available or reliable. Fortunately, the GoRSS, with the support of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), had the foresight to invest early in the development of an education management information sys- tem (EMIS). Although still in its early phase, the data collected by EMIS are one of the principal sources of information for this report. Starting in 2007, education censuses have been carried out every year, from 2008 onwards also covering secondary schools and the Alternative Education System (AES). Every year, EMIS has been achieving better coverage of schools and learning spaces, thereby gradually improving the quality of the data; however, it will take more time before a reliable data source for education decision making will be fully in place. The information available from the nascent EMIS is reinforced by household surveys and administrative data such as the states’ payroll database. However, the different data sources can also be inconsistent. Caution has been taken throughout the analysis to compare data from different sources and work with the most consistent data sets. When there is a particularly large inconsistency, this is mentioned explicitly in the text. Nevertheless, by triangulating existing data sources, the authors believe that the ESR provides a faithful depiction of the state of education in South Sudan. They are confident that the report provides a firm founda- tion for the establishment of an education system that will provide equi- table and good-quality education for all the people of South Sudan. Although the overall focus of the study is sectorwide, the report pro- vides relatively more information about primary schooling than about other levels of education. This is for the most part a result of more and better data being available about primary education. EMIS, for example, provides the most detailed information about primary schooling, thereby reflecting the incipient nature of the education system (and of EMIS itself) 24 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan in the newly independent Republic of South Sudan. The relative focus on primary education, however, limits the scope of the conclusions that can be made about other levels of education. NOTES 1. In some instances in this report, Republic of South Sudan has been short- ened to South Sudan. 2. Of all the countries in the world that report their adult literacy rate, only Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger also have adult literacy rates below 30 percent. 3. SSCCSE (2010a). The origin of the data is the Southern Sudan Relief and Rehabilitation Commission. 4. This is based on studying the age composition of the 2008 census popula- tion and by looking at United Nations (UN) population projections for Sudan. These growth rates could be used in short-term projections of the school-age pop- ulation for purposes of assessing resource needs in the sector. For longer-term pro- jections, slightly lower population growth rates would be expected. 5. This estimate was prepared for the purpose of international comparisons of education indicators, and should not be used for other purposes. 6. For comparison, the GDP for all of Sudan was about SDG 2,975 per capita in 2009. 7. The average per capita consumption is thus higher than our estimated GDP per capita. However, much of the food consumption in the Republic of South Sudan comes from households’ own agricultural production. Since it is not traded, it would likely not fully enter the GDP. This could explain the discrepancy. 8. GoRSS was established around mid-2005, so 2006 was its first full fiscal year. CHAPTER 2 Overall Enrollment Patterns his chapter reviews recent trends and patterns in student enroll- T ments in the Republic of South Sudan. The chapter goes on to cal- culate the gross enrollment rates (GER) for each level of education and compare the levels of schooling coverage with those of other Sub- Saharan African (SSA) countries. Further, the chapter presents data on the organization of schools and learning places. STRUCTURE OF THE EDUCATION SYSTEM Historically, the education system in South Sudan was underdeveloped. Sommers (2005) provides a detailed account of the history of education in Sudan in the 1900s and particularly during the second civil war that lasted from 1983 to 2004. Although there was some growth in student enrollments before and during this period, the education sector was never very developed in South Sudan and investments in education remained low. That explains why this country has one of the lowest rates of adult literacy in the world today—27 percent based on the most recent house- hold survey (NBHS 2009). Of all the countries in the world that report their adult literacy rate, only Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger have adult lit- eracy rates below 30 percent. Furthermore, the relatively few schools operating in South Sudan were not part of a coordinated education sys- tem. During the second civil war, for example, most schools were mission schools or run by communities or nongovernmental organizations (NGOs). Schools differed widely on almost all counts: duration of the primary and secondary cycles, curriculum (Ethiopian, Kenyan, Sudanese, Ugandan), language of instruction (English, Arabic), mode of organiza- tion, pupil-teacher ratios, and so forth. 25 26 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan In recent years—for the first time—a coordinated education system is under construction in South Sudan. Toward the end of the second civil war, the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement (SPLM) started focusing on organizing schools, often with demobilized soldiers as teachers, but teachers received no formal pay. Since the signing of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) in 2005 and implementation of its power- and wealth-sharing protocols, the education system is now under significant transformation. For the first time, a coordinated education system is being put in place supported by public resources to fund teachers. This is allow- ing for a very significant expansion of access to education, as we shall see in this chapter. Although not yet used by all schools, South Sudan’s education system is structured around (a) a system of formal education consisting of eight years of primary school and four years of secondary school followed by higher education (often four years), and (b) a system of nonformal edu- cation, known as the Alternative Education System (AES), that provides literacy education to individuals of all ages. In practice, the implementa- tion of this system is still incomplete, as most primary and secondary schools are not yet offering the complete cycles. Since the CPA the Government of the Republic of South Sudan (GoRSS), with the support of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), started rolling out the Education Management Information System (EMIS). This process started in 2006 with the Rapid Assessment of Learn- ing Spaces (RALS) survey of primary schools. Starting in 2007, education censuses have been carried out every year, from 2008 onwards also cover- ing secondary schools and AES. Year by year the EMIS is achieving better coverage of schools and learning spaces, thereby gradually improving the quality of the data. The completeness of the EMIS education census, in terms of share of participating schools, is discussed in detail in the EMIS National Statistical Booklet for the 2009 school year (MoE-EMIS 2010). Two state ministries of education (SMoE) also collect their own edu- cational statistics: Eastern Equatoria and Lakes. TREND IN STUDENT ENROLLMENTS There are no official, definitive data on school enrollments for the years before 2005, but several estimates are available. From 2005 onwards, data sources gradually grew more reliable. Appendix C presents data from sev- eral sources for an overview of enrollments over the five years before the CPA (table C.1) and for the 2005–09 period (table C.2). Overall Enrollment Patterns • 27 Table 2.1 Average Growth in Student Enrollments, by Level, 2000–09 Average annual enrollment growth (%) Level 2000 2005 2009 2000–05 2005–09 2000–09 Primary education 331,000 669,000 1,380,580 15 20 17 Secondary education 7,740 17,465 44,027 18 26 21 Higher education 15,102 23,968 7 (2002) (2002–09) Vocational training 724 2,760 16 Sources: Data from table C.1 and table C.2. Primary school enrollments have risen spectacularly in South Sudan over the past decade: they approximately doubled between 2000 and 2005 from 0.3 million to 0.7 million, and then again between 2005 and 2009 from 0.7 million to 1.4 million (table 2.1). Thus, the more peaceful and stable period since 2000, and in particular since 2005, has facilitated a large growth in the student population. Secondary school enrollments also grew. EMIS records secondary school enrollments at 44,027 in 2009, the second year that such data were collected by school census. This is up from 7,740 in 2000 and 17,465 in 2005 (table 2.1). Since 2005, primary school enrollments have grown by 20 percent per year, on average (compared with 15 percent per year between 2000 and 2005). Between 2005 and 2009, secondary school enrollments grew by an estimated 26 percent per year (compared with about 18 percent per year between 2000 and 2005). Finally, higher education enrollments grew at a more modest pace by about 7 percent per year since 2002. Primary schools have added more than a million students in nine years, most of them after 2005. THE GROSS ENROLLMENT RATIO The primary school GER1 grew from 21 percent in 2000 to 72 percent in 2009. Figure 2.1 illustrates the trend in primary school enrollments and in the primary school-age population. As a result of demographic growth, we estimate that the school-age population has grown from about 1.5 million in 2000 to 1.9 million in 2009. Due to the much faster enroll- ment growth, the primary school GER has increased from an estimated 21 percent in 2000 to 72 percent in 2009, an impressive feat by any measure. 28 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Figure 2.1 Trend in Primary School Enrollments, School-Age Population and GER, 2000–09 2,000,000 100 88 84 80 76 1,500,000 Enrollment 60 53 68 72 GER (%) 1,000,000 61 40 44 500,000 38 20 29 21 21 24 0 0 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 Year Year Primary school enrollments Primary (8 years) Population age 6–13 Primary (6 years) Source: Analysis based on data in appendixes B and C. Focusing on the first six years of the primary cycle—the cycle length used in most international comparisons of primary education—the GER attained 88 percent in 2009. This is significantly lower than the average primary school GER for Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) (104 percent).2 At 88 percent, South Sudan’s primary GER (six years) is comparable, however, to that of a few other SSA countries, such as 90 percent in Chad, 89 percent in Central African Republic, and 90 percent in the Democratic Republic of Congo (table 2.2). In the years ahead, South Sudan’s GER will likely also reach and exceed 100 percent for a number of years until the system stabilizes. Table 2.2 International Comparison of Educational Coverage, 2009 Primary Upper Higher (6 years) secondary No. of students per Region GER (%) GER (%) 100,000 inhabitants Central African Republic 89 8 240 Chad 90 17 187 Congo, Dem. Rep. 90 31 591 Ethiopia 102 15 337 Kenya 113 43 433 Uganda 122 15 352 Sub-Saharan Africaa 104 29 572 The Republic of South Sudan 88 6 283 Sources: UNESCO Institute for Statistics (http://www.uis.unesco.org) and World Bank education country status reports. a. Unweighted average. Overall Enrollment Patterns • 29 Based on EMIS data on enrollments, secondary school GER is 6 per- cent in South Sudan, which is much lower than the average of 29 percent for Sub-Saharan Africa (table 2.2). It is also lower than levels found in sev- eral SSA countries close to South Sudan, such as the Central African Republic (8 percent), Chad (17 percent), and Uganda (15 percent). Including enrollments at Khartoum campuses, the Republic of South Sudan has 283 university students per 100,000 inhabitants—half of the SSA average. In 2009, higher education enrollments totaled 23,968, although 73 percent of these were actually enrolled at the Khartoum cam- puses of South Sudan’s universities (see also table 2.6 later in this chap- ter). This corresponds to a higher education GER of about 3.7 percent.3 For comparative purposes, the average of this indicator for SSA countries is 572 students per 100,000 inhabitants; Chad has 187, Central African Republic has 240, the Democratic Republic of Congo has 591, and Uganda has 352 students per 100,000 inhabitants. THE FORMAL EDUCATION SYSTEM: SCHOOL NETWORK AND ORGANIZATION PRE-PRIMARY EDUCATION Pre-primary education is at an early stage of development. Previously, the Ministry of Education (MoE) had not been collecting data on pre-primary enrollments, but started collecting and publicizing these data as of the 2010 school year. In 2009, the payroll database included a little over 400 government-paid staff that worked in 75 nursery schools, all in Central or Eastern Equatoria State. There are also private and NGO-supported early childhood development (ECD) or preschool centers; for instance, the Catholic Church reported enrolling as many as 4,738 students in kinder- garten across South Sudan. PRIMARY EDUCATION Some 85 percent of primary schools operate with some public funding (figure 2.2). EMIS uses a typology of schools that reflects some combina- tion of funding and management arrangement: • Government schools are publicly funded and managed. • Government-aided schools receive public funding but are privately managed (some by churches and mosques). • Private schools are privately funded and managed (some by churches or mosques). 30 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Figure 2.2 Primary Schools by Ownership and Funding, 2009 NGO-supported 1% Private 4% Community Government- schools aided 10% 3% Government 82% Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009. • Community schools are funded and managed by communities with- out government support. • NGO-supported schools are funded and managed by NGOs without government support. The need to operate with so many school categories reflects that the boundaries between government and non-government schools are quite fluid. Goldsmith (2010), for example, describes how some church schools have church-, government-, and parent-paid teachers within the same institution. This arrangement allows government to have leverage across more than just government schools. Private profit-making schools are beginning to open in some larger towns in South Sudan for the first time. According to EMIS, the majority of schools (85 percent) are either gov- ernment schools or government-aided schools. This leaves 15 percent of schools that are funded from private sources. Enrollments are about 1,149,000 in government schools (83 percent of total), 51,000 in govern- ment-aided schools (4 percent), 59,000 in private schools (4 percent), 112,000 in community schools (8 percent), and 9,000 in NGO-supported schools (1 percent). The average size of a primary school has doubled in just seven years. The strong growth in school enrollments has been accompanied by a con- siderable expansion of the school system, although the stock of schools has not kept up with enrollment growth. Table 2.3 shows that although Overall Enrollment Patterns • 31 Table 2.3 Evolution in the Number of Primary Schools and School Size, 1980–2009 Year Number of schools Average enrollments per school 1980/81 ~900 184 2002 ~1,600 212 2006 2,922 259 2007 3,068 368 2008 3,195 402 2009 3,221 429 Sources: World Bank based on data from Brophy (2003) for 1980/81; from UNICEF (2004) for 2002; and the remaining data from MoE-EMIS (2010). the number of primary schools has grown steadily, the average enroll- ments per school increased from 184 around 1980 to 212 by 2002 and as much as 429 students per primary school in 2009, a high number in a country with a predominantly rural population. The result is many over- crowded schools. The average pupil-teacher ratio is 52 and increasing. Table 2.4 provides data on trends between 2007 and 2009. In that two-year interval, primary enrollments grew by 22 percent, but the number of schools grew only by 5 percent, and teachers only by 2 percent (the number of classrooms, however, grew by 62 percent). This led to an increase in the average pupil- teacher ratio from 43 in 2007 to 52 in 2009, including the volunteer Table 2.4 Trend in the Organization of Primary Schools, 2007–09 No. of No. of classrooms Teachers/ Classrooms/ teachers (perm. or school school Pupil- Pupil- Enroll- No. of (incl. semi- (incl. (perm. or teacher classroom Year ments schools volunteers) perm.) volunteers) semiperm.) ratio ratio 2007 1,127,963 3,068 25,934 6,587 8.5 2.1 43 171 2008 1,284,252 3,195 25,912 6,611 8.1 2.1 50 194 2009 1,380,580 3,221 26,575 10,663 8.3 3.3 52 129 Index 122 105 102 162 — — — — (2007=100) Source: World Bank based MoE-EMIS (2010). Note: — = Not available; perm = permanent. 32 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan teachers. Meanwhile the pupil-classroom ratio improved from 171 to 129. The table also shows that the average primary school in South Sudan has eight teachers and three classrooms in 2009, so classrooms are still in short supply despite progress made since 2007. Fifteen percent of primary schools operate more than one shift. Schools with multiple shifts account for 20 percent of the student body in primary schools since multishift schools are considerably larger (553 stu- dents) than single-shift schools (377), on average. Multishift and single- shift schools have similar pupil-teacher ratios, so this mode of organiza- tion is used predominantly in schools with large enrollments to obtain a more efficient use of classrooms. Multishifting is unusual in the three Equatoria states (5–10 percent) but more common in states such as War- rap (24 percent), Northern Bahr Ghazal (22 percent), and Western Bahr Ghazal (19 percent). Classroom construction costs are high in South Sudan, particularly in states that have no or little local construction mate- rials (these states tend to border northern Sudan).4 As many as 87 percent of primary schools are incomplete (figure 2.3). Although almost all schools offer grades 1 and 2, and most have grades 3 and 4, many fewer schools have grades 5 and above. Only 13 percent have a grade 8. Some may be new schools and only add one additional grade each year as the first cohort of students moves up through the grades. As mentioned in the previous section, some schools are not following the South Sudanese curriculum and offer only, for example, the Ugandan seven-year primary cycle. Nevertheless, the share of incomplete schools is very high and represents a principal constraint to attaining the MDG of universal primary completion (six years of schooling or more). Figure 2.3 Share of Primary Schools that Offer Each of the Primary Grades, 2009 100 99 98 94 83 80 % of primary schools that offer grade(s) 60 60 41 40 26 20 13 0 G1 G2 G3 G4 G5 G6 G7 G8 Grade Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009. Overall Enrollment Patterns • 33 Figure 2.4 Secondary Schools by Ownership, 2009 Other 6% Private 19% Government- aided Government 6% 69% Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009. SECONDARY EDUCATION In secondary education, 75 percent of schools are publicly funded. In 2009, EMIS recorded 158 schools and an enrollment of 44,027. As in the primary subsector, most schools are government funded, although the secondary subsector has a slightly higher share of privately funded schools than the primary subsector (figure 2.4). The school census data reveal considerable variation in the educational offerings at secondary schools in 2009. Although the secondary school cycle is now officially four years, the majority of secondary schools offered less, whether only one grade (9 schools), two grades (25 schools), or three grades of sec- ondary education (81 schools). Only 38 out of 158 secondary schools offered all four years of secondary school in 2009. Some of the schools with less than four grades may be new and may only add the final grades as students move up through the cycle. Others may still be operating under foreign curricula and thus offer three-year or six-year cycles. A num- ber of schools still reported significant grade 6 enrollments in 2009 total- ing as much as 27 percent of total secondary enrollments that year. This is a remainder of the six-year secondary cycle typically offered by second- ary schools that followed the Kenyan or Ugandan system. However, very few were in grade 5 in 2009, so this practice is clearly being discontinued. As shown in table 2.5, the average school has some 280 students, 14 teachers, and 6 nonteaching staff, but only 5 classrooms (permanent or semipermanent). The small number of classrooms points to fairly large class sizes. As shown, EMIS has registered 118 public secondary schools, 34 Table 2.5 Organization of Secondary Schools, Public and Private, 2009 No. of Pupil- Pupils per Pupil- School No. of No. of nonteaching No. of Enrollments/ Teachers/ Classrooms/ teacher nonteaching classroom type Enrollments schools teachers staff classroomsa school school school ratio staff ratio All schools 44,027 158 2,191 925 764 279 14 4.8 20 48 58 Publicb 33,838 118 1,704 759 578 287 14 4.9 20 45 59 Private/other 10,189 40 487 166 186 255 12 4.7 21 61 55 Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009. a. Permanent or semipermanent classrooms. b. Government or government-aided. Overall Enrollment Patterns • 35 but the payroll database for the states counted 173 public secondary schools in 2009. Ten secondary schools have a special status as National Secondary Schools, and enjoy better funding than other government sec- ondary schools. These elite schools are funded directly by the MoE and not through the states. HIGHER EDUCATION There are currently eight universities in South Sudan, three public and five private (and possibly more new private universities not included yet). The three public universities, Juba, Bahr El Ghazal, and Upper Nile University, each have one campus in South Sudan and one in northern Sudan. As set out in the CPA, the three public universities are mainly funded by the Gov- ernment of National Unity in Khartoum. Juba University is by far the largest of the eight universities. It accounts for more than 60 percent of total higher education enrollments, although most of its students are in Khartoum. Enrollments in higher education have grown from 15,102 students in 2002 to almost 24,000 students in 2009 (7 percent per year, on average), a fairly moderate increase compared with that of primary and secondary education (17 percent and 21 percent per year, respectively) (table 2.6). Table 2.6 Higher Education Enrollments at the Republic of South Sudan’s Universities (and Ownership, Campus Location), 2009 Enrollments at the Republic of South Sudan Enrollments at northern campuses (e.g., Juba, Sudan campuses Total higher education Campus location Malakal, or Wau) (Khartoum) enrollments Public Juba University 2,113 12,668 14,781 University of Bahr El Ghazal 1,666 3,316 4,982 Upper Nile University 1,608 1,407 3,065 Subtotal public universities 5,387 17,391 22,828 Private Catholic University of Sudan 352 352 Dr. John Garang Institute 142 142 Southern Sudan Open College 340 340 Sunshine Learning College 142 142 Upendo Christian University 164 164 Subtotal private universities 1,140 1,140 Total 6,527 17,441 23,968 % private enrollments 17 0 5 Sources: Juba University figures were collected directly from the university. Other figures are from MoE-EMIS (2010). 36 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Enrollment figures may not reflect the total number of southerners attending university, however, as some attend other north Sudanese uni- versities, and others may go abroad for their university studies. Only 6,527 students are enrolled on South Sudan’s campuses. Of these, 83 percent are enrolled in public universities and 17 percent in pri- vate institutions. Figure 2.5 shows the enrollments by academic area at the Juba campus of Juba University. The three areas with the largest enrollments are rural development, education, and natural resources and environment. Next, figure 2.6 shows the breakdown of enrollments in the BSc program on the northern Sudan campuses of the three universities of the Republic of South Sudan: here, the three main areas are social sciences, education, and agriculture. TECHNICAL/VOCATIONAL EDUCATION Secondary-level vocational training is offered at some 20 vocational schools. Based on a total recorded enrollment of 2,625 students in 2009, the average school size was about 130 students. Vocational schools offer vocational training in a number of areas, including (in descending order by enrollments) tailoring, auto repair, carpentry, computers, masonry, elec- tricity, welding, agriculture, plumbing, hair dressing, and printing. The centers also offer general education subjects including English and adult literacy. Figure 2.5 Enrollments by Academic Area at the Juba Campus of Juba University, 2008–09 600 527 499 500 Enrollments by area 400 380 300 200 188 186 122 114 97 100 0 log n t ion g s ne es m ce no tio en ce rin iti ici on ur at t ien m y ch a ee en an te rm ed vir so p uc sc gin elo m en re M fo Ed hu ed In En ev d al pli an r d ld tu an Ap Na ra ts Ru Ar Academic area Source: Juba University. Overall Enrollment Patterns • 37 Figure 2.6 Enrollments in the BSc Program by Academic Area at the Northern Sudan Campuses of Juba, Bahr El Ghazal, and Upper Nile Universities, 2009–10 6,000 5,000 4,793 Enrollments by area 4,000 3,000 2,809 1,937 1,758 2,000 1,310 1,000 799 599 0 es ion re h es g es alt rin ltu nc iti nc at He ee an cie cie u uc ric gin m ls ls Ed Ag Hu En cia ra tu So Na Academic area Source: Federal Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research. ALTERNATIVE EDUCATION SYSTEM The Alternative Education System (AES) integrates a variety of learning programs. AES offers learning opportunities to children and adults who either never attended formal education or have attended school but dropped out and are not likely to reenroll. It offers a variety of learning programs, including some targeted to active and demobilized Sudan Peo- ple’s Liberation Army (SPLA) and other security forces. AES consists of seven main components, often implemented in partnerships with other organizations and with the support of the development partners: Acceler- ated Learning Programmes (ALPs), Community-based Girls’ Schools (CGS), Adult Education, Intensive English Courses (IECs), Interactive Radio Instruction (IRI), Pastoralist Education, and Agro-forestry Education. Established in 2002, the AES is the second-largest part of the education system. EMIS tallied some 217,239 AES students in 2009 (equivalent to 18 percent of primary school enrollments), while the AES Directorate itself reports as many as 537,108 learners (MoE-AES 2011). Both EMIS and the AES Directorate register some 5,000–6,000 AES teachers. By def- inition as “alternative,� AES enrollments may be harder to assess than enrollments in the formal system. Alternative learning spaces are proba- bly more short-lived, which makes it harder for the MoE to maintain a current list of centers for their annual data collection. Shorter programs may not be in session when the annual education census is carried out, 38 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan and are not very comparable with longer programs. Also, there may be some double-counting of learners, where dropouts from one program become new entrants in another program. ALPs account for more than 75 percent of reported AES enrollments. Figure 2.7 provides a breakdown of the 2009 AES enrollment by type of learning program. More than three-quarters of AES students are enrolled in ALPs, which offer an accelerated primary cycle of four years instead of the eight years indicated in the formal system. This program targets older out-of-school children and youth (aged 12–18) but sometimes enrolls children of school age, especially in communities where no primary school facilities are available. One-fifth (19 percent) of AES students attend the classic Adult Literacy Program, while the remaining 3 percent are enrolled in CGS, IECs, and Interactive Radio Instruction. There are no data on enrollments in Pastoralist Education and Agro-forestry Educa- tion. This, of course, suggests that AES enrollment data from EMIS are probably underestimated. Most AES centers do not have their own buildings. In 2009, there were 1,022 AES learning centers, almost half of which were funded by partner agencies (477), according to EMIS. Most AES centers operate within a pri- mary school (50 percent) or some other community structure—such as a church, community building, or secondary school—but more than 20 percent of centers operate “under the tree.� The average enrollment per center was 239 students in 2009. Figure 2.7 AES Enrollments by Type of Program, 2009 Community Adult Literacy Girls School 1% Program 19% Intensive English Course Accelerated 1% Learning Program 78% Interactive Radio Instruction 1% Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009. Overall Enrollment Patterns • 39 KEY FINDINGS • Total primary enrollments have risen tremendously over the past decade, expanding the primary school GER from 21 to 72 percent between 2000 and 2009. This is evidence both of the strong demand for education in South Sudan and of recent years’ efforts by GoRSS, private organiza- tions, and communities to expand the network of schools. The major- ity of primary schools now operate with public funding (85 percent). • The expansion of primary schools has not kept up with demand, how- ever, resulting in many overcrowded schools: the average primary school has 429 students, eight teachers, and three classrooms. • The secondary school GER is 6 percent based on EMIS data. Secondary schools appear to have adequate numbers of staff, but lack classrooms and other facilities. Seventy-five percent of secondary schools are public. • Many primary and secondary schools are incomplete, that is, they do not offer the complete cycle. For primary education, this is a serious barrier for achieving education for all, and at both levels will cause much frus- tration for citizens who are demanding more schooling for their children. • In higher education, there are three larger public universities that are funded by the Government of National Unity, as per the CPA. A large proportion of their students attend campuses in northern Sudan, how- ever. There are also a few smaller, private universities in South Sudan. Overall, however, less than 7,000 students attended university within the borders of the Republic of South Sudan in 2009, while more than 17,000 attended the campuses in the north. • With more than 200,000 students and about 5,000–6,000 teachers, the AES is the second largest part of the education system. ALPs—which offer a four-year accelerated primary cycle—account for three-quarters of registered AES enrollments. About half of AES learning centers oper- ate within a primary school or some other community structure, but more than 20 percent of centers operate “under the tree.� NOTES 1. Calculated as total enrollment in primary education divided by the popu- lation aged 6–13. 2. Many SSA countries have primary GERs that exceed 100 percent due to grade repetition and because several cohorts of children attend school at the same time to catch up after decades of low educational coverage. 3. Using a four-year cohort, the 18- to 21-year-olds, as the reference population. 4. Multishifting helps relieve the burden of overcrowded schools; however, by its nature, it significantly reduces the instructional time each student receives. Evi- dence shows that there is a close link between instructional time and learning. CHAPTER 3 Patterns of Student Flow he patterns of student flow through the cycles of the education sys- T tem are in a state of transition. The first section of this chapter examines the flow of students through the grades within the formal education system and calculates different indicators of student flow: rep- etition, intake, completion, and retention rates.1 Next, the chapter assesses the probability that a child in the Republic of South Sudan has or will access primary schooling. The third section provides data on stu- dent flow through the Alternative Education System (AES). The final sec- tion looks at the current schooling status of all children and youth and estimates the share who are out of school and overage. Because several school systems with varying cycle lengths are still oper- ating side by side in South Sudan, the calculation of completion, reten- tion, and transition rates is subject to some caution. When this is a par- ticular concern, the method of calculation has been adapted as indicated in the text. REPETITION AND SCHOOLING PROFILE IN THE FORMAL SYSTEM REPETITION Many students repeat grades in primary schools; in grade 1 in particular, as many as 23 percent could be repeaters. Table 3.1 compares the repeti- tion rates based on two data sources, the Education Management Informa- tion System (EMIS) and National Baseline Household Survey (NBHS) data. EMIS reports a level of repetition close to 10 percent in every grade of the primary cycle. The household survey, on the other hand, finds a higher level of repetition overall—15 percent, on average, across the primary cycle, with even higher levels in grade 1 (23 percent) and grade 8 (20 percent).2 41 42 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Table 3.1 Repetition in Primary Schools Based on EMIS and NBHS, 2009 Primary grade EMIS (%) NBHS (%) P1 10 23 P2 10 11 P3 9 11 P4 9 13 P5 9 12 P6 10 12 P7 10 14 P8 11 20 Average primary 10 15 Sources: Analyses of EMIS 2009 and NBHS 2009. When a student repeats a grade, it places a strain on the education sys- tem that must provide and fund an additional year of schooling. There is also evidence that it increases the risk that the student will drop out of school entirely (Glick and Sahn 2010). When parents enroll a child in school, they do so because the expected benefits of schooling exceed the anticipated costs, whether direct cost through fees or parental contribu- tions or opportunity cost. When a child is then asked to repeat a grade, the balance between costs and benefits can easily shift. First, repetition sends a signal to parents that the benefit of educating that child may not be as high as expected. Second, repetition increases the cost to the house- hold of providing that child with the full cycle of education. SCHOOLING PROFILE The cross-sectional schooling profile illustrates the extent of access to dif- ferent parts of the system. Figure 3.1 shows the cross-sectional schooling profile based on EMIS data.3 In the case of South Sudan, where enroll- ment rates have expanded rapidly within a few years, the schooling pro- file is not a good measure of one cohort’s flow through the system. Instead, it is simply a picture of the extent of access to different parts of the school system at a single point in time. The schooling profile for South Sudan shows a system in rapid expan- sion. Access to the early grades of primary school is far larger than access to upper parts of the system. Rapid expansion of coverage and dropouts explain this pattern. This translates into a primary gross intake rate (GIR) Patterns of Student Flow • 43 Figure 3.1 Cross-Sectional Schooling Profiles Based on EMIS, 2009 160 145 GIR 140 120 101 100 85 Percent 80 66 60 42 PCR 40 26 20 15 8 7 5 3 1 0 P1 P2 P3 P4 P5 P6 P7 P8 S1 S2 S3 S4 Grade Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009. Note: The data points of the schooling profiles are calculated as nonrepeaters divided by population of relevant age. GIR = gross intake rate; PCR = primary completion rate. of 145 percent, a primary-6 completion rate of 26 percent, and a primary- 8 completion rate of 8 percent4 (table 3.2) With a PCR for grade 6 of 26 percent, there is a very long road ahead to attaining universal primary completion (UPC). The PCR is an impor- tant indicator of progress toward UPC, a Millennium Development Goal (MDG). UPC usually refers to completion of a primary cycle of around six years, generally deemed necessary to provide children with basic skills, including lifelong literacy. With a current PCR for the first six years of schooling of 26 percent, South Sudan clearly has a long road ahead to attain UPC. However, recent progress is well above the average for Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) countries. Table 3.3 shows the evolution in the gross intake and completion rates in primary education since 2007. The last column Table 3.2 Gross Intake and Completion Rates, Primary Education, 2009 Rate EMIS (%) Gross intake rate 145 Primary completion rate, grade 6 26 Primary completion rate, grade 8 8 Sources: Analyses of EMIS 2009 and NBHS 2009. 44 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Table 3.3 Trend in Gross Intake and Completion Rates, Primary Education, 2009 Average annual Rate 2007 2008 2009 % point gain Gross intake rate (%) 105 135 145 20.3 PCR, grade 6 (%) 15 21 26 5.2 PCR, grade 8 (%) 6 6 8 1.0 Sources: Analyses of EMIS and population data. shows the average annual percentage point gain in these indicators: between 2007 and 2009, the GIR gained 20 percentage points per year. The completion rates improved at 5 percentage points per year for grade 6 and 1 percentage point per year for grade 8. The gains in the grade 6 completion rate are quite substantial compared with the average annual gain of 2 percentage points for 33 low-income SSA countries between 1999 and 2009 (Majgaard and Mingat 2012). Figure 3.2 shows a similar pattern of enrollments by year in higher education. In Juba University, first-year enrollments are 1,200 students, but second-year enrollments are only 600, and third- and fourth-year enrollments are even smaller. RETENTION In the case of the Republic of South Sudan, where enrollment rates have expanded rapidly within a few years, the schooling profile is not the best measure of one cohort’s flow through the system. The retention rate refers Figure 3.2 Enrollments at University of Juba, Juba Campus 1,400 1,200 Enrollments by year 1,000 800 600 400 200 0 1st year 2nd year 3rd year 4th year Year Source: Data collected from Juba University. Patterns of Student Flow • 45 to the likelihood of children enrolling in grade 1 still being in school in a later grade. It measures the efficiency of the system to move students through the grades until the end of the cycle in which students have enrolled. Roughly one-third of students are retained until the end of the primary cycle.5 Dropout is uneven across the first four grades but steep after grade 4 (figure 3.3). Between grades 1 and 2, the dropout seems large with only 73 percent of those initially enrolled apparently still in school by grade 2. Once in grade 2, however, most pupils remain in school until grade 4. After grade 4, the dropout is steep again with, on average, 13 percent of those initially enrolled dropping out every year. SKIPPING GRADES Surprisingly, according to NBHS, 21 percent of those enrolled in 2009 reported having skipped the previous grade (table 3.4). This is another indication of the fluidity of the school system in South Sudan. The pat- tern shows poor student flow management and, more generally, poor knowledge of the actual level of student learning and curricula. COHORT ACCESS AND MULTICOHORT EFFECTS Figure 3.4 shows the likelihood, by age, that children and youth have ever been enrolled in primary schooling. The likelihood of “ever� being Figure 3.3 Retention Profile Based on EMIS, 2009 100 100 80 73 72 70 60 54 Percent 41 40 28 18 20 0 P1 P2 P3 P4 P5 P6 P7 P8 Grade Source: Last column of table D.2 (appendix D). 46 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Table 3.4 Students Skipping Grades, 2009 Students skipping As share of enrollments Grade skipped grade in grade (%) Skipping grade 1 43,485 16 Skipping grade 2 54,505 22 Skipping grade 3 38,803 21 Skipping grade 4 33,238 25 Skipping grade 5 24,133 24 Skipping grade 6 19,777 26 Skipping grade 7 14,354 23 Overall 228,295 21 Source: Analysis of NBHS 2009. Figure 3.4 Probability of Ever Enrolling in Primary Schooling, 2009 100 90 Share of age group who are or 80 have been enrolled (%) 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 Age Source: Analysis of NBHS 2009. enrolled in primary school increases consistently until reaching a peak at age 13. At age 13, 60 percent of the population reports having been enrolled in primary school. This peak value is also known as the cohort access rate, as it expresses the proportion of the children that ever access education as current enrollment rates. Access to primary schooling has improved from 40 to 60 percent of a cohort over 10 years. Figure 3.4 indicates that only about 40 percent of 23- year-olds report ever having been enrolled in school. Finally, figure 3.4 provides information about the ages at which chil- dren enter school. The peak at age 13 indicates that children enter school Patterns of Student Flow • 47 at all ages between 5 and 13, but that if they are not enrolled by age 13, it is unlikely that they will ever enroll. There is a wide gap between the gross intake rate of 124 percent reported above and the cohort access rate of 60 percent. This results from the presence of children from different age cohorts accessing school at the same time—common in rapidly expanding school systems, such as when new schools are opened where there were none before or when school fees are eliminated.6 STUDENT FLOW IN THE ALTERNATIVE EDUCATION SYSTEM The profile of enrollments and nonrepeaters in AES, shown in figure 3.5, shows declining enrollments with increasing grade, except for grade 4.7 Since AES by its very nature has a flexible design, this could indicate that there are several entry points to the cycle. Among the reasons given for dropout—as reported by EMIS—family responsibilities were by far the most common, outranking dropout resulting from work, health condi- tions, or fees. Repetition in AES is 13 percent across all grades, but high- est in the three first grades. CURRENT SCHOOLING STATUS OF ALL CHILDREN AND YOUTH More than half of school-age children and youth are out of school. While the data presented in this chapter so far include only those enrolled, fig- ure 3.6 indicates the schooling status of all children and youth between Figure 3.5 Enrollments and Nonrepeaters by Grade in AES, 2009 80,000 Number of enrollments/repeaters 70,000 60,000 50,000 40,000 Enrollments Nonrepeaters 30,000 20,000 10,000 0 L1 L2 L3 L4 Grade Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009. 48 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Figure 3.6 Schooling Status by Age, 2009 100 90 80 70 Share of age group (%) 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 27 29 Age Primary Secondary Higher Not currently enrolled but have attended school Not currently enrolled and never attended school Source: Analysis of NBHS 2009. the ages of 5 and 30. For those enrolled in school, the chart shows what level that they are enrolled in; for those out of school, it shows whether they have ever been enrolled. Clearly, most are out of school and have never been to school. The education system is in a catch-up phase, dealing with many cohorts of youth that had little access to schooling. Figure 3.6 also illus- trates that overage enrollment is a widespread feature of the education system. This is seen both by the low enrollment of, in particular, the 6- to 8-year-olds, and by the continued enrollment of youth in their 20s in both primary and secondary schools. Dealing with such diversity in the schools is a challenge. Although this will be a feature of the system for the next several years, over time it will probably self-correct as children start enrolling closer to the official age and the “multicohort� effect dimin- ishes. As shown in table 3.5, across the primary cycle, 44 percent of stu- dents are five or more years overage for the grade they are attending. The share is highest in the upper grades. With so many children still out of formal schooling, nonformal options will be needed for many years to come. Chapter 4 presents addi- Patterns of Student Flow • 49 Table 3.5 Share of Primary School Pupils Five or More Years Overage for Their Grade, 2009 Grade Share of pupils five or more years overage (%) P1 21 (11 years or older) P2 39 (12 or older) P3 47 (13 or older) P4 54 (14 or older) P5 56 (15 or older) P6 60 (16 or older) P7 62 (17 or older) P8 66 (18 or older) P1–P8 44 Source: Analysis of NBHS 2009. tional data on both out-of-school children of primary school-age and the older nonliterate children and youth. KEY FINDINGS • After decades of low educational access, the Republic of South Sudan’s system is in a catch-up phase. This is reflected in the very high value of the GIR to primary education: at 145 percent in 2009, this indicator is inflated by the multiple cohorts entering schools at the same time. • In the past two years, the PCR, corresponding to six years of primary education, improved by about 5 percentage points per year, from 15 per- cent in 2007 to 26 percent in 2009. The average improvement for 33 low-income SSA countries was 2 percentage points per year. • Many children remain out of school. Only 60 percent of children in their early teens report ever having been enrolled in school. However, this is much higher than 10 years ago, when only 40 percent of the same age group had ever enrolled. • Only about a third of those who enroll in primary school reach the end of the primary cycle. Retention is fairly good until grade 4, but after grade 4, dropout is steep and persistent. The primary completion rate is 24 percent for six years of primary school and only 8 percent for the whole eight-year cycle. • The education system is affected by high repetition (15 percent of those enrolled are repeaters), a considerable number of students skipping 50 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan grades, and an extraordinarily large number of overage students. Some of these aspects are likely transitional and will ease over time, as the system stabilizes. This is the case for the overage students, for example. Other aspects are more at risk of becoming permanent features of the education system, such as the high repetition and dropout rates. NOTES 1. Because several school systems with varying cycle lengths are still operating side by side in South Sudan, the calculation of certain student flow indicators is messy. This affects mostly the calculation of the completion, retention, and tran- sition rates. When this is a particular concern, the method of calculation has been adapted as indicated in the text. 2. The data for secondary education are not yet reliable enough to calculate repetition rates. 3. Each data point in the schooling profile corresponds to an “access rate� to that grade, which is calculated as the nonrepeaters in the grade (that is, enroll- ments net of repeaters) divided by the population of relevant age for the grade. The first data point is equivalent to the primary gross intake rate (GIR), while the P8 data point is equivalent to the primary completion rate (PCR). 4. Appendix D presents how EMIS data may be combined with the NBHS rep- etition structure to produce an adjusted schooling profile, which gives a gross intake rate of 124 percent and a primary-8 completion rate of 7 percent. 5. Appendix D describes the methodology for calculating the retention rate. 6. See, for example, Avenstrup, Liang, and Nellemann (2004) for a description of the surges in enrollments in Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, and Uganda, when school fees were eliminated. 7. With only one year of EMIS data for AES and no household survey data to provide an added perspective, limited analysis can be done of the student flow through AES. CHAPTER 4 Disparities in School Participation ccess to education has always been very inequitable in the Repub- A lic of South Sudan, resulting in wide disparities in literacy rates across gender and across the 10 states (as shown in chapter 1). Although gaps in access to primary school are diminishing as more and more children become enrolled, disparities still affect all levels of educa- tion. The chapter first explores the disparities between girls and boys, rural and urban, and poor and rich children. Next, it looks at disparities across states. Finally, it presents figures on the number and characteristics of out-of-school and nonliterate youth. SOCIOECONOMIC DISPARITIES SOCIOECONOMIC DISPARITIES IN PRIMARY SCHOOL There are wide disparities in the chances that a child will ever enroll in primary school, depending on whether the child is urban or rural, rich or poor, or boy or girl. As shown in figure 4.1, the widest disparities are asso- ciated with the urban-rural and rich-poor dimensions, but there are also strong gender disparities. Thus, urban children are 33 percentage points more likely to ever enroll in grade 1 than rural children. Children from the richest quintile are 32 percentage points more likely to enroll in grade 1 than children from the poorest quintile. And boys are 13 percentage points more likely to ever enroll in grade 1 than girls. There are almost equally wide socioeconomic disparities in the reten- tion rate to the last grade of primary school. For those children who did enroll in school, the gaps in the likelihood of still being in school by the last grade are again widest for the urban-rural and rich-poor dimensions. Urban children are 27 percentage points more likely than rural children 51 52 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Figure 4.1 Disparities in Access to and Retention in Primary Education, 2009 Access: Probability of ever enrolling in grade 1 100 86 90 82 80 69 70 61 60 48 49 Percent 42 44 50 37 40 33 32 30 13 20 10 0 Boy/Girl/gap Urban/Rural/gap Rich/Poor/gap Urban boy/ Rural girl/gap Retention: For those who attended grade 1, probability of still being in school by grade 8 100 90 80 68 70 61 54 60 48 Percent 43 50 34 25 34 30 40 27 24 30 14 20 10 0 Boy/Girl/gap Urban/Rural/gap Rich/Poor/gap Urban boy/ Rural girl/gap Source: Analysis of NBHS 2009. Note: The analysis of access to grade 1 is based on children ages 11–17, while the analysis of retention to grade 8 is based on youth ages 19–27. “Rich� refers to the 20 percent richest and “poor� to the 20 percent poorest in the population. to still be in school by grade 8, children from the richest quintile are 24 percentage points more likely to still be in school than children from the poorest quintile, and boys are 14 percentage points more likely than girls to remain enrolled until grade 8. As figure 4.1 shows, rural girls are much less likely than urban boys to ever enroll in school. Girls living in rural areas are facing very difficult odds: their chance of ever enrolling in school is only 42 percent compared with 86 percent for urban boys. Even when enrolled, rural girls are also much less likely than urban boys to complete the primary cycle. The retention of rural girls to the last grade of the primary cycle is only 24 percent (compared with 68 percent for urban boys, resulting in a gap of 43 percentage points). We would see even higher gaps if these two groups, rural girls and urban boys, were fur- ther disaggregated by, for example, income, state, ethnic group, or Disparities in School Participation • 53 nomadic population.1 Reaching the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) of universal primary completion (UPC) will require a concerted effort to close all these gaps. DISPARITIES IN REASONS FOR NOT ATTENDING SCHOOL When asked why their children were not in school, parents gave similar reasons for their sons as for their daughters, according to the National Baseline Household Survey (NBHS) (figure 4.2): “no money for school costs� and “school too far from home.� This is a major change from 2001, when parents reported different reasons for girls and boys not in school. According to a Care International survey of schools,2 girls’ nonattendance was attributed to domestic chores while boys’ was attributed to distance to school. This could indicate either that there has been a change in atti- tudes toward girls’ school participation or that out-of-school girls and boys now have more similar characteristics than a decade ago, as the gen- der gap in access to schooling is narrowing. Urban and rural children report different reasons for nonattendance. For rural families, the main reason given for children’s nonattendance is “school too far from home,� at 24 percent. Distance to school is only an issue for 9 percent of urban families. This indicates the presence of con- siderable supply-side issues in rural areas, where many children may not have a school that is close enough for them to attend. Simply building more schools may be enough to bring many additional children into Figure 4.2 Reasons for Not Attending School, Boys and Girls, Urban and Rural, 2009 30 45 Share of respondents (%) Share of respondents (%) 40 39 25 24 23 22 23 35 20 30 15 16 Boys 25 22 24 15 Urban 12 20 9 8 10 Girls 16 10 15 1211 Rural 10 8 9 9 9 5 5 0 0 er er co or Sc ami g ho far co or Sc ami g ho far o l o l n n as ra th as ra th ol y f ol y f e f rti e f rti Su ts ho ly e Su ts ho ly e re ltu re ltu s/O s/O m o m o Illn ns Illn ns m m ho one ho ne fro to fro ol to th o th ppo s s Cu Cu pp es es sc mo ol m No No sc Reasons for not attending Reasons for not attending Source: Analysis of NBHS 2009. Note: Based on children ages 6–15 who were not attending school at the time. In the survey, parents were able to indicate either one or several reasons for nonattendance, so the five reasons are not mutually exclusive. 54 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan classrooms. The main reason for nonattendance in urban areas is “no money for school costs,� reported by as many as 39 percent of urban fam- ilies, while only 22 percent of rural residents give this reason. This differ- ence may be a result of urban schools charging higher fees than rural schools, as some of the collected information would indicate.3 GENDER DISPARITIES ACROSS ALL LEVELS OF EDUCATION Clearly, disadvantages to girls’ school participation affect all levels of edu- cation, although the gender gap is wider in secondary and higher educa- tion than in primary. The Alternative Education System (AES) has the least gender bias of all. Based on 2009 enrollment data from the Educa- tion Management Information System (EMIS), girls made up 37 percent of total enrollments in primary schools, 27 percent in secondary schools, and 24 percent in higher education (the female enrollment share is only about 20 percent on South Sudan’s campuses).4 Further, girls made up 42 percent of enrollments in AES and 24 percent of enrollments at teacher training institutes (TTIs) (figure 4.3). Because the system is in a catch-up phase with children from many dif- ferent age groups enrolling in school at the same time, analyzing total cur- rent enrollment does not give an accurate picture of the gender gap between different generations. In fact, the gender gap in primary educa- tion and literacy has been diminishing at an impressive rate over the past two decades. Using household survey data comparing the share of girls Figure 4.3 Female Share by Level of Education Based on EMIS Data, 2009 50 42 38 Share of girls (%) 40 37 35 32 31 30 27 26 24 24 20 10 0 ll 1 6 8 all 1 6) s S I TT tie a P P P S AE (S y, ry, y, y, y, y, rsi ar r 4 ar ar ar da da S ive im im im im y, n on Un Pr co ar Pr Pr Pr c nd Se Se co Se Level of education Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009. Note: Data for universities include enrollments on Khartoum campuses, but exclude enrollments on Juba University’s Juba campus for lack of gender-disaggregated data. AES = Alternative Education System; TTI = Teacher Training Institute. Disparities in School Participation • 55 Figure 4.4 Female Share by Educational Attainment and in Literate Population, 2009 50 44 44 41 38 Share of girls (%) 40 36 37 36 30 28 20 10 0 P1 P6 P8 –9 14 19 24 29 0– 5– 0– 5– s6 ed ed ed s1 s1 s2 s2 ge ss in in ta ta ce a ge ge ge ge at at ac te a a a a ra er er te te te te er e Ev Ev ra ra ra ra Ev Lit e e e e Lit Lit Lit Lit Female share Source: Analysis of NBHS 2009. Note: This analysis assumes that the female share of the population is 50 percent in the age groups shown. Analysis of access is based on children aged 11–17, while analysis of attainment of grade 6 or 8 is based on youth aged 19–27. that have ever enrolled in school or ever attained P6 or P8 (but may not currently be enrolled), figure 4.4 indicates that the share of girls is several percentage points higher than in figure 4.3. For an added perspective, fig- ure 4.4 also provides the female share of literate individuals in different age groups, showing a considerable increase in the female share of the lit- erate population across the five age groups, from 28 percent for women 25–29 years old to 44 percent for girls 6–9 years old. If this trend contin- ues, the gap between girls and boys in terms of primary schooling and lit- eracy is set to close within a relatively short period of time. Girls also have higher repetition rates across different levels of education. According to EMIS 2009, repetition rates were 11 percent for girls and 9 percent for boys in primary school; 9 percent for girls and 6 percent for boys in sec- ondary school; and 15 percent for girls and 12 percent for boys in AES. REGIONAL DISPARITIES REGIONAL DISPARITIES IN THE PRIMARY SCHOOL ENROLLMENT There are wide disparities in the primary school gross enrollment rate (GER) across states. This is shown in figure 4.5, which divides the 10 states into three groups based on the level of their GER: • States with relatively high primary school enrollment. These states include Western Equatoria, Upper Nile, and Central Equatoria, all with a primary 56 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Figure 4.5 Disparities in Primary School GER across States, 2009 120 106 100 96 91 80 68 67 65 Percent 60 56 51 50 46 40 20 0 WEQ Upper CEQ WBG Unity NBG Lakes Jonglei Warrap EEQ Nile State Source: Analysis of NBHS 2009. Note: See appendix D for a comparison of states’ primary school GER based on EMIS and NBHS. CEQ = Central Equatoria; EEQ = Eastern Equatoria; NBG = Northern Bahr Ghazal; WBG = Western Bahr Ghazal; WEQ = Western Equatoria. school GER above 90 percent. Upper Nile historically has had a more developed education system and is the state with the highest adult liter- acy rate in South Sudan.5 Central Equatoria is the capital region and as such would be expected to have above-average school enrollment. • States with average primary school enrollment. Three states fall into this category, all with a primary school GER between 60 and 90 percent: Western Bahr Ghazal, Unity, and Northern Bahr Ghazal. • States with relatively low primary school enrollment. This group comprises four states with primary school GER below 60 percent: Lakes, Jonglei, Warrap, and Eastern Equatoria. The same four states have the lowest adult literacy rates in South Sudan, all in the 15–19 percent range, compared with 27 percent for the country as a whole. These states will need further support in terms of expanding their education systems. REGIONAL DISPARITIES IN PRIMARY SCHOOL ENTRY AND ATTAINMENT Table 4.1 analyzes the disparities across states in the rates of entry to grade 1 and attainment of grade 8 based on household survey data.6 Universal primary completion (UPC) can be achieved only if all children both enroll in school (grade 1) and complete a full course of primary school- Table 4.1 Disparities in Primary School Entry, Attainment, and Retention Rates across States and by Gender, 2009 Probability of ever entering P1 (cohort access rate) Probability of attaining P8 (cohort completion rate) Retention States listed in order of descending primary GER All Girls Gender gap (% point) All Girls Gender gap (% point) All High enrollment states Western Equatoria 86 81 8 25 17 15 29 Upper Nile 77 72 11 36 25 19 47 Central Equatoria 71 65 13 43 32 20 60 Average three states 78 73 11 35 25 18 45 Average enrollment states Western Bahr el Ghazal 55 47 15 28 18 17 50 Unity 55 48 15 20 12 13 36 Northern Bahr el Ghazal 54 47 15 19 11 14 36 Average three states 55 47 15 22 14 15 41 Low enrollment states Lakes 41 34 15 15 8 11 36 Jonglei 40 32 15 11 6 9 27 Warrap 35 27 14 11 6 9 31 Eastern Equatoria 37 29 15 20 13 14 54 Average four states 38 31 15 14 8 11 37 Average all 55 48 13 24 17 13 43 Source: Analysis of NBHS 2009. 57 58 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan ing. Therefore, analyzing entry and attainment rates allows us to distin- guish between states that have problems with securing access to grade 1, retention within the cycle, or both. At 43 percent, Central Equatoria has the highest P8 attainment rate of all the states. The states are listed in order of ascending primary GER, but the table shows that states with higher GER do not always have higher entry and attainment rates. In terms of attainment of the primary cycle—the main indicators of progress toward UPC—Central Equatoria is ahead of all other states, including the other two high-enrollment states, although they have a higher GER. This is a result of Central Equatoria having the best retention within the primary cycle out of all the states, at 60 percent com- pared with an average of 43 percent for South Sudan as a whole. None of the states are close to 100 percent in either entry or attain- ment. But some states have much more work ahead of them than others and will need more support to attain these goals. The table also provides the size of the gender gap, in percentage points, at the points of entry and exit of the primary cycle. Altogether, the data provided in table 4.1 give a helpful snapshot of each state’s progress toward and distance from UPC. Upon entry, the gender gap is narrowest in the states with the highest enrollment, while the pattern is reversed upon exit, where the high enroll- ment states have surprisingly large gaps between girls’ and boys’ attain- ment. For additional comparative information on enrollment patterns in the states, appendix F presents the educational pyramids of each state. OUT-OF-SCHOOL CHILDREN Figure 4.6 displays the current enrollment status of children and youth in urban and rural areas, respectively. The two panels show the proportion of each single age group that is enrolled in primary, secondary, and higher education. Clearly, children in urban areas are much more likely to be enrolled in any level of education than rural children. For this reason, and because most of the population live in rural areas, most out-of-school children are rural. Out of school, in this report, is understood to mean primary school-age children who are not attending school (neither pri- mary, nor secondary or higher education). To estimate the number of out-of-school children, we focus on the 8- to 15-year-olds, an eight-year cohort that approximates better when South Sudan’s children are normally in school than the official 6–13 age group.7 In this age group, 27 percent are out of school in urban areas compared to 58 percent in rural areas, for a South Sudan average of 53 percent of 8- to 15-year-olds. In absolute numbers, this means that 1 million children Disparities in School Participation • 59 Figure 4.6 Youth Cohorts by Level of Schooling in Urban and Rural Areas, 2009 Urban Rural 100 100 90 90 80 Share of age group (%) 80 Share of age group (%) 70 70 60 60 50 50 40 40 30 30 20 20 10 10 0 0 5 8 11 14 17 20 23 26 29 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 27 29 Age Age Primary Secondary Higher Not currently enrolled but have attended school Not currently enrolled and never attended school Source: Analysis of the 2009 NBHS. are out of (primary) school in South Sudan. Urban areas are home to an estimated 75,000 out-of-school children, while almost 925,000 out-of- school children live in rural areas. Most of the out-of-school children live in Warrap, Jonglei, or Eastern Equatoria, as shown in figure 4.7. Figure 4.7 Out-of-School Children by State (Thousands), 2009 WEQ, 35 WBG, 34 CEQ, 90 Warrap, 185 EEQ, 159 Upper Nile, 81 Jonglei, 160 Unity, 60 NBG, 92 Lakes, 101 Source: Analysis of NBHS 2009. Note: Includes children ages 8–15 who are not enrolled in any level. CEQ = Central Equatoria; EEQ = Eastern Equatoria; NBG = Northern Bahr Ghazal; WBG = Western Bahr Ghazal; WEQ = Western Equatoria. 60 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan NONLITERATE YOUTH AND AES Within the 15–40 age group, an estimated 2.2 million are nonliterate out of a total population8 of about 3.2 million ages 15–40. Paradoxically, although literacy rates have improved over time, most nonliterates are young because of South Sudan’s strong population growth, as illustrated in figure 4.8. For comparison, AES enrolls approximately 170,000 students in the 15–40 age group. Since most are enrolled in multiyear AES programs, such as the four-year Accelerated Learning Programme (ALP), the output of grad- uating students is likely below 50,000 a year. Thus, of the “stock� of 2.2 million nonliterate, only about 50,000 individuals exit every year (“flow�). Given that 65 percent or almost two-thirds of nonliterate youth are female, strictly speaking, gender equity in AES would require that 65 per- cent of AES enrollments are female. Since the share is currently only 42 percent, this points to the need for better targeting of AES services to girls and women. Currently, only in Upper Nile and Western Equatoria are more women enrolled in AES than men. Nonliterate individuals are most likely to live in Warrap or Jonglei. The left panel of figure 4.9 shows the breakdown, by state, of the nonlit- erate population. Warrap and Jonglei account for the largest shares, 18 percent and 16 percent, respectively, of this group. The right panel shows the breakdown of AES enrollments by state. Most AES enrollments are in Unity and Northern Bahr Ghazal, but there are also many in Jonglei. Comparing the two panels may give an indication of where more AES centers are needed. Warrap stands out as having only 2 percent of all AES Figure 4.8 Population, Ages 15–40, by Gender and Literacy Status, 2009 200,000 180,000 160,000 140,000 Population 120,000 Female, nonliterate (1.44 million) 100,000 80,000 Male, nonliterate (0.77 million) 60,000 Female, literate (0.33 million) 40,000 20,000 Male, literate (0.68 million) 0 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 Age Source: Analysis of NBHS 2009. Note: Data across ages were smoothed for clarity. Disparities in School Participation • 61 Figure 4.9 Comparison of Nonliterate Population and AES Enrollments, by State Where They Live, 2009 Nonliterate, ages 15–40 AES enrollments WBG WEQ 2% WBG Warrap 3% 3% 2% WEQ CEQ CEQ 7% 11% 12% EEQ EEQ Upper Nile 7% 12% Warrap 14% 18% Jonglei Unity 15% Jonglei Upper Nile 16% 19% 8% Lakes Lakes 8% NBG NBG Unity 10% 18% 9% 6% Sources: Data on nonliterate population are based on NBHS 2009. Data on AES enrollments are based on EMIS 2009. CEQ = Central Equatoria; EEQ = Eastern Equatoria; NBG = Northern Bahr Ghazal; WBG = Western Bahr Ghazal; WEQ = Western Equatoria. enrollments, while it accounts for as much as 18 percent of the nonliter- ate target group. There also seems to be a deficit of AES services in East- ern Equatoria, which is home to 12 percent of the nonliterate target pop- ulation but only 7 percent of AES enrollments. KEY FINDINGS • The likelihood that children from different population groups ever enroll in grade 1 and remain in school until grade 8 depends on vari- ous socioeconomic factors. Rural children, poorer children, and girls are all at a considerable disadvantage, with the widest gaps associated with the urban-rural and rich-poor dimensions. • While there continues to be a gap between boys’ and girls’ enrollment at all levels of education, it has diminished greatly over recent years. The gender gap is much smaller for the current generation of children than among adults, even among young adults under age 30. This shows that girls are among the main beneficiaries of the recent expansion in edu- cational coverage. Gaps in school participation remain, however, and girls are also affected by higher repetition and dropout rates than boys. 62 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan • Overall, the two most important reasons provided for nonattendance are cost of schooling and distance to school. Boys and girls provide largely the same reasons for not being in school. But for urban children, the main reason for nonattendance is the cost of schooling; for rural chil- dren, the main reason provided is distance to school. • The 10 states can be categorized into three groups with widely different primary school GERs. Three states have gross enrollment rates of around 95–100 percent, another three states have gross enrollment rates around 65–70 percent, and four states have gross enrollment rates around 50 percent. This indicator seems to correlate with the states’ literacy rates, indicating that states that historically had less- developed education systems are still behind. These states may need further support to catch up with the rest, so inequities of the past do not become permanent features of the education system. • Central Equatoria has the highest rate of P8 attainment, at 43 percent, and Jonglei and Warrap have the lowest, at 11 percent; but none of the states are close to 100 percent in either entry or attainment at the pri- mary level. Consequently, all states need to work at improving both access to grade 1 and retention within the primary cycle, with some needing more support to attain these goals (see table 4.1). • Currently, South Sudan has an estimated 1 million out-of-school chil- dren, that is, children who should be in primary school but are not. About 75,000 of these live in urban areas and 925,000 in rural areas, most likely in Warrap, Jonglei, or Eastern Equatoria. • An estimated 2.2 million population of South Sudan in the 15–40 age group are nonliterate and could benefit from literacy training. Although literacy rates have improved over time, most nonliterate individuals are at the younger end of this range because of South Sudan’s strong population growth and young population. NOTES 1. This was not done because of lack of information on some of these dimen- sions in the household survey, NBHS, on which this analysis is based, and because the sample size does not allow for much disaggregation. 2. Reported in MoEST/UNICEF (2008). 3. The director general of one state indicated that fees were higher in urban than in rural schools (NBHS, October 2009). 4. This figure excludes enrollments at Juba University, Juba campus, for lack of data. At Juba University in Khartoum, the female enrollment share is 22 percent. 5. Adult literacy rates by state are provided in chapter 1. Upper Nile ranks highest with a rate of 45 percent, compared with the Republic of South Sudan’s average of 27 percent. Disparities in School Participation • 63 6. Household survey data seem to be the better choice for state-level analyses because EMIS (combined with population) data produce primary education cov- erage indicators that are counterintuitive for some states and underestimate sec- ondary school coverage. 7. We did not use the official age for primary, 6–13, because with so many children enrolling late, a 6- or 7-year-old who is not enrolled in the Republic of South Sudan cannot really be considered out of school, but rather not in school yet. The 8- to 15-year-old age group has a much higher rate of school participa- tion than the 6- to 13-year-old age group. 8. These figures are based on the NBHS and may not be entirely consistent with the population census figures. CHAPTER 5 Student Learning and Service Delivery n uncontested mandate of the education sector is to build knowl- A edge and skills in the school population. Fulfillment of this man- date is directly dependent on the quality of services offered in schools and classrooms. Effective service delivery is associated with the promotion of students from grade to grade, completion of primary and secondary education, and proficiency in learning. Delivering quality education across the Republic of South Sudan will be a key challenge, compounded by its status as a new country. This chapter examines aspects of student achievement and service delivery in South Sudanese schools, with the main focus being on primary education. DATA SOURCES The main source of data for this chapter is the Ministry of Education (MoE) Service Delivery Study (SDS), a survey of a sample of 107 primary schools across four states: Central Equatoria, Lakes, Upper Nile, and West- ern Bahr Gazal. The four states were selected to represent South Sudan’s major regions. The Service Delivery Study included questionnaires on schooling conditions, classroom observation, and student assessment tests in language and mathematics of 1,800 grade 6 students. Data col- lection took place in July and August 2010. Appendix A provides more information about the study. STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES IN PRIMARY EDUCATION There are two ways a school system can monitor and evaluate levels of student achievement: through examinations or learning assessments. Examinations are aligned with the school curriculum and test students on 65 66 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan their curricular knowledge. They consequently certify a student’s readiness to enter the next grade or level of instruction. Learning assessments, on the other hand, test standard skills of students on a sample basis. If con- ducted annually or every two to three years, student assessments allow for comparisons over time. In addition, the results reflect the effectiveness of institutions to deliver quality services. STUDENT EXAMINATION RESULTS Each state in South Sudan has its own system of examinations in primary education. Success in the grade 8 exam certifies students and allows them to proceed to secondary school. Independent units in each state are responsible for developing and conducting the state’s grade 8 final exam. Normally, the number of students appearing for the exam would be a pro- portion of students in grade 8. However, in South Sudan the total num- ber of students registering (39,315) far exceeded the number in grade 8 in 2009 (18,295). This indicates that many students from the Alternative Education System (AES)—which in 2009 enrolled more than 40,000 in its last grade—sit for the exam to obtain primary school certification. Though it is not possible to compare student performance across South Sudan and over time, table 5.1 captures the success rate of students in each state. Overall, about 80 percent of the registered students were successful in the grade 8 exams. Pass rates for boys ranged from 62 per- Table 5.1 Student Performance in Grade 8 Examinations, 2009 State % Boys passed % Girls passed Central Equatoria 72 62 Eastern Equatoria 71 59 Jonglei 62 80 Lakes 92 82 Northern Bahr Ghazal 83 82 Unity 86 94 Upper Nile 87 85 Warrap 91 88 Western Bahr Ghazal 82 82 Western Equatoria 80 83 Total for the Republic of South Sudan 81 80 Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009. Student Learning and Service Delivery • 67 cent in Jonglei to 92 percent in Lakes and pass rates for girls ranged from 59 percent in Eastern Equatoria to 94 percent in Unity. In three states (Cen- tral and Eastern Equatoria, and Lakes), girls performed much worse than boys, and in two states (Jonglei and Unity), this situation was reversed. STUDENT ASSESSMENT RESULTS The Service Delivery Study included learning assessments in mathematics and language and a student background questionnaire. The mathematics test consisted of 30 test items from the 1995 or 2003 Trends in Interna- tional Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS) fourth-grade assessment and the language test of 25 items from the 1995 or 2001 Progress in Inter- national Reading Literacy Study (PIRLS) fourth-grade assessment. Taking into account the years lost due to the conflict in South Sudan, the research team decided to administer the test to students in grade 6 instead of grade 4.1 Of the students who took the test, only 3 percent were in the correct age group for grade 6 (11 years old), 45 percent were in the 12–16 age group, and the remaining students were more than 16 years old. The overall performance of students in South Sudan is weak in both mathematics and language. The mean score for the four states in mathe- matics is 29 percent and in language 35 percent. In figure 5.1, the distri- bution of test scores in both subjects skews to the left, pointing to the small share of students that was able to answer most of the questions cor- rectly. In mathematics, less than 8 percent of students scored 50 percent and above, and less than 1 percent scored above 75 percent. For language, Figure 5.1 Distribution of Test Scores for Grade 6 Students in Mathematics and Language, 2009 20 20 15 15 Percent of students Percent of students 10 10 5 5 0 0 0 20 40 60 80 0 20 40 60 80 Student test scores in mathematics Student test scores in language Source: Analysis of SDS 2010. Note: Each chart shows a histogram of the test scores. 68 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan this number is 16 percent and 4 percent, respectively. To give an idea of the international range of results, both tests consisted of a series of mul- tiple choice questions, each with four options, so a randomly completed test questionnaire would give an average score of around 25 percent. Fourth-graders in Singaporean schools score around 80 percent on simi- lar tests (more international comparisons are shown later). Student performance in Lakes state is higher in both mathematics and language compared to the other three states (table 5.2). In mathematics, the average student answered 40 percent of the questions correctly com- pared to Central Equatoria with 27 percent, Upper Nile with 21 percent, and Western Bahr Ghazal with 28 percent. Similarly, in language, the aver- age student score is 47 percent; again, the Lakes state score is the highest (47 percent) compared to Central Equatoria with 33 percent, Upper Nile with 24 percent, and Western Bahr Ghazal with 32 percent. The box plots (figure 5.2) display the wide variation in school-level average scores. Although Lakes state performed better than the other states, it also has the most variation across schools. Average school scores range from about 20 to 70 percent in mathematics and about 25 to 75 percent in language. The variation in average school scores in the other three states was much smaller. As shown in table 5.3, differences between the average performance of girls and boys are not large. Only in two states was there a significant dif- ference in scores: girls performed 4 percentage points higher than boys in Upper Nile and 3 percentage points lower in Western Bahr Ghazal. Table 5.2 Student Performance in Mathematics and Language, 2009 State/score Number Mean % Standard deviation Average student test score in mathematics 2,010 29 15.2 Central Equatoria 719 27 11.2 Lakes 549 40 15.9 Upper Nile 430 21 15.1 Western Bahr Ghazal 312 28 11.8 Average student test score in language 2,039 35 16.8 Central Equatoria 793 33 13.3 Lakes 543 47 18.2 Upper Nile 412 24 12.9 Western Bahr Ghazal 291 32 14.2 Source: Analysis of SDS 2010. Student Learning and Service Delivery • 69 Figure 5.2 School Average Test Score Distribution, Mathematics and Language, 2009 Mathematics score Language score Mean school score in mathematics (%) Mean school score in language (%) 60 * 60 40 * 40 20 20 0 * 0 Central Lake Upper Nile Western Central Lake Upper Nile Western Equatoria Bahr Equatoria Bahr Ghazal Ghazal State State Source: Analysis of SDS 2010. Note: The graph is read as follows: (a) the center line in the box plots indicates the median for the data set; (b) the lower and upper edges of the rectangle are the first and third quartiles of the data set; (c) the ends of the lines extending from the rectangle are the minimum and maximum values (excluding outliers); (d) the individual points represent potential outliers. Table 5.3 Performance according to Gender, 2009 State Mathematics (%) Language (%) Boy 27 33 Central Equatoria Girl 27 32 Boy 41 49 Lakes Girl 41 48 Boy 23 26 Upper Nile Girl 27 27 Boy 30 33 Western Bahr Ghazal Girl 27 32 Boy 30 36 Sample average Girl 29 34 Source: Analysis of SDS 2010. Figure 5.3 portrays average student achievement according to four income groups or quartiles.2 Quartile 1 is the poorest and quartile 4 the wealthiest. For all four quartiles, students in Lakes state performed, on average, higher than students in the same quartile in the other states. 70 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Figure 5.3 Pupil Performance in Mathematics and Language according to Household Wealth Mathematics Language 50 60 40 50 Average % score Average % score 40 30 30 20 20 10 10 0 0 Central Lake Upper Western Central Lake Upper Western Equatoria Nile Bahr Equatoria Nile Bahr Gazal Gazal State State Quartile 1 Quartile 2 Quartile 3 Quartile 4 Source: Analysis of SDS 2010. Except for language scores in Upper Nile, students in the wealthiest quar- tile generally performed better than those in the other quartiles. In some cases, in both mathematics and language, students from the second income quartile performed better than those in the third income quartile. INTERNATIONAL COMPARISON OF STUDENT ASSESSMENT RESULTS The Republic of South Sudan’s performance in both mathematics and language is low compared to other countries. The 30 questions in the mathematics test administered in South Sudan included questions on knowing facts and procedures, on reasoning, on solving routine prob- lems, and on using complex procedures and concepts. Table 5.4 lists the average score obtained for each group of questions for each of five coun- tries and South Sudan. Solving routine problems and using complex pro- cedures and concepts appear to be harder for students across countries. The tests were administered to grade 5 students in northern Sudan and Benin and grade 4 students in Yemen and Singapore. Considering that students mostly in the cities at the beginning of grade 6 took the test in South Sudan, performance is quite low when compared to other coun- tries. If the rural schools in South Sudan are included in the sample, then the scores are likely to be much lower. Across the four categories, South Sudan’s scores are lower than northern Sudan by an average of 8 percent- age points. South Sudan does perform higher than Benin (except in rea- soning) and Yemen. Student Learning and Service Delivery • 71 Table 5.4 International Comparisons: Mathematics Average Score, 2009 Mean correct score for each content area (%) The Republic of Northern Content area South Sudan Sudan Benin Yemen Singapore Grade in which test was administered Grade 6 Grade 5 Grade 5 Grade 4 Grade 4 Knowing facts and procedures 31 39 23 28 81 Reasoning 38 47 41 36 85 Solving routine problems 28 31 22 24 79 Using complex procedures and concepts 27 37 20 26 70 Sources: Analysis of SDS 2010; IEA 2008. The language test includes questions on documentary literature, on expository writing, and on narrative writing.3 Few developing countries took this test; therefore, comparisons are only made with northern Sudan and Benin. The average performance for each group of questions for each country is given in table 5.5. Overall, narrative prose is more difficult than documentary or expository prose for most countries. South Sudan’s scores are lower than northern Sudan by about 4 percentage points, on average. Benin, however, performs lower than South Sudan by about 6 percentage points. SERVICE DELIVERY IN PRIMARY EDUCATION IN FOUR STATES Student learning in primary education is dependent on the quality of service delivery in schools. This section, which for the most part is based on data for the four states examined in the Service Delivery Study, Table 5.5 International Comparison of Student Performance in Language by Content Area, 2009 Mean correct score for each content area (%) The Republic of Content area South Sudan Northern Sudan Benin Singapore Grade in which test was administered Grade 6 Grade 5 Grade 5 Grade 4 Document 37 39 32 83 Expository prose 43 44 32 82 Narrative prose 28 38 25 63 Sources: Analysis of SDS 2010; IEA 2008. 72 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan assessed the following basic components of service delivery in the educa- tion sector, without which instruction cannot adequately take place: • physical infrastructure of schools (condition of school buildings, the availability of drinking water and toilets) • classrooms and instructional materials (the availability of chalkboard, storage, desks, class sizes, textbooks, notebooks, and writing instruments) • school management (school working days, record keeping, the cur- riculum used in schools, the pace of teachers’ coverage of the curricu- lum, and teacher monitoring) • community involvement evident in the participation and work of edu- cation councils in the education system. SCHOOL INFRASTRUCTURE This section looks at the status of primary school classrooms and the avail- ability of drinking water and toilets in primary schools and finds that school facilities are generally inadequate. In particular, a third of classes are held under open air and half of schools lack access to drinking water and toilets. Only one in four classrooms are permanent structures across South Sudan (table 5.6). This share varies between 14 and 15 percent in Jonglei and Warrap and 39 and 41 percent in Central Equatoria and Western Bahr Ghazal. Across South Sudan, a third of classes are held in open air, 2 per- cent in tents, and another 10 percent under roof only. The remaining Table 5.6 Status of Primary School Classrooms, 2009 Type of structure (%) State Permanent Semipermanent Roof only Tent Open air Other Central Equatoria 39 29 11 1 18 1 Eastern Equatoria 32 18 15 2 31 1 Jonglei 15 36 5 1 42 1 Lakes 22 23 7 1 46 0 Northern Bahr Ghazal 20 28 11 2 37 1 Unity 22 28 6 1 42 0 Upper Nile 34 32 7 3 23 1 Warrap 14 46 6 1 32 0 Western Bahr Ghazal 41 26 14 2 17 1 Western Equatoria 26 13 20 2 38 1 The Republic of South Sudan 25 29 10 2 33 1 Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009. Student Learning and Service Delivery • 73 about 30 percent of classes are held in semipermanent structures, typi- cally made of mud, thatch, or grass. Schools without buildings, or in struc- tures that cannot withstand rain, are unlikely to function for the whole school year, leading to the loss of instructional time. Moreover, particularly in open air schools, the level of distraction can be high due to people walking by or riding on bicycles or animals through or close to the school (UNICEF 2009). A 2009 survey by the International Organization for Migration (IOM) provides data on the condition of schools in villages in three states. Over 90 percent of villages in Unity, Warrap, and Northern Bahr Ghazal were surveyed (table 5.7). Only 19 percent of villages surveyed in Unity, 18 per- cent in Warrap, and 27 percent in Northern Bahr Ghazal had a primary school. Some of the schools were not working, however; more than a third of schools in Unity were not working, while the shares of nonwork- ing schools were just under 10 percent in Warrap and Northern Bahr Ghazal. Reasons given for the closure of schools included the destruction of school structure, no teachers, and no funds. Table 5.7 Village Schools in Unity, Warrap, and Northern Bahr Ghazal, 2009 No. of No. of villages Villages with a No. of working nonworking State surveyed school (%) schools* schools * Northern Bahr Ghazal 1,738 (96%) 27 488 45 (9%) Unity 1,785 (100%) 19 374 134 (36%) Warrap 2,049 (97%) 18 386 32 (8%) Sources: IOM 2009a, 2009b, and 2009c. Note: *Includes both primary and secondary schools in the villages surveyed. According to EMIS data, about half of primary schools in South Sudan had access to drinking water and toilets in 2009 (table 5.8).4 Across states, access to drinking water ranged from about 30 percent of schools in Upper Nile and Western Equatoria to more than 70 percent of schools in Lakes, Warrap, and Western Bahr Ghazal. The number of schools with toi- lets ranged from 33 percent in Unity to 70 percent in Western Bahr Ghazal. The UNICEF study (2009) also highlighted the limited availabil- ity of drinking water and toilets in schools. CLASSROOMS AND INSTRUCTIONAL MATERIAL This section looks at the availability of chalkboards, desks, and reading and writing materials in classrooms, and finds that many classrooms lack 74 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Table 5.8 Drinking Water and Toilets in Primary Schools, 2009 Schools with Schools with State drinking water (%) toilet (%) Central Equatoria 45 59 Eastern Equatoria 39 46 Jonglei 39 47 Lakes 69 46 Northern Bahr Ghazal 63 56 Unity 43 33 Upper Nile 32 41 Warrap 72 64 Western Bahr Ghazal 73 70 Western Equatoria 30 56 The Republic of South Sudan 49 51 Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009. furniture, storage, and even basic instructional tools, such as a functional chalkboard. Average pupil-textbook ratios are generally 1:3. Most classrooms surveyed in the Service Delivery Study did not have a functional chalkboard—a basic instructional tool. Across the four states, less than half the classrooms (40 percent) had chalkboards in good, usable condition (table 5.9). Similarly, storage facilities are available in only 30 percent of class- rooms surveyed in the Service Delivery Study: 20 percent in Central Equa- toria, 19 percent in Lakes, 37 percent in Upper Nile, and 38 percent in Western Bahr Ghazal. When classrooms lack safe storage, it is a challenge for teachers to preserve their instructional aids or maintain records of stu- dent attendance and performance. Table 5.9 Availability of Chalkboards and Storage in Classrooms in Four States, 2009 Classrooms with Classrooms with Students with usable chalkboard safe storage desks State (%) (%) (%) Central Equatoria 33 20 64 Lakes 37 19 20 Upper Nile 49 37 60 Western Bahr Ghazal 42 38 53 Sample average 40 29 53 Source: Analysis of SDS 2010. Note: These data are based on grades 3, 4, and 5 observed in the sample schools. Student Learning and Service Delivery • 75 The share of students that have a desk ranges from 20 percent in Lakes state to 64 percent in Central Equatoria. On average, across the four states, about half the students have desks. In a situation where printed material for the most part is unavailable, textbooks constitute the only opportunity for children to practice reading and mathematics. In the Service Delivery Study, only a small percentage of students in the grade 3, 4, and 5 classrooms possessed a mathematics and language textbook (table 5.10). The availability of textbooks in West- ern Bahr Ghazal was particularly low (between 2 and 11 percent). In grades 4 and 5, a higher percentage of students in Lakes had textbooks (about 40 percent) when compared to the other three states. The pupil- to-textbook ratio for 2009 is available in the EMIS data for South Sudan Table 5.10 Availability of Mathematics and Language Textbooks, 2009 Pupils with a mathematics textbook (%) Pupils with a language textbook (%) Grade sampled Grade 3 Grade 4 Grade 5 Grade 3 Grade 4 Grade 5 Central Equatoria 16 17 12 18 16 12 Lakes 17 37 43 21 37 42 Upper Nile 23 19 23 18 21 25 Western Bahr Ghazal 4 4 3 6 11 2 Sample average 17 19 19 17 20 20 Source: Analysis of SDS 2010. Table 5.11 Pupil-to-Textbook Ratio, 2009 Grades 1–4 Grades 5–8 State Math English Math English Central Equatoria 1.6 1.6 4.8 3.9 Eastern Equatoria 2.9 3.0 3.5 3.7 Jonglei 3.1 2.8 8.0 2.4 Lakes 4.8 4.4 2.5 2.1 Northern Bahr Ghazal 4.7 4.1 4.4 3.4 Unity 8.0 6.9 9.4 4.0 Upper Nile 3.5 3.3 10.7 3.8 Warrap 6.5 6.2 3.8 3.9 Western Bahr Ghazal 2.2 2.3 9.6 1.7 Western Equatoria 2.2 2.1 3.7 2.2 The Republic of South Sudan 6.7 3.2 3.2 3.0 Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009. 76 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan (table 5.11). For grades 1–4 there were a few more English textbooks avail- able than math textbooks. In English the ratio of textbook to pupil was 1:3 and in math it was 1:6.7. The ratio for math was better in 2008 (1:4.4.). For grades 5–8, the ratio for both math and English was 1:3, and this was an improvement from 2008 when it was 1:6. Student opportunity for written practice reinforces learning. Like text- books, notebooks (paper or exercise books) for writing practice are scarce. Between 10 and 17 percent of students in grade 3, 4, and 5 classrooms do not possess notebooks (table 5.12). The situation in Western Bahr Ghazal is ideal in grade 3 and grade 5 with 100 percent of students having note- books. The availability of writing instruments is lower in other states, with pencils or pens available to about 72 percent of students in grades 3, 4, and 5 in Upper Nile; 81 percent in Lakes; 82 percent in Western Bahr Ghazal; and 83 percent in Central Equatoria. Table 5.12 Availability of Mathematics and Language Notebooks and Writing Instruments, 2009 Students with a mathematics Students with a language notebook (%) notebook (%) Students with pencil/pen State Grade 3 Grade 4 Grade 5 Grade 3 Grade 4 Grade 5 (%) Central Equatoria 81 86 87 90 85 88 83 Lakes 88 93 87 85 79 85 81 Upper Nile 87 74 80 83 84 88 72 Western Bahr Ghazal 100 75 95 77 93 100 82 Average 86 83 86 86 85 89 79 Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009. SCHOOL MANAGEMENT This section looks at school working days, record keeping, curricula used, and syllabus coverage and presents these findings: • There is large variability across schools and states in the number of days schools are in session. • Most of the registered students were in school at the time of the survey. • Teacher attendance on the day of the survey was less consistent than student attendance. • Most teachers reported teaching less than 10 hours a day. • Progress on syllabus coverage was generally low compared with planned progress. There is considerable variation in the school year across states. Accord- ing to the Service Delivery Study, 13 percent of schools reported closing Student Learning and Service Delivery • 77 Table 5.13 Share of Schools Reporting Functioning Months, 2009 Start month End month Schools (%) April December 56 May December 19 February December 18 March December 7 Source: Analysis of SDS 2010. for three months during the school year and 7 percent for two months as a result of inclement weather. The number of months that schools func- tioned also varied across states and within states (table 5.13). Across the four states, 18 percent of schools functioned for 11 months (February to December), 7 percent for 10 months (March to December), 56 percent for 9 months (April to December), and 19 percent for 8 months (May to December). Different curricula could explain some of this variation in the number of months schools functioned. Notwithstanding, the length of the school year is quite short for those schools starting in April or May. Standardizing the number of working days per year across states and schools will be an important task for South Sudan. When head teachers or principals were asked to report the number of working days during these months, they indicated a wide range: 110–288 days in Central Equatoria, 186–224 days in Lakes, 124–360 days in Upper Nile, and 151–299 days in Western Bahr Ghazal. Again, this indicates the lack of a standardized academic year across schools. Except in Upper Nile, average student attendance was high in the class- rooms observed for the Service Delivery Study. To compute student atten- dance, the number of students present on the day of the visit was com- pared to the number of students recorded in the attendance register. In Upper Nile, a third of the students were absent on the day of the visit. This could be due to the monsoons in progress during the study. In the Serv- ice Delivery Study an average of 12 percent of students in the classes observed were absent in Western Bahr Ghazal, 7 percent in Central Equa- toria, and 3 percent in Lakes. In Lakes, there were more students in the grade 4 class than registered. There is considerable variation in the extent to which schools main- tain records on certain critical areas. The Service Delivery Study captures maintenance of school records in three key areas (table 5.14): student enrollment, student performance, and teacher leave. Records on student enrollment were maintained by 63 percent of schools in Upper Nile, 73 78 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Table 5.14 Percentage of Schools Maintaining Records, 2009 Schools able to show records (%) Teachers’ daily arrival State Student enrollment Student performance Teachers’ leave and departure Central Equatoria 88 76 46 88 Lakes 96 85 81 93 Upper Nile 63 46 50 70 Western Bahr Ghazal 73 73 27 80 Sample average 82 70 53 83 Source: Analysis of SDS 2010. percent in Western Bahr Ghazal, 88 percent in Central Equatoria, and 96 percent in Lakes. Fewer schools maintained records on student perfor- mance and even fewer on leave taken by teachers. A record of teachers’ leave was kept by only 27 percent of schools in Western Bahr Ghazal, and half the schools in Upper Nile and Central Equatoria. This number was higher for Lakes (81 percent). Though more than 70 percent of schools kept a log of teacher arrival and departure, the discussion below shows the small percentage of teachers that arrive on time. As mentioned earlier, a variety of curricula were adopted across states. Table 5.15 portrays the different curricula used in each state. MoE is in the process of introducing a national curriculum, and schools are gradually adopting it. In 2009, more than 60 percent of grade 4 classrooms had implemented the national curriculum, and more than 95 percent of grade 1 classrooms had done so. Table 5.15 Type of Curricula Used in Grade 4, by State, 2009 The Republic of State South Sudan Ugandan Ethiopian Kenyan Other Central Equatoria 76 19 2 2 2 Eastern Equatoria 89 6 0 4 0 Jonglei 73 7 6 8 6 Lakes 62 8 8 13 8 Northern Bahr Ghazal 71 7 7 8 7 Unity 89 2 2 2 4 Upper Nile 91 3 2 2 2 Warrap 65 8 8 12 8 Western Bahr Ghazal 61 10 10 10 10 Western Equatoria 95 4 0 1 0 The Republic of South Sudan 76 8 5 7 5 Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009. Student Learning and Service Delivery • 79 Figure 5.4 Teachers’ Syllabus Coverage, 2009 Household Wealth 70 60 10% syllabus covered 50 20% syllabus covered % teachers 40 30% syllabus covered 30 20 40% syllabus covered 10 50% syllabus covered 0 Central Upper Lakes Western Equatoria Nile Bahr Gazal State Source: Analysis of SDS 2010. Teachers in South Sudan are expected to have an annual scheme that provides a road map for syllabus coverage over the school year and a les- son plan for the specific class period. An average of 71 percent of teachers across the four states had a plan for syllabus coverage, and over 88 percent claimed they instructed students based on a daily lesson plan. In spite of the existence of a scheme and lesson plans, syllabus coverage is not on schedule (figure 5.4). Even if schools started only in April or May, teach- ers at the time of the school visit for the Service Delivery Study should have completed about half the syllabus. In 2009, more than 70 percent of teachers in Central Equatoria and Upper Nile had completed less than 20 percent of the syllabus. The majority of teachers in Lakes and Western Bahr Ghazal were somewhat more on track. Although most schools record teacher arrival and departure, many teachers do not arrive on time (table 5.16). The survey did not examine the extent to which teachers left the school early, but did examine (as reported by the principal) the number of teachers that arrived in school Table 5.16 Teachers’ Arrival and Departure, 2009 All teachers arriving on All teachers arriving on All teachers present at time last week time last month time of survey State (% of schools) (% of schools) (% of schools) Central Equatoria 15 15 32 Lakes 11 15 26 Upper Nile 17 38 42 Western Bahr Ghazal 29 14 21 Sample average 18 21 30 Source: Analysis of SDS 2010. 80 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Table 5.17 Regular Teachers’ Average Hours per Week, 2009 Percent of teachers teaching (hours per week) State 3–10 11–20 21–30 31–40 Over 40 Central Equatoria 53 30 8 10 0 Lakes 19 21 33 21 6 Upper Nile 71 20 4 4 2 Western Bahr Ghazal 50 38 9 0 3 Source: Analysis of SDS 2010. on time. In the week prior to the school visits, all teachers arrived on time in only 17 percent of schools in Upper Nile, 15 percent in Central Equa- toria, 11 percent in Lakes, and 29 percent in Western Bahr Ghazal. In the previous month, the range of schools where all teachers arrived on time was from 21 percent in Western Bahr Ghazal to 42 percent in Upper Nile. Instructional time is dependent not only on whether teachers are pres- ent, but also the distribution of instructional hours during the school day. During the school visits, all teachers were present in 42 percent of schools in Upper Nile, 32 percent in Central Equatoria, 26 percent in Lakes, and 21 percent in Western Bahr Ghazal. Table 5.17 provides the number of hours teachers instruct pupils in the classroom. According to teacher reports, the majority taught less than 10 hours per week: 71 percent of teachers in Upper Nile, 53 percent in Central Equatoria, and 50 percent in Western Bahr Ghazal. The story was different in Lakes, where the major- ity of teachers taught 21 to 30 hours per week. Teachers in South Sudan take a large number of leave days each year (figure 5.5). It is not clear whether this leave is authorized officially or whether it is informal practice. It is likely the latter due to the absence of a leave policy in South Sudan, a situation discussed in more detail in chapter 7 on teacher management. In the Service Delivery Study, as only a few schools kept records on teachers’ leave, headmasters’ responses to the questions on teacher absence were incomplete and vague. According to answers given by teachers to the same questions, teachers take leave for a variety of reasons during the school year. About 24 percent of teachers across the four states took up to 4 days of sick leave in 2009, 16 percent took 5–10 days, and 4 percent took more than 10 days. For the illness of a family member, 32 percent of teachers took up to 4 days, 13 percent took 5–10 days, and 3 percent took more than 10 days. This proportion is similar for leave taken for social functions and emergencies. About 24 per- cent of teachers took up to 4 days for administrative and official tasks. Student Learning and Service Delivery • 81 Figure 5.5 Teacher Leave—Reasons and Length of Absence, 2009 40 35 30 <4 days % teachers 25 20 5–10 days 15 10 >10 days 5 0 k ily s ies ive al y r he on lar Sic i m fic nc at Ot cti sa Fa Of str ge un ct ini er lle lf Em m cia Co Ad So Reason for absence Source: Analysis of SDS 2010. More teachers take between 5 and 10 days of leave for administrative tasks (17 percent) than for official tasks (13 percent). Taken together, teachers are absent for significant periods. Teacher absence is a more serious issue for schools where the school year is particularly short. Teacher supervision by the head teacher and county inspector is less than satisfactory (table 5.18). Between 14 percent of teachers in Lakes and 31 percent in Upper Nile were never visited by the head teacher. Visits to teachers by the county inspector varied from 17 percent of teachers in Central Equatoria to 67 percent of teachers in the Upper Nile. A higher degree of monitoring in terms of the frequency of visits is evident in Lakes, followed by Central Equatoria. In both these states, the head teacher and the county inspector visit more than 80 percent of the teachers. Table 5.18 Teacher Monitoring by the Head Teacher and County Inspector, 2009 Teachers visited by head teacher (%) Teachers visited by county inspector (%) In the last In the last State Never 12 months Last month Never 12 months Last month Central Equatoria 17 8 75 17 42 42 Lakes 14 32 54 19 32 49 Upper Nile 31 5 64 67 19 14 Western Bahr Ghazal 15 5 80 55 20 25 Sample average 20 15 65 40 30 31 Source: Analysis of SDS 2010. 82 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Table 5.19 Education Council Participation in Schools, 2009 Schools with an Education councils Committees that held Schools supported by education council with an executive one or more meetings local NGOs or State or PTA (%) committee (%) last month (%) institutions (%) Central Equatoria 100 100 63 73 Lakes 88 85 81 58 Upper Nile 96 96 79 50 Western Bahr Ghazal 94 94 69 56 Sample average 95 94 72 61 Source: Analysis of SDS 2010. Note: PTA = parent-teacher association; NGO = nongovernmental organization. COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT Community participation in schools is strong. Across the four states, 95 percent of schools have an education council or parent-teacher associa- tion (PTA). In almost all cases, this organization is operating through an executive committee (table 5.19), and three-quarters of executive com- mittees are reported to be active (holding meetings). About 60 percent of schools receive support from outside entities such as nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) and civil society. The Service Delivery Study examined the kind of support that is pro- vided by education councils and PTAs (table 5.20). Overall, support more often consists of helping teachers in the classroom, and less often of pro- viding monetary support, such as paying for classroom supplies or even teacher salaries. This may in part be explained by widespread poverty, but could also be a result of the high frequency of school support provided by NGOs or other institutions as reported in table 5.19, which reduces the Table 5.20 Types of Support Provided by Education Councils, 2009 % of schools in which executive committee Helps teachers in the Buys Buys learning Pays teacher State classroom textbooks material salaries Central Equatoria 33 5 10 33 Lakes 23 8 8 8 Upper Nile 33 0 25 4 Western Bahr Ghazal 31 0 13 6 Sample average 30 4 13 16 Source: Analysis of SDS 2010. Student Learning and Service Delivery • 83 need for parents to contribute monetarily. The exception is the more urban Central Equatoria, in which a third of councils helped pay for teachers. Table 5.20 suggests that parental contributions to education councils or PTAs are low in the schools surveyed, except those in Central Equatoria. STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES IN SECONDARY EDUCATION Table 5.21 presents data on student performance in secondary school examinations. Since secondary schools operate with different curricula, some students take an exam at the end of the third year, while others do so at the end of four years of secondary. No data are available for Warrap. In Eastern Equatoria, the number passed is higher than those registered, which suggests that some students took the exam without registering. Overall, around 60 percent of the 5,274 students who registered for the exam passed. This gives a total of about 3,300 students who passed the secondary school exam in 2009. Thus, the pipeline of students who could potentially continue in higher education is quite narrow. Except in Western Equatoria and Western Bahr Ghazal, girls were gen- erally less likely to pass the secondary school examination than boys. These two states also have the lowest pass rates overall. Table 5.21 Examination Results in Secondary Education, 2009 Passed (%) Number State registered Boys Girls Central Equatoria 1,138 82 76 Eastern Equatoria 349 105 79 Jonglei 493 83 76 Lakes 244 96 40 Northern Bahr Ghazal 2 100 Unity 344 79 72 Upper Nile 1,675 63 45 Warrap Western Bahr Ghazal 497 14 40 Western Equatoria 532 21 21 The Republic of South Sudan 5,274 64 57 Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009. Note: Data are from the exam at the end of secondary year 3 or secondary year 4, depending on the curriculum followed. Exam data from six-year secondary schools are excluded. 84 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan SERVICE DELIVERY IN SECONDARY EDUCATION Information on service delivery in secondary education is scarce. The dis- cussion below is based on available EMIS data on secondary schools. The physical structure; the availability of libraries, laboratories, and comput- ers; and the curricula in use in different states were examined. The majority of schools in secondary education function in concrete buildings (table 5.22). Warrap has the highest proportion of permanent structures. The proportion of permanent structures is slightly lower in Central Equatoria (69), Lakes (67), and Unity (58) than in the other states. An average of 18 percent of secondary schools operates in semi- permanent structures across states. A few schools in Lakes, Upper Nile, Warrap, and Western Bahr Ghazal function in tents or in structures with just the roof in place. About 66 percent of the secondary schools have access to drinking water and 82 percent to toilets. All schools in Unity and Western Equato- ria have access to drinking water. Except in Northern Bahr Ghazal and Warrap, where only around 20 percent of schools have access to drinking water, in the other states about half the schools have access to drinking water. The availability of toilets ranges from 71 percent of schools in East- ern Equatoria to 100 percent of schools in Lakes. Whether there are suffi- cient toilets that are usable is not known. Table 5.22 Secondary School Infrastructure, 2009 % of school structures that are: State Permanent Semipermanent Roof only Tent Open air Central Equatoria 69 26 2 0 2 Eastern Equatoria 89 7 0 0 4 Jonglei 76 24 0 0 0 Lakes 67 28 4 0 0 Northern Bahr Ghazal 77 23 0 0 0 Unity 58 29 0 0 14 Upper Nile 78 17 4 1 0 Warrap 92 0 0 8 0 Western Bahr Ghazal 84 10 0 1 5 Western Equatoria 89 8 0 0 3 The Republic of South Sudan 78 18 1 1 2 Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009. Student Learning and Service Delivery • 85 Table 5.23 Libraries, Laboratories, and Computers in Secondary Schools, 2009 Schools % of schools having laboratories in: Schools having with libraries Combined computers State (%) Physics Biology Chemistry science (%) Central Equatoria 27 7 4 7 11 7 Eastern Equatoria 12 12 12 12 12 6 Jonglei 0 0 0 0 0 0 Lakes 60 20 20 20 20 0 Northern Bahr Ghazal 12 0 0 0 0 0 Unity 25 0 0 0 0 0 Upper Nile 0 0 0 0 0 0 Warrap 0 0 0 0 0 0 Western Bahr Ghazal 7 7 7 7 0 0 Western Equatoria 11 6 6 0 11 6 The Republic of South Sudan 8 5 4 4 6 3 Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009. There is a critical shortage of libraries and laboratories (table 5.23). Lakes has a higher number of libraries and laboratories when compared to the other states. No school has a library in Jonglei, Upper Nile, and Warrap. Excluding these states, approximately 8 percent of schools have a library. Only four states—Central and Eastern Equatoria, and Northern and Western Bahr Ghazal—have science laboratories, and even in these states only an average of about six schools has a laboratory. A handful of schools across the three states have computers. A variety of curricula are in use in secondary education in South Sudan. Apart from the South Sudan curriculum, which has been adopted by 58 percent of schools, others use the Kenyan and Ugandan curricula (table 5.24). Seven percent of schools use the Kenyan curriculum, 21 per- cent use the Ugandan, and 14 percent of schools use other curricula. The South Sudan curriculum appears to be the most popular and is used by 58 percent of schools. The majority of schools in Upper Nile (90 per- cent) and Western Bahr Ghazal (100 percent) use the South Sudan cur- riculum. In Unity, 88 percent of schools use a different curriculum. The Ugandan curriculum is most popular in Central Equatoria and the Kenyan curriculum in Lakes. 86 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Table 5.24 Curricula in Secondary Schools, 2009 % of schools with the following curriculum: The Republic of State Kenyan South Sudan Ugandan Other Central Equatoria 4 39 46 11 Eastern Equatoria 4 64 31 1 Jonglei 15 42 0 42 Lakes 39 43 18 0 Northern Bahr Ghazal 28 61 0 11 Unity 0 14 0 86 Upper Nile 0 90 0 10 Warrap 15 30 20 35 Western Bahr Ghazal 0 100 0 0 Western Equatoria 3 70 10 16 The Republic of South Sudan 7 58 21 14 Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009. KEY FINDINGS • Although student pass rates at the primary school examination are high—perhaps because examinations often test the more able stu- dents—a test of student learning in grade 6 in a sample of mostly urban schools in four states finds weak levels of student learning in both language and mathematics. In language, students got 35 percent of questions right, while in mathematics, students answered correctly 29 percent of the time.5 • These results are no surprise, given the history of education in the Republic of South Sudan and considering that many other countries in Sub-Saharan Africa and other parts of the world are struggling with achieving good levels of student learning. Comparing the South Sudan’s sample with results found in other developing countries that have used the same or similar tests, we find that South Sudan’s school sample performed a little better than Benin, on par with the Republic of Yemen, but not as good as northern Sudan.6 • The report documents weaknesses in service delivery in primary and secondary schools, which likely contribute to the weak learn- ing performance. Most of the primary schools and some of the sec- ondary schools do not have permanent structures leading to the loss of school working days. There is a shortage of drinking water and toi- Student Learning and Service Delivery • 87 lets, especially in primary schools. Average class sizes are high in pri- mary schools, which makes instruction a challenge. There is a severe shortage of textbooks in both primary and secondary schools. Accord- ing to the Service Delivery Study, two-thirds of the students did not have paper to write on and a fifth of the students did not have writing instruments—limiting opportunities for reinforcing what is taught. • The report has documented weak school management practices in several areas: – There is no clear policy on the number of working days in a school year and some of the schools functioned for less than eight months. – Record-keeping associated with enrollments, student performance, and teachers’ leave is not uniform. – Inadequate instruction is evident in the slow coverage of the syllabus in classrooms, which leads to a cumulative shrinkage of what stu- dents learn each year. – Tardiness of teachers and a very limited number of hours teachers spend on instruction per week can explain the slow pace of syllabus coverage. – Only about half the head teachers and county inspectors monitor teachers in classrooms. Improving the functioning of schools in these areas is critical to improve educational outcomes, retention, and learning. NOTES 1. In Benin and northern Sudan, these tests were given to students in grade 5. They were tested in the same selection of test questions as the Republic of South Sudan. 2. For the construction of the asset index, each of nine assets was assigned a weight equal to the fraction of pupils that own the asset. The assets included a car, a refrigerator, a electricity, tap water, a television, a radio, a computer, a mobile phone, and a gas or electric stove. If the number of possessions = 0, then index = 1 (poor- est); if the number of possessions >=5, then index = 4 (wealthiest). 3. A document is a circumscribed representation of a body of information that one can or intends to communicate. Expository writing uses a style that can inform, explain, describe, or define the author’s subject to the reader. This kind of writing is often used in academics to demonstrate knowledge and familiarity with the topic or subject. Narrative writing tells a story or part of a story. Narrative writing is used in novels, short stories, biographies, autobiographies, historical accounts, essays, poems, and plays. 4. The survey did not examine the quality of the drinking water or whether the toilets were usable. 5. Both tests were multiple choice tests, in which randomly filled test ques- tionnaires would give an average score of around 25 percent. 6. However, the Republic of South Sudan as a whole would likely produce weaker results, since most of the country’s schools are rural, while the sample included mainly urban schools. CHAPTER 6 Education Spending his chapter analyzes the patterns of education spending in the T Republic of South Sudan. The focus is on public spending, but some figures for private spending are also provided. Information on donor spending is not included for lack of information. First, the trend in public education spending since 2006 is shown. Next, the chapter focuses in more detail on the patterns of public education spending in 2009, calculates per student spending by level of education, analyzes its composition, and compares it with per student spending in other coun- tries in the region. Finally, estimates of the volume of household spend- ing on education are provided. TREND IN PUBLIC EDUCATION SPENDING SINCE 2006 This section analyzes the trend in public spending since 2006, the first full year of the Government of the Republic of South Sudan (GoRSS), because this is the time when public education spending really started in South Sudan. During the conflict years, the school network was smaller and composed primarily of community or religious schools, or schools supported by nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), many function- ing with the help of volunteer teachers. Since around 2005, GoRSS has been building a network of government or government-supported schools that have civil servant teachers, although many volunteers still remain in the system. GoRSS is now financing the salaries of some 30,000 education staff working in schools and administrative offices across the states. GoRSS is counting on donors to cover most of the capital spend- ing and support schools with instructional materials, school feeding, and so forth. 89 90 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan The annual budget of GoRSS (blue book) captures both (a) the edu- cation spending at the central level, represented by the Ministry of Edu- cation (MoE) budget, and (b) the transfers from central GoRSS to the 10 states to support the provision of education (known as conditional trans- fers, education part). Funded mainly by this transfer, states are responsi- ble for running most government schools at the primary and secondary levels and Alternative Education System (AES) learning centers.1 In prin- ciple, the states have some taxing authority and are supposed to top off the funds received from the conditional transfer, but states have made it known they do not have their own revenues to invest in education and are thus only funding schools with the transfer.2 Thus, government spending is for the most part captured in the GoRSS’ annual budget books. As a result of a budgetary crisis, GoRSS education spending has been declining since 2008, but the budget priority for education has been more or less stable since 2006. Table 6.1 presents data on aggregate GoRSS edu- cation spending since 2006. It also shows the share of the total GoRSS spending that is allocated to education. Corrected for inflation, GoRSS’ education spending has dropped from the SDG 270 million–290 million range between 2006 and 2008 to only SDG 207 million in 2009 and a budgeted SDG 254 million for 2010 (all in constant 2008 SDG). The drop in 2009 is explained by a strong decline in oil prices in the wake of the global financial crisis. In terms of the budget share allocated to education, the share fluctuates in the 5–8 percent range without any particular trend, although it seems education was harder hit than other sectors by the 2009 budget crisis (8 percent of the 2009 budget was originally allocated to education but only 6 percent was actually spent). For 2010, education’s share of the total GoRSS budget is again 8 percent, indicating that educa- tion is still a GoRSS spending priority. The decline in education spending is happening at a time when the school-age population is growing; this has led to a considerable drop in public spending per child. Figure 6.1 shows the trend in GoRSS education Table 6.1 Trend in GoRSS Education Spending, 2006–10 2009 2009 2010 2006 2007 2008 Approved Actual Approved Spending Actual Actual Actual budget (provisional) budget In current SDG million 225.2 233.1 290.2 291.3 234.1 323.5 In constant 2008 SDG million 279.0 269.8 290.2 258.0 207.3 254.2 As % of total GoRSS spending 6 8 5 8 6 8 Sources: MoFEP’s budget books, 2007–10. Education Spending • 91 Figure 6.1 Trend in Public Education Spending per Child (Ages 6–16), 2006–09 140 120 118 120 113 Spending per child (SDG) 97 93 100 97 80 83 In current 60 SDG 40 In constant 2008 SDG 20 0 2006 2007 2008 2009 Year Sources: MoFEP’s budget books, 2007–10. Data for 2006–08 are actuals, for 2009 provisional. spending per school-aged child (age 6–16), calculated by dividing total GoRSS education spending by the population of that age group. In real terms, spending per child declined from SDG 120 in 2006 to SDG 83 in 2009, a 30 percent drop. Figure 6.2 compares the trend in spending per child with the corre- sponding figures for northern Sudan. In 2006, education spending per child was almost twice as much in northern Sudan than in South Sudan; by 2009, northern Sudan was spending three times as much per school- age child. This difference reflects a far more developed education system Figure 6.2 Comparison of Public Education Spending per Child (Ages 6–16), in Northern Sudan and the Republic of South Sudan, 2006–09 300 282 260 265 250 221 Constant 2008 SDG 200 Northern Sudan 150 120 113 118 South Sudan 100 83 50 0 2006 2007 2008 2009 Year Sources: Figure 6.1 and World Bank 2012. 92 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan in the north with a significant and growing share of youth continuing their studies up through to higher education. It also seems to reflect that northern Sudan was not as affected as South Sudan by the drop in oil prices because of their more diversified economy. ANALYSIS OF PUBLIC EDUCATION SPENDING IN 2009 This section focuses on the patterns of spending in a single year, 2009. The purpose of the analysis is to assess how spending is allocated across levels of education and by type of spending to provide a better understand- ing of how resources are used. The analysis is based as much as possible on actual spending rather than budget figures, since these often differ widely. RECURRENT AND CAPITAL SPENDING BY LEVEL OF GOVERNMENT In 2009, GoRSS spent 97 percent of the education budget on recurrent costs and 77 percent on staff salaries. Table 6.2 provides a first, simple breakdown of GoRSS education spending—this breakdown is readily available in GoRSS’ budget books. In 2009, 97 percent of total public edu- cation spending was recurrent and 3 percent was capital spending. The share for capital spending was unusually low that year due to the budget crisis, as capital spending was cut more than recurrent spending in an effort to protect staff salaries (capital spending was cut from a budgeted SDG 40 million to SDG 6 million in 2009). The recurrent spending has two parts, salaries and operating expenses; salaries represent 77 percent and opera- tions 21 percent of total education spending. Thus, almost four out of every five pounds invested by GoRSS in education goes to salaries. The remaining pound goes largely to recurrent operating expenses other than salaries. Table 6.2 GoRSS Education Spending by Spending Category and Level of Government, 2009 Recurrent Total spending In SDG million (2009 provisional) Salaries Operating Capital SGD million % MoE 10.3 47.6 6.2 64.1 27 Transfer to states for education 169.4 0.7 0.0 170.0 73 SDG million 179.7 48.3 6.2 234.1 100 Total spending % 77 21 3 100 — Source: MoFEP’s budget book 2010. Note: — Not available. Education Spending • 93 The education sector is very decentralized in terms of the volume of spending that is administered by the states. Table 6.2 also shows that almost three-quarters (73 percent) of the education budget was spent by the states, mainly to cover salaries. The budget share transferred to the states for their spending needs is higher than in most other sectors in South Sudan. On paper, the states spend their resources almost exclu- sively on salaries (SDG 169.4 million out of a total transfer of SDG 170 million) since they are allocated only a tiny operating budget (SDG 0.7 million) and no capital budget. But in the absence of other sources of rev- enue, funds are likely somewhat fungible and states may be forced to dip into the transfer for salaries to fund minor recurrent operating costs. States have been lobbying for larger operating budgets, but in the current budget environment GoRSS has not been able to finance this. MoE’s central budget is well documented, but represents only a quar- ter of public education spending because most public education spending goes through the states. The MoE has a salary budget that covers staff working in the ministry, in three teacher training institutes,3 in three other national institutes of education,4 in the 10 National Secondary Schools, and in the mobile AES centers (giving a total salary budget of SDG 10.3 million in 2009). MoE also has a fairly large operating budget (SDG 47.6 million). The government’s budget books include fairly detailed descrip- tions of the programs funded by MoE’s operating budget, but MoE’s budget is small compared with the states’ spending. Other than the infor- mation used for table 6.2, there is no other public information on how the totality of education resources is spent. For example, there is no read- ily available information on the breakdown of spending by level of edu- cation: primary, secondary, AES, and so forth. Therefore, information from different sources had to be pieced together for the breakdown of spending by level of education provided in the next section. DISTRIBUTION OF RECURRENT SPENDING BY LEVEL OF EDUCATION Table 6.3 estimates the breakdown of public recurrent spending by level of education. It is based on several different data sources: most important, on a detailed review of the 2009 payroll database of each state to deter- mine how many staff work in pre-primary, primary, or secondary schools, or in AES learning centers.5 To have a more complete picture of education spending, higher education spending data were collected from the Gov- ernment of National Unity (GoNU) in Khartoum and through a visit to Juba University. 94 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Table 6.3 Approximate Breakdown of Public Recurrent Education Spending by Level of Education, 2009 Education level Total, SDG million Share, incl. GoNU (%) Share, GoRSS only (%) Pre-primary 1.8 0.7 0.8 Primary 154.2 54.8 67.6 Secondary 49.6 17.6 21.7 AES 19.2 6.8 8.4 Teacher training institutes (TTI) 3.1 1.1 1.4 Higher education support from GoRSS 0.3 0.1 0.1 Total supported by GoRSS 228.2 81.1 100 Higher education funding from GoNU 53.3 18.9 — Total, including funding from GoNU 281.5 100 — Source: Estimation based on analysis of 2009 budget execution data, the payroll database, and information on higher education provided by Juba University and GoNU. Note: Figures include MoE’s central budget broken down and distributed across levels of education by prorating with each education level’s salary spending. — Not available. In 2009, primary education received 55 percent; secondary, 18 per- cent; and higher education, 19 percent of total public recurrent education spending. The three public universities in South Sudan are mainly funded by GoNU (grants amounting to SDG 53 million in 2009 according to GoNU data) but also receive minor support from GoRSS MoE (an esti- mated SDG 0.3 million in 2009). When higher education spending is included, total public education spending in 2009 increases from the SDG 228 million included in GoRSS’ recurrent education budget to a total of SDG 281 million. Out of this total, less than 1 percent goes to pre- primary education, 55 percent to primary education, 18 percent to sec- ondary education, 7 percent to AES, 1 percent to teacher training institutes (TTIs), and 19 percent to higher education. For completeness, the last col- umn in table 6.3 shows the percentage breakdown of GoRSS education spending by level of education. The first six years of the primary cycle receive at least 45 percent of total recurrent education spending. South Sudan allocates 55 percent of recurrent education spending to the eight-year primary cycle; this gives an average spending per year of primary school of 6.9 percent of total recur- rent education spending. If all schools offered all the primary grades, we would calculate the cost of the first six years of primary education to 41 percent of total recurrent spending (calculated as 6.9 × 6). Given the many schools that do not have grades 7 and 8, however, it is fair to assume that at least 45 percent of the budget goes to the first six years, maybe even as much as 50 percent. Education Spending • 95 The share of spending allocated to the first six years of primary educa- tion in South Sudan is quite similar to that of many other countries in the region, as shown in table 6.4. The low-income countries shown, Chad, Ethiopia, and Kenya, allocate a similar share of their budgets to the first six years of primary education (48 percent, 51 percent, and 55 percent respectively) as South Sudan (45–50 percent). The lower-middle-income countries, including Cape Verde, Côte d’Ivoire, and Lesotho, allocate slightly lower shares (39 percent, 43 percent, and 36 percent respectively), as these countries tend to have larger secondary and higher education enrollments. With respect to the shares allocated to upper secondary and higher education, the variation across countries is much wider and with- out a clear pattern for low- and middle-income countries. The distribu- tion of spending across these levels depends more on the policy choices of individual countries. The public universities mainly rely on public funding but also gener- ate their own revenues from student fees. Table 6.5 provides the total rev- Table 6.4 Regional Comparison of Public Spending by Level of Education, LAY Share of public recurrent education spending (%) State/region Primary (adjusted to 6 years) Secondary (upperb) Higher The Republic of South Sudan 45–50a 18 19 Northern Sudan 372 16 30 SSA low-income countries Chad 48 12 23 Ethiopia 51 8 20 Kenya 55 12 16 SSA lower-middle-income countries Cape Verde 39 16 12 Côte d’Ivoire 43 10 21 Lesotho 36 11 37 MENA lower-middle-income countries Egypt, Arab Rep. 40 n.a. 39 Morocco 46 19 16 Tunisia 35 22 22 Sources: World Bank EdStats; Pôle de Dakar 2010; Majgaard and Mingat 2012; World Bank 2012. Note: Data are for latest available year, none before 2005. LAY = latest available year; MENA = Middle East and North Africa; n.a. = Not available; SSA = Sub-Saharan Africa. a. The share of primary education in total public education spending is adjusted to six years for South Sudan and northern Sudan and data are for six years of primary education for all other countries shown. b. The comparison is done for the upper-secondary level, since South Sudan does not have lower-secondary education due to the longer primary cycle (eight years). 96 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Table 6.5 Revenues and Expenditures of the Republic of South Sudan’s Public Universities, 2009–10 Revenues (SDG million) Grants from GoNU Own revenues Other Total University of Juba 24.4 13.1 37.5 Upper Nile University 13.2 0.8 0.1 14.1 Bahr El Ghazal University 11.0 0.6 11.5 Social subsidya 4.7 4.7 Total, including 53.3 14.5 0.1 67.9 own revenues 78.5% 21.3% 0.1% 100% Expenditures (SDG million) Salary Nonsalary operating Social subsidya Total University of Juba 27.2 9.8 37.0 Upper Nile University 12.6 1.5 14.1 Bahr El Ghazal University 9.7 2.4 12.1 Social subsidya 4.7 4.7 Total, including own revenues 49.4 13.8 4.7 67.9 Public expenditures 38.0 10.6 4.7 53.3 (estimated) 71.2% 19.9% 8.9% 100% Source: Analysis of data from GoNU’s Federal Ministry for Higher Education and Scientific Research. Note: a. World Bank estimate based on figures for GoNU’s total social subsidies provided to higher education students. The three universities’ share is calculated by prorating based on enrollments at their campuses in the north. enues of each of the three public universities, including own resources. The total budget for all three amounts to SDG 67.9 million in 2009–10. Of this, SDG 14.5 million are funded through own revenue generation, while GoNU supported the three universities with SDG 53.3 million. Thus, government grants represent 79 percent of the universities’ funding and own revenues, mainly generated from student fees, represent 21 per- cent. The second part of table 6.5 presents the breakdown of expenditures of the public universities, by salaries, nonsalary operating spending, and social subsidies. As shown, a little more than 70 percent go to salaries, 20 percent to nonsalary operating expenses, and 9 percent to social subsidies to support students’ living expenses. COMPOSITION OF RECURRENT SPENDING BY LEVEL OF EDUCATION Table 6.6 is based on table 6.3, but also shows the composition of recur- rent spending at each level of education.6 For this table, simple assump- tions were made about the distribution of the operating budget across lev- els of education (by prorating with salaries), and so the operating Education Spending • 97 Table 6.6 Composition of Public Recurrent Spending at Each Level of Education, 2009 In SDG million Level of education Salary Operating Social subsidy Total Pre-primary 1.5 0.4 — 1.8 Primary 121.5 32.7 — 154.2 Secondary 39.1 10.5 — 49.6 AES 15.1 4.1 — 19.2 Teacher training Institutes (TTI) 2.5 0.7 — 3.1 Higher education support from GoRSS — — 0.3 0.3 Total supported by GoRSS 179.7 48.3 0.3 228.2 Higher education funding from GoNU 38.0 10.6 4.7 53.3 Total 217.7 59.0 5.0 281.5 Source: Estimation based on analysis of MoE’s 2009 budget data, the states’ payroll database, and data on higher education spending collected from the GoNU’s Federal Ministry for Higher Education and Scientific Research. spending figures are very approximate. In terms of the distribution of salaries by level of education, the two largest spending blocks are salaries in primary and secondary education, at SDG 121.5 million and SDG 39.1 million, respectively; then follows salaries in higher education at SDG 38.0 million and AES at SDG 15.1 million. ANALYSIS OF THE PAYROLL IN THE 10 STATES This section analyzes in more detail the spending on salaries in the 10 states. This is of particular interest because most of public education spending goes to salaries (77 percent). For the sake of completeness, the analysis also provides figures on the number of education staff not on payroll in the states, the volunteers. The analysis draws on two sources of data, the payroll database for the states and the EMIS database. Both are needed to establish a full picture of education sector staff working in the states, as the payroll does not include the volunteers, and because EMIS includes only staff working in schools (in the following discussion we call these school-based staff: they include both teachers and nonteaching staff working in schools). Many education sector staff also work in the education offices of the states, counties, or payams, and thus are identified as “nonschool based.� The education payroll of all the states included a total of 30,616 per- sonnel in 2009; 80 percent of them work in schools. Figure 6.3 presents a breakdown of staff who are included in the payroll in the states. In 2009, 98 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Figure 6.3 Number of Staff on Payroll in All States, by Workplace, 2009 35,000 30,616 30,000 Number of staff 25,000 20,000 17,714 15,000 10,000 6,252 3,677 2,562 5,000 411 0 se l l y y S l ba hoo oo ta ar ar AE To im nd ch d c ns es Pr co No Pr Se Workplace Source: Analysis of the payroll database. there was a total of 30,616 education staff on government payroll across the 10 states. Of the total, 1 percent (411) were working in preschools, 58 percent (17,714) in primary schools, 12 percent (or 3,677) in secondary schools, and 8 percent (2,562) in AES; 20 percent (6,252) were non- school-based staff. The nonschool-based staff are typically education offi- cers, inspectors, or support staff. Distribution of paid staff across states is inconsistent with the states’ share of total enrollments. If a state has 10 percent of the total student enrollments of South Sudan, it would be consistent that the state would also have around 10 percent of the total number of paid staff working in states (more or less; some adjustments may be needed for states with large secondary enrollments and so forth). Figure 6.4 depicts the 10 states by their share of enrollments and their share of staff. Five states each have more or less 10 percent of South Sudan’s student enrollments (Northern Bahr Ghazal, Warrap, Unity, Eastern Equatoria, and Central Equatoria, all in the horizontal circle). But their share of total paid staff varies between 8 percent in Northern Bahr Ghazal and 21 percent in Central Equatoria. This indicates that there is scope for improving staff and payroll management at the central GoRSS level, where the distributions across states are decided. Jonglei, Northern Bahr Ghazal, and Upper Nile have relatively few paid staff, while the three Equatoria states have relatively many. Table 6.7 presents the same data, but includes a column that checks the consistency between the share of staff and share of students. As shown, the three Equatoria states all have more staff than their enrollment shares would justify, while Jonglei, Northern Bahr Ghazal, and Upper Nile have much less staff than they should based on their student enrollments. This is a Education Spending • 99 Figure 6.4 Distribution of Paid Staff and Enrollments across the 10 States, 2009 18 Jonglei 16 Upper Nile 14 % of total enrollment 12 Warrap Central Equatoria Northern Bahr Ghazal 10 Unity 8 Eastern Equatoria Lakes 6 Western Equatoria 4 Western Bahr Ghazal 2 0 0 5 10 15 20 25 % of total paid staff Source: Analysis of the payroll database and EMIS 2009 data. Table 6.7 Consistency between Distribution of Paid Staff and Enrollments across the States, 2009 Share of total enrollments Share of total education Result of State at all levels (%) staff on state payroll (%) consistency check Central Equatoria 12 21 High share of staff Eastern Equatoria 8 15 High share of staff Jonglei 17 7 Low share of staff Lakes 8 7 Proportionate Northern Bahr Ghazal 10 8 Low share of staff Unity 10 9 Proportionate Upper Nile 15 7 Low share of staff Warrap 11 10 Proportionate Western Bahr Ghazal 4 6 High share of staff Western Equatoria 5 9 High share of staff Total 100 100 Source: Data on staff are from the payroll database. Data on enrollment share are from the NBHS 2009. rough check only, and other criteria than just enrollments should be taken into account when distributing staff, including, for example, school-age population and the distribution of enrollments by level of schooling. Across the 10 states, the share of staff that do not work in schools varies between 12 and 44 percent of the education payroll. Table 6.8 shows the number of staff working in each of the 10 states by workplace. 100 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Table 6.8 Number of Staff on Payroll in Each State, by Workplace, 2009 Nonschool-based staff Number of State school-based staff Number % of total Total Central Equatoria 5,419 1,089 17 6,508 Eastern Equatoria 3,974 577 13 4,551 Jonglei 1,748 424 20 2,172 Lakes 1,771 354 17 2,125 Northern Bahr Ghazal 1,880 503 21 2,383 Unity 2,354 309 12 2,663 Upper Nile 1,563 690 31 2,253 Warrap 2,611 597 19 3,208 Western Bahr Ghazal 1,059 836 44 1,895 Western Equatoria 2,233 625 22 2,858 Total 24,612 6,004 20 30,616 Source: Data on staff are from the payroll database. Data on enrollment share are from the NBHS 2009. The share of staff that are nonschool based varies widely around the South Sudanese average of 20 percent. In Upper Nile (one of the states that might have too few staff), almost a third of staff are not working in any school, and in Western Bahr Ghazal (which might have too many staff), the share of nonschool-based staff is as much as 44 percent. On the other hand, Unity and Eastern Equatoria have only 12–13 percent of their paid staff working in offices rather than schools. This suggests that each state manages its payroll very differently and that there could be scope for improvement in some states more than in others. Overall, 28 percent of staff on payroll in the states are Category A, 44 percent are Category B, and 29 percent are support staff (Category C). Table 6.9 distinguishes between three categories of staff based on salary grade. The first category, Category A, includes the better paid civil servant staff (grade 10 and lower). Category B includes junior civil servants, such as primary teachers just starting out (grade 14) or just appointed after 18 months of provision employment (grade 12). Category C includes staff in grades 11, 13, 15, or higher, which corresponds to support or unclassified staff, such as workers, cleaners, drivers, and so forth. In primary education, there is a relatively higher proportion of Cate- gory B staff (which make up 56 percent), while secondary education has Education Spending • 101 Table 6.9 Distribution of Paid Education Staff in the States, by Staff Category, 2009 Category Number of staff School-based staff 24,612 Primary education 19,864 Category A (classified, higher pay) 19% Category B (classified, lower pay) 56% Category C (unclassified) 25% Secondary education 4,748 Category A 41% Category B 25% Category C 33% Nonschool-based staff 6,004 Category A 44% Category B 18% Category C 38% Total staff on payroll in states 30,616 Category A 28% Category B 44% Category C 29% Source: Analysis of the payroll database. Note: Category A: Salary grade <=10: classified staff with higher salary (such as managers, secondary teachers). Category B: Salary grade = 12 or 14: classified staff with lower salary (such as primary teachers). Category C: Salary grade = 11, 13, or >=15: unclassified staff (such as cleaners, drivers, support staff). relatively more Category A (41 percent) and support staff (33 percent). This reflects that secondary teachers typically require a higher level of edu- cation and are in a higher pay grade than primary teachers. Also, second- ary schools typically have more support staff than primary schools, as they more often have cafeterias, laboratories, gardens, or other facilities that need management and maintenance. Among the nonschool-based staff, most are either higher paid civil servants (44 percent) or support staff (38 percent). Primary school staff were paid about SDG 5,000 and secondary school staff about SDG 7,000, on average, in 2009, according to table 6.10. These figures include all staff types except those not on payroll (volunteers). But average annual salaries in primary and secondary schools differ widely across states. For primary education, the highest average salary is in Northern Bahr Ghazal (SDG 8,301), which is more than twice as much as Eastern Equatoria (SDG 3,592) and Central Equatoria (SDG 3,834). Part 102 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Table 6.10 Estimated Average Salaries in Primary and Secondary Education by State, 2009 Average salary (SDG) (indexed to average salary Average annual salary (SDG) for the Republic of South Sudan as a whole) State Primary Secondary Primary Secondary Central Equatoria 3,834 5,070 78 72 Eastern Equatoria 3,592 7,535 73 108 Jonglei 5,857 7,676 119 110 Lakes 4,957 5,327 101 76 Northern Bahr Ghazal 8,301 5,700 168 81 Unity 6,507 12,081 132 172 Upper Nile 6,664 7,009 135 100 Warrap 4,623 9,102 94 130 Western Bahr Ghazal 6,886 8,172 140 117 Western Equatoria 4,327 8,434 88 120 Total 4,932 7,005 100 100 Source: Estimation based on analysis of the payroll database. Note: Data are for school-based staff, teachers as well as nonteachers, volunteers excluded. of these differences may be explained by differences in the composition of staff across the states, with some states having more or less of the dif- ferent staff categories. But it may also be that the salary grid for civil ser- vants in South Sudan, which in principle is uniform for all states, is not fully implemented everywhere. Table 6.10 also shows the average salaries in primary and secondary education in multiples of GDP per capita. For South Sudan, however, the choice of GDP per capita for this calculation is not obvious, as discussed in chapter 1. Therefore, table 6.10 calculates the salaries relative to both the GDP per capita of Sudan (all) and an estimated GDP per capita for South Sudan (as explained in chapter 1). The average annual salary in pri- mary schools (all staff, excluding volunteers) is 4.4 times the estimated South Sudan GDP per capita. But it is 1.6 times the GDP per capita for all of Sudan. The average annual salary in secondary school is 6.3 times the estimated South Sudan GDP per capita, but only 2.3 times the GDP per capita of all of Sudan. In total, out of an estimated 51,000 education sector staff working in the states, some 20,000 are volunteers. Until this point, the analysis has focused on the staff included on the payroll. When we compare payroll Education Spending • 103 Figure 6.5 Illustration of Categories of Staff Included in the Payroll versus the EMIS Databases, 2009 Payroll EMIS database database Nonschool- School-based staff School-based staff based staff not on payroll on payroll on payroll 40% 47% 12% Source: Estimation based on analysis of the payroll and EMIS databases. data with EMIS, we find that EMIS includes some 20,000 volunteers who work in schools but are not on payroll. This gives a total education staff working in the states of about 51,000 (30,616 paid and 20,000 unpaid).7 Figure 6.5 illustrates all the educational staff in the states—and the coverage of the two databases with information about staff. The figure shows that 12 percent are nonschool-based staff on payroll (mainly edu- cational officials and administrative staff at state educational offices), some 47 percent are school-based staff on payroll (mainly teachers and administrative staff at school), and another 40 percent are school-based staff who are not on payroll (volunteer teachers and other volunteers in the schools). This serves to illustrate the very large number of persons working in schools on a volunteer basis. PUBLIC PER STUDENT SPENDING IN 2009 Table 6.11 calculates the public per student spending in primary and sec- ondary schools by dividing total public recurrent spending with enroll- ments at these two levels (in public schools). The per student spending is SDG 118 in primary education, SDG 349 in secondary education, and SDG 2,183 in higher education in 2009. Public spending per student in secondary education is three times higher than in primary schools. Sec- ondary schools are more expensive to run because of the need for more specialized teachers, laboratories, and so forth. Public spending per stu- dent in higher education is 18 times higher than in primary schools. This substantial difference may reflect that the universities are fairly small and 104 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Table 6.11 Public per Student Spending by Level of Education, 2009 Total per student Per student salary spending spending Per student School-based Nonschool- operating Multiples of Education level staff based staff spending SDG primary Primary 67 (57%) 26 (22%) 25 (21%) 118 1 Secondary 181 (52%) 94 (27%) 74 (21%) 349 3 Higher education 1,555 (71%) 628 (29%) 2,183 19 Memo item: Higher education 2,023 (73%) 759 (27%) 2,782 24 (including from own revenuesa) Source: World Bank estimation. Note: a. This unit cost includes spending from all the universities’ revenues, including own revenues from student fees. have little economy of scale. Also, the higher cost may reflect higher costs in northern Sudan, where most students are enrolled, and the additional costs of maintaining campuses in both northern Sudan and the Republic of South Sudan. In general, per student spending gives a picture of the allocations of public resources to the average student attending each level. Following the level of per student spending and changes in its composi- tion over time is particularly useful for monitoring the use of resources within the education system. Per student spending data are also useful for making projections of future resource needs. In primary education, 57 percent of the per student spending goes to salaries paid to staff working in schools and another 22 percent to salaries paid to staff that do not work in school; 21 percent is for operating expenses, most of which are at central MoE level. In secondary education, the percent- ages are quite similar. In higher education, a higher share of spending goes to nonsalary spending (29 percent) compared with primary and secondary education because of the social subsidy to support students’ living costs. Table 6.12 calculates the average per student spending for primary schools in each state. It is not surprising that there is considerable varia- tion in the primary per student spending across states. This variation is consistent with two of the earlier findings of this chapter: (a) staff are not distributed across the states proportional to enrollments, and (b) there are differences in the average salary of primary school staff across states. Primary per student spending in Upper Nile is only SDG 35, compared with SDG 259 in Western Bahr Ghazal. At the secondary school level, there are also large disparities across states in per student spending (table 6.13). Per student spending varies between SDG 98 in Lakes and SDG 740 in Western Bahr Ghazal, accord- ing to table 6.13. The 10 National Secondary schools—also included in Education Spending • 105 Table 6.12 Decomposition of Primary School per Student Spending by State, 2009 Per Salary (SDG) student Salary (%) Opera- spending, Opera- School Nonschool ting cost total School Nonschool ting cost Total State based based (SDG) (SDG) based based (%) (%) Central Equatoria 80 27 29 136 59 20 21 100 Eastern Equatoria 107 23 35 165 65 14 21 100 Jonglei 50 19 18 87 57 22 21 100 Lakes 77 28 29 134 58 21 21 100 Northern Bahr Ghazal 72 31 28 132 55 24 21 100 Unity 126 32 42 200 63 16 21 100 Upper Nile 18 10 7 35 51 28 21 100 Warrap 77 36 30 143 54 25 21 100 Western Bahr Ghazal 115 89 55 259 44 34 21 100 Western Equatoria 54 25 21 100 54 25 21 100 Weighted average 67 26 25 118 57 22 21 100 Source: World Bank estimation. Table 6.13 Decomposition of Secondary Education per Student Spending by State, 2009 Per Salary (SDG) student Salary (%) Opera- spending, Opera- School Nonschool ting cost total School Nonschool ting cost Total State based based (SDG) (SDG) based based (%) (%) Central Equatoria 128 44 46 217 59 20 21 100 Eastern Equatoria 340 73 111 524 65 14 21 100 Jonglei 420 158 156 734 57 22 21 100 Lakes 56 21 21 98 58 21 21 100 Northern Bahr Ghazal 181 79 70 330 55 24 21 100 Unity 254 63 85 402 63 16 21 100 Upper Nile 146 82 62 290 51 28 21 100 Warrap 148 70 58 277 54 25 21 100 Western Bahr Ghazal 329 254 157 740 44 34 21 100 Western Equatoria 287 132 112 532 54 25 21 100 Weighted average 652 32 181 865 75 4 21 100 Source: World Bank estimation. 106 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan the table—have an even higher per student spending of SDG 865. These are considered elite secondary schools, so the higher per student spend- ing is perhaps not surprising. INTERNATIONAL COMPARISON OF PER STUDENT SPENDING For the purpose of international comparability, per student spending is usu- ally expressed as percentage of the country’s GDP per capita. Using the South Sudan GDP per capita estimate, the per student cost is 11 percent of GDP per capita in primary education and 31 percent in secondary education (this is calculated by dividing the per student cost by the GDP per capita). Table 6.14 compares these values with the level of per student spend- ing (expressed as a percentage of GDP per capita) with selected countries. As before, two sets of values are shown for South Sudan, since the choice of which GDP per capita to use is not obvious. Table 6.14 International Comparison of Public per Student Spending as Percentage of per Capita GDP, by Level of Education, LAY Higher Primary Secondary (% of State (% of GDP/capita) (% of GDP/capita) GDP/capita) (in US$) The Republic of South Sudan using all 4 11 69 973 Sudan GDP/capita The Republic of South Sudan using 11 31 196 973 RoSS GDP/capita estimate Northern Sudan 8 24 48 673 Neighboring countries in SSA Central African Republic 9 28 305 1,035 Chad 10 28 295 1,652 Ethiopia 11 13 643 1,009 Kenya 22 22 273 1,495 Uganda 11 27 121 367 Average neighboring countries 13 24 327 1,112 Lower-middle-income countries in MENA Jordan 14 17 — — Morocco 20 38 72 1,234 Tunisia 22 24 54 1,544 Average MENA countries 19 26 63 1,389 Source: World Bank estimation. World Bank EdStats. Note: LAY = latest available year; MENA = Middle East and North Africa; RoSS = the Republic of South Sudan; SSA = Sub-Saharan Africa. — = not available. Education Spending • 107 Primary per student spending in South Sudan (11 percent) is similar to the level of spending of most of the low-income SSA countries shown (for which, the average is 13 percent), but lower than the levels observed in all the three lower-middle-income MENA countries (average of 19 per- cent), if the South Sudan GDP per capita estimate is used. The opposite is the case for secondary education, where per student spending in South Sudan (31 percent) is higher than the two other country group averages (24 percent in low-income SSA and 26 percent in lower-middle-income MENA). However, the secondary cycle in South Sudan is more compara- ble to upper secondary education for purposes of international compar- isons, and upper secondary usually has higher per student spending than lower secondary (Majgaard and Mingat 2012). In higher education, the per student spending (when expressed as a share of GDP per capita) is in the lower part of the range observed in the five SSA countries but considerably higher than in all three MENA coun- tries. For an added perspective, the table also shows the higher education per student spending expressed in U.S. dollars. This indicator is strikingly similar in most of the countries shown (except Uganda), an indication that the cost of providing higher education, in particular the cost of aca- demic staff, is largely determined in a regional (labor) market rather than national. Expressed in U.S. dollars, the public per student spending in South Sudan is US$973. If we base the comparisons on the GDP per capita of all of Sudan, per student spending levels appear very low compared with those of the com- parator countries. HOUSEHOLD SPENDING ON EDUCATION Although South Sudan has a policy of fee-free primary education, some fees likely remain. One state reported charging SDG 10 for registration of children in primary school (and SDG 35 for secondary school) but also said that fees were lower in rural areas than in urban. The justification for registration fees is often that they are needed to pay for materials. The large number of volunteers in schools might also be receiving some sup- port from parents and communities to sustain their livelihoods; or per- haps a portion of the registration fee goes to the volunteers. It seems no fees are charged for AES. More information is needed on school fees and their use, and on the financial arrangements for the volunteers. Although not conclusive, household survey data indicate moderate levels of household spending on basic education. The most recent house- hold survey, NBHS 2009, offers some evidence of the magnitude of household education spending. Table 6.15 shows per student household 108 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Table 6.15 Household Education Spending by Level of Education, Total and per Student, 2009 Aggregate household Average per Education level spending in a year (SDG) student (SDG) Primary 2,275,597 1.6 Secondary 770,167 5.0 Higher 215,036 7.0 Not currently enrolled (for ages 6–30) 2,162,187 2.6 Subtotal general education 5,422,988 2.3 Vocational 114,868,627 798.5 Total 120,291,615 47.3 Source: Analysis of NBHS 2009. spending by level of education. On average, parents reported spending SDG 1.6 per primary school student and SDG 5.0 per secondary school student per year. They spent only a little more, SDG 7.0, on higher edu- cation students but a lot on vocational training.8 Parents also reported spending on the children who were not enrolled (SDG 2.6), suggesting that parents may pay for tutoring or other nonformal arrangements for those children. The aggregate household spending on education in 2009, according to the household survey, was SDG 120.3 million. This is equiv- alent to about half of GoRSS’s education spending in 2009. Most of the household spending went to vocational training (adolescents and adults), however, and not to basic education. KEY FINDINGS • Due to a budgetary crisis, public education spending declined in real terms after its 2008 peak and is now lower than when the Com- prehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) was established. Since the school-age population is growing every year, this has led to a decline in public education spending per child. The sector receives between 5 and 8 percent of total GoRSS spending, a share that has remained more or less stable over the years. • The primary cycle as a whole receives 55 percent of public recurrent education spending. Thus, the budget allocation to the first six years Education Spending • 109 of primary education is approximately 45–50 percent, a level com- parable to other countries in the region. Secondary education receives 18 percent and higher education 19 percent, when GoNU’s financing is included. • Salaries constitute the largest spending component, on average, 77 percent of total GoRSS education spending (or 79 percent of recurrent spending). There are about 51,000 education staff working in the 10 states; only 30,616 of these are on payroll, while some 20,000 are volunteers. • The 10 states are the employers of the frontline staff and are therefore responsible for managing most of the public education spending. There are wide disparities in the resources available to the states, how- ever. For example, staff are not distributed across the states consis- tent with enrollments, and it seems states are able to pay widely dif- ferent average salaries with the resources they receive. The end result is widely different levels of average per student spending in both primary and secondary schools. Thus, there is considerable scope for improving the distribution of staff and resources across the states to enable a more geographically equitable development of the education system. • Public per student spending is SDG 118 in primary school, SDG 349 in secondary school, and SDG 1,555 in higher education, on average. The primary per student spending, which corresponds to about 11 percent of GDP per capita, is comparable to the level of spending observed in other SSA countries that are at a similar level of income.9 • There are still primary school fees in some states, but not much is known about fees, or about whether parents are funding the many vol- unteer teachers. In the most recent household survey, parents reported fairly moderate amounts of yearly education spending. More informa- tion is needed to determine whether school fees are limiting access to school for some children. NOTES 1. With a few exceptions as discussed later in this chapter, the mobile AES cen- ters and 10 National Secondary Schools are funded directly from MoE’s budget. 2. These data are sourced from a workshop in Juba in February 2010, in which the director generals of the state ministries of education (SMoEs) of a number of states participated. 3. Arapi TTI, Maridi TTI, and Aramweer TTI. 4. Maridi Department of Curriculum Development Center, Printing Press, and Institute of National Languages. 110 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan 5. This is a time-consuming process and the result includes some degree of error, since school names may not always reflect the levels of education actually taught in the school. 6. Appendix E includes more detailed tables showing the composition of recurrent spending in each state, by level of education. 7. These figures exclude staff working in MoE. 8. It is difficult to interpret the high levels of spending on vocational training reported in the household survey. 9. When an estimated GDP per capita for Republic of South Sudan is used. CHAPTER 7 Teachers and Teacher Management he education sector in the Republic of South Sudan has the highest T number of civil servants, similar to other countries. Within the sec- tor, teachers constitute the largest number of employees and the most geographically dispersed. This chapter focuses on the recruitment and management of teachers to provide quality education in South Sudan. Providing quality education is dependent on the timeliness and effectiveness of instruction in classrooms. Building an adequately sized and competent teaching force presented a much greater challenge for the education system in South Sudan when compared to other countries. First, at the end of the 20-year conflict, the employee database was not up-to-date. Accurate information on how many teachers actually taught in the 10 states was needed to estimate resource requirements. Second, there was no information on the aca- demic qualification of teachers—how many teachers possessed elemen- tary and secondary certification or a tertiary degree commensurate with grade level responsibilities. Data were also not available on whether teachers had any professional or preservice qualifications such as a diploma or a degree in the field of education. Third, the conflict years halted the establishment of a system of teacher management with the necessary institutions, rules, procedures, and, most important, a system of supervision that included both incentives and sanctions. This chapter deals with how South Sudan is addressing the three chal- lenges described above, and the implications for continuing to tackle these concerns. The chapter discusses (a) the ongoing task of establishing a teacher workforce; (b) the status and challenges of ensuring that both new teachers and teachers working in the system possess a minimum level of academic and professional qualifications with corresponding 111 112 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan remuneration to enable effective instruction; and (c) the elements required for an effective system of teacher management. ESTABLISHING A TEACHER WORKFORCE After the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) was established and government resources became available through the implementation of the oil-sharing agreements, the Government of the Republic of South Sudan (GoRSS) prioritized establishing a civil servant teaching cadre. Goldsmith (2010) describes how government pay has become the princi- pal source of income for the majority of South Sudan’s teachers. This sig- nifies a fundamental change from the situation before the CPA, when most schools were run and funded by communities, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), or churches. In early 2008, the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology (MoEST) conducted a field headcount of teachers to identify and gather basic data on teachers, including grade, work station, and qualifications. Those conduction the headcount visited schools, where each teacher would fill in a form under supervision from an enumerator and then countersigned by the school’s head teacher. It was decided not to include other school-based staff in the headcount. The headcount gave a “sight- ing shot� of teachers and has been the basis for resource allocation between states. As of 2008, the Education Management Information Sys- tem (EMIS) has also been collecting data on teachers, and efforts are ongoing to compare and integrate the two (Goldsmith 2010). The headcount process helped focus resources on frontline staff by providing greater visibility to the use of resources. The process included retrenchment of unproductive or nonteaching staff, thereby giving room to hire more teachers, including some who used to be volunteers. It has also helped make progress toward harmonizing salary grades across states, although more work needs to be done in this area, as discussed later. TEACHER PAYROLL After the headcount, MoEST commissioned the implementation of a basic computerized payroll system in the states. Under the leadership of the MoEST Payroll Unit, the payroll system was implemented in most states between October 2008 and December 2009. Table 7.1 presents the implementation progress as of January 2010 and describes the specific accomplishments in each state. The payroll system allows state ministries of education (SMoEs) to calculate and prepare pay slips or pay sheets for Teachers and Teacher Management • 113 Table 7.1 Status of Payroll System Implementation in the 10 States State Payroll actions and status Central Equatoria SMoE was pressed by MoEST to address, through downsizing, the issue of chronic arrears arising from massive overcommitment: downsizing of over 1,000 least productive staff in 2010. Eastern Equatoria More than 500 new teachers recruited and paid by SMoE in 2009 with funds saved from better management and availability of information allowing for the retrenchment of unproductive staff. Jonglei SMoE is in the process of reconciling legacy payroll data with EMIS data to improve payroll system. Lakes SMoE has brought its grading into line with the rest of the country. This ended the practice of unsustainably high grading, which had entailed payment on rotation. Northern Bahr Ghazal System introduction exposed nonstandard pay and deductions. Unity SMoE retrenched almost 350 unclassified staff in May 2010. System visibility to GoRSS has given SMoE a much stronger hand to play with the State Ministry of Finance over delays or withholding of payment. Upper Nile GoRSS has won a long-standing dispute with the State Ministry of Finance and secured agreement that control of health and education pay will be released back to the line ministries. In addition, GoRSS secured a switch over to standard GoRSS pay scales. Warrap The State Minister of Education has used the newly established system of payroll as an opportunity to run a full screening of teachers in person. Western Bahr Ghazal The state retrenched more than 700 unproductive staff; teachers in former liberated areas are receiving in some cases 150 percent more pay, now that they have moved to the standard GoRSS pay scales. Pay has moved up from 65 percent to 70 percent of mandated basic pay in 2010, and will go up again once further retrenchment is carried out. Western Equatoria Introduction of the system enabled MoEST and GoRSS to press SMoE on retrenchment of a large raft of supernumerary unclassified staff. Source: Booz & Company 2010. disbursing salaries. SMoEs submit these paylists to GoRSS for the release of funds for teacher pay. SMoEs disburse salaries to teachers; salaries are paid in cash, usually at schools, but sometimes at the payam or county offices. The new payroll system has made it easier for teachers to collect their pay, thereby reducing teacher absences. 114 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan TEACHER WORKFORCE AND SALARY GRADES There are about 25,000 teachers in primary schools and 1,700 teachers in secondary schools across South Sudan. One of the most striking features of the teacher workforce is the low share of female teachers. On the whole, 13 percent of primary school teachers and 11 percent of secondary school teachers are female, but there is considerable variation across states (table 7.2). Presently, women make up 24 percent of enrollments in the primary teacher training colleges, so the share of female teachers is only set to increase slowly. South Sudan is establishing a classification of teachers into 14 salary grades. Though grades 13 and 14 are supposed to be support staff and may not be qualified, there are persons in these grades teaching in schools in South Sudan (figure 7.1). Four percent of teachers in primary and 18 percent of teachers in secondary are not classified (grade level 0). It is likely that there are difficulties in classifying these teachers in one of the salary grades or this group of teachers is in private schools. Private schools pay their own teachers, and the estimated number for this group is about 2,000 (Goldsmith 2010). About 34 percent of teachers are in grade 14 in primary and 9 percent in secondary schools. Thirty-six percent are in grade 20 in primary and 11 percent in secondary schools. This indicates that more than a third of the teachers in primary are not paid. Moreover, there are few teachers in the higher salary grades. In spite of ongoing efforts to appoint teachers to appropriate salary grades based on experience, quali- fications, and performance, this will take a few more years to achieve.1 Table 7.2 Share of Female Teachers in Primary and Secondary Schools, 2009 Female teachers in Female teachers in State primary (%) secondary (%) Central Equatoria 21 15 Eastern Equatoria 13 10 Western Equatoria 14 8 Jonglei 8 8 Unity 8 13 Upper Nile 21 14 Lakes 8 7 Warrap 7 4 Western Bahr Ghazal 23 9 Northern Bahr Ghazal 8 8 The Republic of South Sudan 13 11 Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009. Teachers and Teacher Management • 115 Figure 7.1 Distribution of Teachers by Salary Grade, 2009 40 30 % of teachers 20 10 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Salary grade Primary Secondary Source: Analysis of EMIS 2010. Paying teachers in a way that is consistent with their experience and qualifications continues to be a challenge. Since complete data on teach- ers’ years of service are not available, qualifications play a greater role in allocating teachers to a particular salary grade. Though there is no record of the length of service prior to the CPA, it is likely that estimates of this dimension inform decisions on salaries. This would especially apply to those individuals recruited during the war without prior qualifications. Moreover, it is likely that ad hoc pay increases to teachers have taken place since clear policies associated with this area were only introduced recently. Correspondence between qualifications, experience, and pay scales in South Sudan will take time to accomplish. TEACHER PREPARATION AND QUALIFICATIONS The academic and professional qualifications of teachers determine the quality of instruction in the classroom. The subject-content knowledge of primary school teachers is weak. As part of the Service Delivery Study (SDS) in the four states, a subsample of 160 teachers took the same math- ematics and language tests that were given to students. The mean score for teachers (figure 7.2) in mathematics is 63 percent and in language 62 per- cent. Only about 28 percent of teachers in mathematics and 31 percent of teachers in language obtained a score of 80 percent and above. These lev- els reflect teachers’ limited mastery of the curriculum that they must teach. Teachers’ content knowledge exhibited in these assessments indi- cates the critical need for developing both the preservice and in-service training of teachers. 116 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Figure 7.2 Teacher Performance in Mathematics and Language in Four States, 2010 12 15 10 % of teachers % of teachers 10 8 6 5 4 2 0 0 0 20 40 60 80 100 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Teacher test scores in mathematics Teacher test scores in language Source: Analysis of SDS 2010. QUALIFICATION OF TEACHERS South Sudan does not have enough academically qualified teachers, espe- cially in primary schools. In primary schools, overall, 46 percent of teach- ers have just primary school education and 45 percent have secondary cer- tification. States such as Lakes, Northern Bahr Ghazal, and Warrap have the highest percentage of teachers with only a primary school certificate (figure 7.3). In Central and Eastern Equatoria and Jonglei states, more than 50 percent of teachers have a secondary certificate. It will be important for the group of teachers with only primary education to upgrade their basic Figure 7.3 Primary Teachers’ Academic Qualifications, 2009 100 90 % of teachers qualified 80 Unknown 70 60 Graduate 50 40 Secondary 30 20 Elementary 10 0 Eq ia Eq ia ria lei Up ity ile s p Ba zal l n za ke ra da or r ng rN Un to to Ga Ga La ar Su at ua ua Jo W pe qu rth ahr hr th lE ou B rn rn ra fS rn n ste te nt er te co es Ce Ea es W bli No W pu State Re Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009. Teachers and Teacher Management • 117 Figure 7.4 Secondary Teachers’ Academic Background, 2009 100 90 % of teachers qualified 80 Graduate 70 60 Secondary 50 40 Primary 30 20 Unknown 10 0 ria ria ria lei Up ity ile s p Ba zal l n za ke ra da ng rN Un to to to Ga Ga La ar Su ua ua ua Jo W pe rth ahr hr h Eq Eq Eq ut B So l rn rn ra rn n ste te nt er te es Ce Ea es W No W State Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009. academic qualifications. In secondary schools, the situation is better (figure 7.4). Fifty-three percent of teachers are graduates and 33 percent have sec- ondary education. A significant proportion of teachers in states such as Upper Nile, Warrap (77 percent), Western Bahr Ghazal (76 percent), and Warrap (66 percent) possess a graduate degree. Teachers with professional qualifications are also few in South Sudan. In primary schools, only about 16 percent of teachers are trained and about 61 percent do not possess any preservice training (figure 7.5, left panel). Thirteen percent of teachers are working on their preservice qual- ifications. In secondary schools, about 48 percent of teachers’ profes- Figure 7.5 Teachers’ Professional Qualifications, 2009 Primary Secondary Trained, 19% Diploma in primary, 26% In-service, Untrained/ 7% unknown, Untrained, 48% 61% Under training, Preservice/ 13% Diploma in phases, secondary, 12% In-service/ 3% phases training, 11% Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009. 118 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan sional backgrounds are either unknown or limited to a primary certificate (figure 7.5, right panel). Twenty-six percent have only a diploma in pri- mary education. Twelve percent of teachers possess preservice training specific to secondary education and 11 percent have a diploma in sec- ondary education. Three percent are undergoing professional training. PROFESSIONAL TRAINING OF TEACHERS According to the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), there are “specific policy and legal issues that need to be har- monized related to the ongoing establishment of teacher training institu- tions … and the curriculum content of in-service and pre-service pro- grams� (USAID 2009: vi). After the CPA, the first major intervention of the MoEST to deal with the low levels of both the academic and professional qualifications of pri- mary teachers was to introduce a Fast Track Training Program (FTTP). MoEST completed the design and curriculum for the FTTP at the end of 2006. The six-week course included modules on class preparation, stu- dent management, approaches to teaching and learning, teaching meth- ods, and supplementary self-study materials. Modules were adapted to the situation in each state. Over 1,200 teachers have participated in the FTTP. In addition, to the FTTP, several NGOs offered alternative teacher training programs of varying quality and length. Significant among them was the “Distance Teacher Education Program� from the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and the “Sudan Basic Education Program� from USAID for both academic and professional training. MoEST has recently developed a “National Teacher Education Strat- egy,� which is multifaceted and includes both preservice and in-service training of teachers working in the school system. The strategy proposed the following institutions for preservice training in primary education: teaching training institutes (TTIs) in each state and two Cluster Education Centers (CECs) in each county. This would amount to 10 TTIs and 158 CECs. Table 7.3 lists proposed and ongoing preservice training programs. In 2009, 2,445 students (USAID 2009) were enrolled in various govern- ment and NGO programs to become teachers in primary schools. Of this number, 595 were women. Preservice training for secondary schools includes a two-year diploma, a four-year graduate degree, and a one-year diploma after an undergradu- ate degree. Five universities can offer these programs—Bahr El Ghazal, Juba, Rumbek, Upper Nile, and Rumbek. However, only three are func- tioning—Juba, Upper Nile, and Bahr El Ghazal. In 2009, 2,357 students Teachers and Teacher Management • 119 Table 7.3 Preservice Programs Organized by GoRSS, 2009 Prior Duration qualification Institutions Qualification Two-year residential training Secondary Teacher training Primary School institutes Teaching Certificate Four-year residential training Primary Teacher training Primary School institutes Teaching Certificate Four-year training (distance learning Working Cluster Education Primary School and face-to-face training for 60 days teachers Centers Teaching Certificate during school vacations) Source: MoEST 2009. were enrolled to become teachers in secondary schools. Of this number, only 393 were women. In-service training is undertaken by both the government and by NGOs. A variety of short courses are offered to address thematic areas such as English speaking and the needs of specific groups such as Arabic trained teachers, returnees, and so forth (table 7.4). TEACHER MANAGEMENT This section deals with the evolving system of teacher management in South Sudan. It addresses the status of teacher recruitment, teacher deployment and transfer, and the system in place for the supervision of teacher performance, especially instruction. Table 7.4 In-service Programs Offered in the Republic of South Sudan, 2009 In-service programs Participants Training for alternative learning programs Teachers without a Primary School Leaving Certificate Two-month Fast Track Training Program Teachers Six-month beginner English training Arabic and community teachers Six-month intensive English training Teachers with secondary education, Arabic and community teachers Radio instruction (12 weeks) for Accelerated Sudan Radio Service Learning Programme teachers Four-week training for trainers of ALP department Accelerated Learning Programme teachers Continuing professional development Teachers Source: MoEST 2009. 120 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan TEACHER RECRUITMENT According to the teacher recruitment policies articulated by state officials examined in five states, a secondary school diploma is required for teach- ing in primary education and an undergraduate degree for teaching in sec- ondary schools. No state mentions the need for professional qualifica- tions. Counties are responsible for identifying the number of new teachers required and the state is accountable for managing the recruit- ment process. After states advertise vacant posts on the radio, prospective candidates collect their application forms from SMoEs. Candidates have to present certificates to confirm qualifications (Sudanese, Ugandan, Kenyan, or any other equivalent), birth, and nationality, in addition to a handwritten application (must be their own writing). States establish a committee to conduct interviews and hire new teachers. Some states maintain detailed minutes of the interviews and decisions made on cho- sen candidates. The departments that deal with labor and public services in particular are involved with the recruitment of new teachers. For a variety of reasons, some of them mentioned in table 7.1, states find it difficult to recruit new teachers. State authorities admit that they recruit a significant number of teachers that are not included on payroll as a result of funding constraints. These teachers are either voluntary or informally paid. For example, Torit county in Eastern Equatorial State indicated that 30 new teachers were in schools but were not on payroll. Although states are responsible for hiring teachers, due to the acuteness of need at the school level, principals and parents try to hire teachers. Schools often hire teachers for instruction in primary school with just primary edu- cation or secondary school with just secondary school qualifications. Teach- ers with experience but without the required qualifications would be pre- ferred candidates on this list. Payments to teachers not on payroll or hired locally are ad hoc, depending on the availability of additional funds. TEACHER DEPLOYMENT AND TRANSFER South Sudan’s stipulated pupil-to-teacher ratio (PTR) is 50:1 for primary and 40:1 for secondary. However, there was no evidence that teacher deployment and transfer actually takes place on the basis of these norms. As shown in table 7.5, average PTRs vary greatly from one state to the next—from 31 students per teacher in Central Equatoria to 84 students per teacher in Jonglei. (If volunteer teachers are excluded from the PTR, the range is from 51 students per teacher in Central Equatoria to 145 stu- dents per teacher in Jonglei.) Official descriptions of teacher deployment and transfer policies in both primary and secondary subsectors indicate Teachers and Teacher Management • 121 Table 7.5 Pupil-Teacher Ratios in Public Primary Schools, with and without Volunteers, 2009 Paid teachers only Including volunteers Number of teachers Number of teachers in Pupil-teacher in average school Pupil-teacher average school State ratio (%) (E = 425) ratio (%) (E = 425) Central Equatoria 51 8 31 14 Eastern Equatoria 82 5 38 11 Jonglei 145 3 84 5 Lakes 65 7 50 8 Northern Bahr Ghazal 86 5 56 8 Unity 102 4 62 7 Upper Nile 131 3 72 6 Warrap 91 5 50 9 Western Bahr Ghazal 61 7 49 9 Western Equatoria 54 8 33 13 The Republic of South Sudan 87 5 52 8 Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009. Note: The number of teachers in an average school is calculated based on the linear relation between the number of teachers and the number of students in public schools in each state. E = enrollment. that South Sudan is very much at a nascent stage, requiring policies and procedures to guide its implementation. In principle, teachers can be transferred within counties (from payam to payam) and across counties. However, in practice, as no transport or housing is provided, transfers of teachers are rare in primary. According to state officials, teacher transfers take place usually in an ad hoc manner. Sometimes transfers are carried out to balance the number of teachers in a school, provide subject specialist teachers, or as a means of disciplining the teacher. Misbehavior or misconduct warrants a transfer to another county. State officials in Central Equatoria indicate that teachers can be transferred after staying in a school for just one year. In Lakes State, pri- mary teachers remain in their own counties due to security reasons; therefore, the primary responsibility for transfers between schools lies with the county official. Transfers are more prevalent in secondary edu- cation. In Western Bahr Ghazal, 9 and 10 teachers were transferred in sec- ondary schools in 2008 and 2009, respectively. Lakes transferred three teachers in 2009. Figure 7.6 shows a scatterplot of all South Sudan’s public primary schools according to their enrollments and number of teachers. The graph also includes a linear regression line, which is the number of teachers expressed as a function of the number of students. The data points are distributed in a 122 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Figure 7.6 Consistency between Number of Teachers and Pupils in Government Primary Schools, 2009 30 y =0.007x +5.098 R² =0.21 Number of teachers 25 20 15 10 5 0 0 500 1,000 1,500 2,000 Number of pupils Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009. Each dot or observation represents a school. Note: Chart is based on government schools only. The number of teachers includes volunteer teachers. cloud rather than very close to the regression line; this suggests that the num- ber of students in a school is not a good predictor of how many teachers work in the school—that is, the relation between the two is weak (and the R2, the statistical measure of the strength of this relation, is only 0.21). Figure 7.7 compares the “degree of randomness� in the primary teacher allocation in South Sudan (calculated as 1 − R2, that is, 0.79), with the corresponding values for a large number of Sub-Saharan African Figure 7.7 International Comparison of Degree of Randomness (1−R2) in Teacher Allocation to Public Primary Schools, 2009 90 Degree of randomness (%) 79 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 oz Guin e b a Na ique Le ibia N o ine ene r Bi l Za sau Bu Rw bia l A M ina da ca ri o Re nia Ga lic n ag ali Gh ar Et ana Cô ra L pia d’ ne C e Ug had ng T da Re o . R in m wi Bu oon Lib di ia n De B . of Ca ala f a- ga M .o Gu S ige ip ir am e th fri au Fas bo o, og da er m en n c b ad M te eo rk an an Ivo ínc as m n ta r io p ep ru so s pu m Su er Sie h Pr th nd ou M M éa fS Co o, co om ng bli oT ra Co pu nt Sã Ce Country Re Source: World Bank database. Note: The graph compares the degree of randomness, which is calculated as 1−R2, in the regression between number of teachers as a function of number of students. Teachers and Teacher Management • 123 Table 7.6 Teacher Deployment: Coefficient of Determination across States, 2009 State R2 Central Equatoria 0.59 Eastern Equatoria 0.45 Jonglei 0.17 Lakes 0.34 Northern Bahr Ghazal 0.35 Unity 0.15 Upper Nile 0.09 Warrap 0.30 Western Bahr Ghazal 0.41 Western Equatoria 0.63 The Republic of South Sudan 0.21 Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009. Note: Table is based on government schools only, but includes volunteer teachers. countries. As shown, South Sudan has the highest degree of randomness of all the countries shown, which means the weakest and most inconsis- tent distribution of teachers across schools as a function of enrollments. When the R2 is compared across states (table 7.6 and figure 7.8), pre- dictability is highest in Central Equatoria (R2 0.59) and lowest in Upper Nile (R2 0.09). This means that Central Equatoria manages teachers quite Figure 7.8 States with Highest Predictability (Central Equatoria) and Lowest Predictability (Upper Nile) in Teacher Deployment, 2009 Central Equatoria Upper Nile 30 R² = 0.59 30 R² = 0.09 25 25 20 20 Teachers Teachers 15 15 10 10 5 5 0 0 0 500 1,000 1,500 2,000 0 500 1,000 1,500 2,000 Pupils Pupils Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009. Note: Charts are based on government schools only, but include volunteer teachers. 124 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan well while teacher management is weak in Upper Nile. Predictability in teacher deployment is weak in South Sudan, partly due to the inability of the system to distribute teachers across counties and schools within a state. TEACHER SUPERVISION The SMoE is responsible for the supervision of secondary schools and teacher performance, as well as the county and payam offices for primary. Teachers are expected to be supervised three times a year. However, due to a shortage of staff and financial resources, supervision rarely takes place. At the primary level, one inspector per payam is expected to supervise all schools in the payam. The range of schools in a payam varies from a single school to 53 schools (in Western Equatoria). The uneven distribution of schools (table 7.7) across payams makes this task challenging. When there are too many schools, it is not effective and when there are too few schools, it is not efficient. The policy of one inspector per payam may not be appropriate to provide oversight and the effective management of teachers. Moreover, there are no financial resources earmarked for this task. At the secondary level, although there are a few supervisors, a clear system of teacher and school supervision is not evident. States indicate that they do use tools or reporting instruments for school and teacher supervision. However, these tools were not available in any of the states included in the Service Delivery Study. Table 7.7 Distribution of Schools across Payams in States, 2009 Number of schools in a payam Number of State payams Lowest Highest Central Equatoria 42 1 35 Eastern Equatoria 55 1 21 Jonglei 65 1 20 Lakes 52 1 16 Northern Bahr Ghazal 50 1 17 Unity 57 1 14 Upper Nile 74 1 17 Warrap 45 1 23 Western Bahr Ghazal 16 1 41 Western Equatoria 46 1 53 Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009. Teachers and Teacher Management • 125 GoRSS is in the process of introducing a uniform format for supervi- sion, which states have not yet implemented. The tool is comprehensive and captures critical areas associated with instruction in classrooms. The tool examines teaching and learning according to the following areas: • lesson preparation and planning • use of resources and classroom environment • the teaching and learning process • pupils’ understanding and attainment • assessment and record keeping. The absence of tools and databases suggests that standards for teacher performance are not yet in place across states. In addition to monitoring teacher performance in class, the importance of monitoring regularity in teacher attendance is increasingly becoming critical. Requests to states for policies and regulations associated with teacher leave and absence from schools did not yield any results. The five states examined indicated that teachers take no leave since they have school vacations when they are not in school. In one state, leave policies set in place during the colonial period were presented as the policy (table 7.8). However, there is no sign that states implement these regulations. KEY FINDINGS • Significant strides have been made in establishing a functioning payroll system for teachers. Remaining challenges include filling the Table 7.8 Leave Regulations for Government Officials—1975 Type Length of leave Ordinary leave • This regulation does not apply to the staff who benefit from school vacations Local leave • Seven days in a year Sick leave • Seven days in a year • More than seven days, first six months with full pay; second six months with half pay • More than one year referred to General Medical Commission Special leave • Four years leave without pay to accompany spouse • Seven days for trade union work • Pregnancy two weeks before and six weeks after birth with pay; also eligible for sick leave • Forty-five days per year without pay Source: GoRSS. 126 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan information gaps on teacher experience and qualifications and achiev- ing more uniform teacher pay across states. There is concern about the low proportion of female teachers in both primary and secondary edu- cation—less than 15 percent. • Teachers’ subject-content knowledge is weak, which reflects the lim- ited academic and professional training received. The number of ade- quately trained teachers in primary education is low in South Sudan: 46 percent of teachers have only a primary school education and another 45 percent have secondary education. About 60 percent of teachers do not possess any professional training to be teachers. Upgrading the subject-content and pedagogical knowledge of teachers presents an urgent task for South Sudan. • An effectively managed teaching force is critical to regular school func- tioning and instructional quality. Currently, teachers are not allo- cated to schools in a way that is very consistent with schools’ stu- dent enrollments. Thus, there is room for improvement in the teacher allocation across schools. Teacher management policies in South Sudan are evolving and will require concerted efforts to develop, pilot, and fine tune. Implementing clear recruitment, deployment, and transfer policies that can guide and strengthen the teaching force will be critical. In addition, setting in place a supervi- sion system that monitors teachers’ work will also serve to support and sustain good performance. NOTES 1. The different administrative traditions in the Republic of South Sudan proved to be a challenge to the process of creating a unified salary structure. Tra- ditions included different treatments of basic allowance; formal and informal appointments; and a variety of approaches to pension, allowances, deductions, taxes, and so forth. CHAPTER 8 Conclusions he government and the people of the Republic of South Sudan have T every reason to be proud of what has been accomplished in the edu- cation system since the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA). Among the most important achievements is the remarkable progress in expanding access to schooling (for example, school enrollments dou- bled between 2005 and 2009). With independence, South Sudan will continue to grow and consolidate the education system—essentially entering a new phase of sector development. Because South Sudan has been deprived of a functioning education system for many years, it has faced a double challenge: addressing the pent-up demand for formal educational opportunities and coming to terms with the fact that so many citizens of South Sudan will never have a chance to attend formal schools. Entering a second phase of educational development does not mean that these challenges have now been addressed. Increasing the capacity of the system to stem the flow of and address the stock of out-of-school youth still constitutes the number one priority. How- ever, this report points to a new set of challenges that the country’s authori- ties and other education stakeholders also need to address. By prioritizing these “second order� challenges, South Sudan can avoid many of the stubborn problems that have plagued other education systems: unsus- tainable growth of the sector in financial and institutional terms, dimin- ished quality, and continued inequities of both quality and access. With the support of its development partners, the Government of the Republic of South Sudan (GoRSS) has embarked on the preparation of an education sector development plan that will guide reform and investments in the education sector in the coming years. Based on the analyses and findings of this report, we present below a series of priorities and consid- erations that ought to be addressed during the preparation of this plan: 127 128 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Step up education spending, as education expenditures on the whole are low compared to the needs, and correct inequities in the distribution across states of recurrent expenditures. GoRSS has given due priority to the devel- opment of primary education as evidenced by the substantial financial support for primary teacher salaries. However, current levels of spending are inadequate since schools, without sufficient numbers of paid staff, rely on a large number of volunteers. Furthermore, the budget does not support critical nonsalary expenditures, such as for textbooks. Govern- ment spending for teacher salaries does not appear to be equitably dis- tributed, as reflected in student unit costs that vary considerably from one state to another. These inequities stem from GoRSS simply taking on salaries of teachers already in the system, since new hiring has been lim- ited. Clear policies on acceptable pupil-teacher ratios (PTRs) and teacher deployment applied across states will be needed to correct allocation pat- terns and bring about equity in national teacher spending for salaries. Strengthen the ability of the GoRSS Ministry of Education (MoE) and state ministries of education (SMoEs) to drive reform, and incorporate non- state providers’ contributions into the overall plan for sector development. A new phase of education development must face increasingly complex challenges. To address these challenges and incorporate the lessons learned during the last six years, three sets of actors must effectively carry out their respective roles and responsibilities: (a) the GoRSS MoE; (b) the SMOEs; and (c) nonstate providers of educational services, including nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), churches, contractors, and firms. The provision of services by these three sets of actors will be most effectively located within a nationwide policy and quality assurance framework. Such a framework can steer South Sudan toward its overall education sector objectives. The distribution of responsibilities between the GoRSS MoE, the SMoEs, and nonstate actors has already been mapped in the constitution of South Sudan. Education service delivery is framed as the political and administrative responsibility of the states. The GoRSS MoE will formulate policies, norms, and standards; ensure coordination; provide advisory services; promote and disseminate innovations; and enforce quality assur- ance. Furthermore, state actors (MoE and SMoE) can already contract nonstate actors to provide education services (private or community schools—but also teacher training, school construction, and so forth). Therefore, it is particularly urgent to strengthen the capacities of state-level administrators so that they can support the more complex transforma- tions of the education system. Conclusions • 129 Both the GoRSS MoE and the SMoEs are relatively recent creations, with weak capacity. As discussed above, the SMoEs have been even weaker and thus in many cases the GoRSS MoE has had to support state min- istries to a considerable extent. Furthermore, nonstate actors (NGOs, churches, and so forth) traditionally have had considerable freedom to provide educational services, and have been accountable to external part- ners rather than the community or the state. Transitioning from this base- line (and progress has already been made) will require a phased approach that captures the comparative strengths of both nongovernmental initia- tives within the overall state and national strategic plans for the sector. Keep a strong focus on increasing access and retention in primary edu- cation. The primary school gross enrollment rate (GER) for South Sudan is 72 percent1 and about one million children in the primary school age group are not in school. With so many children still out of school, it is clear that the expansionary phase of the development of the education system is far from completed. Access to the early grades is steadily increas- ing, but only about a third of children who enroll in grade 1 complete the primary cycle. Achieving universal primary completion (UPC) will mean increasing both access and retention. The weak primary completion rate may be associated with the high number of primary schools not offering the higher grades. Improving completion within primary education will require completing schools, at least up to grade 6. Moreover, only 25 per- cent of all schools operate in permanent structures. Enabling schools to offer a complete primary cycle and providing permanent school structures and adequate sanitary facilities are critical for expanding access to school- ing in South Sudan. In most Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) countries, policies to expand the supply of fee-free primary education have been successful at getting most children to school. Supply-side policies, however, may not be sufficient to reach the most marginalized, such as children from very poor families. Demand-side interventions will also need to be considered. Strengthen and expand second-chance literacy training for out-of-school youth. Despite recent achievements, most school-age children are still out of school, and most youth have never been to school. Although some youth are now enrolled as overage students, most youth will never have access to formal schooling or will not return after dropping out. Improv- ing access must cater to overage students in the “catch-up� phase. About 44 percent of primary school pupils are five or more years overage for their grade. Without expanding the existing capacity of the system, a very large number of youth in South Sudan will never receive formal educa- tion; another large group will not finish their basic education. The Alter- 130 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan native Education System (AES) is a unique aspect of South Sudan’s edu- cation system. If the country is successful in achieving UPC, it is necessary for the AES to continue to play a central role in the overall education sys- tem. For now and into the foreseeable future, AES will remain the second most important part of the education system. The tremendous stock of out-of-school youth will continue to need educational opportunities that can only be provided by AES. Generally, the AES has gained a good repu- tation among partners and the population. Further reinforcement of the quality and measurement of outcomes of this part of the education sys- tem should be a key pillar of an ongoing government education strategy. Address inequity across gender, location, and region. Globally, the gap between boys and girls in access and retention is only 13 percent. How- ever, this triples (44 percent in access and 43 percent in retention) when the urban-rural dimension is considered. While gender inequity is a cen- tral feature of South Sudan’s education system, particularly in the rural areas where more than 80 percent of the population resides, rural boys are also at a disadvantage. In urban areas where the educational coverage is rel- atively high, gender inequity is diminishing. Building more schools in rural areas closer to children’s homes will expand educational opportunities for all rural children, but those who have the most to gain are the girls. Performance on key educational outcomes also differs across states. Western Equatoria and Upper Nile are some of the high performers, with primary school GERs of 106 percent and 96 percent, respectively. This is much higher than the GERs for Warrap and Eastern Equatoria, which are 50 percent and 46 percent, respectively. Similar differences are evident with regard to completion rates. Targeted and additional national-level financing and administrative support for the weaker states will be crucial to ensure they can close the gap with the better performing states. Educa- tional systems in the weaker states will require a range of interventions such as improved infrastructure, more teachers, and sufficient instruc- tional material. Address teacher workforce issues and put in place a system of teacher management. The PTRs of Western Equatoria (51:1) and Central Equato- ria (54:1) (only counting paid teachers) are comparable to averages found in most SSA countries. However, the PTR is considerably higher in most other states of the Republic of South Sudan. Even when volunteer teach- ers are included, the PTR in Jonglei is still high at 84:1. States with high PTRs typically have lower GERs than average, and thus PTRs will only con- tinue to rise over the next few years as more children enter school. Increas- ing the number of teachers will be critical for the states with more out-of- school children. Conclusions • 131 Almost half of the teachers in South Sudan are not on the payroll. Lit- tle is known about these “volunteer� teachers—as they are referred to in South Sudan—in terms of how they are recruited, paid, trained, or super- vised. The GoRSS has not yet established a strategy for the future of vol- unteer teachers. In reality, most states gradually incorporate them into the payroll. Any strategy must consider the short-, medium-, and long-term budgetary consequences of changing the professional status of these teachers. Reduce the inequitable deployment of teachers and allocation of text- books. The historical legacy of “laissez faire� recruitment and deployment undertaken by states before the CPA has led to an uneven deployment of government-paid teachers in South Sudan. The “sighting� system that identified the exact number of teachers in each state marks the beginning of a new approach to address inequities. Correction of the uneven deploy- ment through new policies and practices that are driven by equity will be a crucial task for GoRSS in the years to come. Textbook procurement and distribution is not yet high on the agenda of GoRSS or state governments due to competing demands. All students need a set of textbooks if the quality of education is to be improved. Therefore, South Sudan needs to establish a sustainable and cost-efficient system of textbook production and distribution. Focus on improving learning achievement. Low quality of education in South Sudan is not surprising, considering the state of the education sys- tem at the time of the CPA. With the government racing to meet demand for schooling, quality may have been temporarily sacrificed. However, delaying improvements in quality is a fundamental error committed by many countries as they expand their education system. This misstep has proven to be very difficult to reverse. The Service Delivery Study administered standardized language and mathematics learning achievement tests to primary students in Central Equatoria, Lakes, Upper Nile, and Western Bahr Ghazal. The average stu- dent test scores were extremely weak. The same test was administered to 160 teachers across the four states and revealed that the knowledge and pedagogical expertise of teachers are acutely limited. These poor results may in part be attributed to the qualifications of teachers. Almost half of teachers have only primary school education and about 60 percent have not received any teacher training. Upgrading the subject matter and ped- agogical knowledge of teachers presents an urgent task for South Sudan. Improve service delivery and school management. Primary schools in South Sudan tend to be overcrowded, and class sizes are large. Between 2002 and 2009, the average enrollment in a primary school doubled to 132 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan 429 students, resulting in many overcrowded schools. By 2009, schools had an average of 129 pupils per classroom and 52 students per teacher, when volunteers are included. High average class size makes regular instruction difficult to implement. Most of the primary schools (75 per- cent) and some of the secondary schools (22 percent) do not have per- manent structures, which leads to the loss of school working days during inclement weather. There is a shortage of textbooks, paper, and writing instruments in South Sudan’s schools, especially in primary schools, which have an aver- age of one textbook for every three students in both mathematics and English. Two-thirds of students surveyed in the Service Delivery Study did not have paper to write on, and one-fifth of the students did not have pens or other writing instruments. These shortages limit opportunities for reinforcing what is taught. There are indications that parents and local communities support edu- cation. However, schools and teachers are not well managed. Parent- teacher associations (PTAs) were evident in most schools surveyed in the Service Delivery Study. Schools typically also received some financial and in-kind support from local NGOs and communities. However, consider- able variation across states is evident in the number of working days in a school year, with some schools functioning for less than eight months a year. The lack of clarity in the number of working days is compounded by the irregularity in the time classes spend on actual instruction. The major- ity of teachers interviewed in the Service Delivery Study taught for less than 10 hours a week. The deficiencies in working days and instructional hours are reflected in the low syllabus coverage in classrooms. In addition, the management of schools is weak: few head teachers maintain records on student enrollment, student performance, and teach- ers’ leave. South Sudan has yet to put in place a system of teacher super- vision that can provide consistent evaluations of teacher performance. Such a system would include links between teacher performance and pay and the organization of timely and relevant in-service training. Although more analysis is needed to fully understand education qual- ity, the factors discussed above appear to be the principal contributors to low levels of achievement. Invest in skills development and post-basic education for the labor mar- ket and economic growth. The great influx of children into schools will have a tremendous positive impact on social and economic conditions in South Sudan, but this effect will take some time. The adult population today is characterized by illiteracy or unfinished primary education, and will continue to be so for the foreseeable future. Conclusions • 133 The demand for high-level skills in the formal labor market is minis- cule, and future jobs (primarily construction, roads, and so forth) will probably require mostly low-level skills. However, if the profile of the teacher corps is any indication, it appears that the few jobs that require secondary and tertiary education are not easy to fill. Also, many mid-level technicians, managers, administrators, accountants, and foremen in South Sudan are not Sudanese, but come from places like Kenya, Ethiopia, and Eritrea. Many employers—in the private sector as well as NGOs and bilateral and international agencies—complain about the lack of workers from South Sudan with mid- or high-level skills. Workers who cannot be locally sourced include foremen, accountants, managers, administrators, statisticians, analysts, translators, and teacher trainers. On the supply side, as noted above, secondary education and tertiary education have relatively low levels of enrollment compared to neighbor- ing countries. This should change as more youth complete primary edu- cation and seek opportunities for secondary and higher education. The potential influx to South Sudan of young adults enrolled in the Khartoum campuses may also change this equation, although weak English skills may hamper their potential insertion into the labor force as qualified workers. The immediate problem is that the existing post-basic education sys- tem cannot produce mid-level professionals that are critical for the devel- opment of state and nonstate administrative and technical apparatus. Existing higher education is organized in a traditional manner (with, for example, four-year bachelor’s degree programs in broad disciplinary areas), and this report found no programs targeted for the development of mid-level technical, administrative, and managerial skills. Strengthen the capacity for monitoring and evaluation and avoid devel- oping plans that will outstrip implementation capacity or available finan- cial resources. The future development of the education sector in South Sudan will require greater accountability at all levels, which in turn means better and more widely available information about sector trends. It is evi- dent that if policies are to be effectively developed and implemented, much more reliable and detailed data will be needed to measure results and hold state- and national-level administrations accountable. Reliable and detailed data on educational outcomes, deployment of teachers, availability of textbooks, and teacher and school management are needed to measure progress. The CPA period constituted a first phase of educational development. Now South Sudan enters a second phase, where further expansion must address additional considerations of equity, efficiency, and learning. Building an additional classroom or hiring another teacher may only 134 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan move South Sudan closer to its education sector objectives if combined with more targeted and effective use of resources. There are many indica- tions that addressing the challenges in the education sector will outstrip strategic and administrative management capacities. This includes capac- ities for effective monitoring, planning, and quality assurance, as well as the capacity to create proper incentives and meaningful social accounta- bility mechanisms.2 Options for development need to be considered in tandem with their fiscal implications so that new directions for the sector are financially sustainable. Finally, the next phase of development will require different approaches than under the CPA, because the context has changed with independence and the goals to be attained will require more elaborate solutions. NOTES 1. The GER is 72 percent for the eight-year primary cycle and 88 percent for the first six years of primary education. 2. This “capacity� consists of technical competence and accountability mech- anisms. Appendixes APPENDIX A: DATA SOURCES APPENDIX B: SCHOOL-AGE POPULATION IN THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH SUDAN, 2000–09 APPENDIX C: COMPARISON OF ENROLLMENT DATA FROM DIFFERENT SOURCES APPENDIX D: METHODOLOGY FOR CALCULATION OF INDICATORS OF STUDENT FLOW APPENDIX E: DECOMPOSITION OF RECURRENT EDUCATION SPENDING IN THE STATES APPENDIX F: EDUCATIONAL PROFILE BY STATE 135 Appendixes • 137 APPENDIX A: DATA SOURCES Chapter 5 uses relevant government documents and reports in addition to recently completed studies in primary and secondary education in the Republic of South Sudan. The main studies that inform this chapter are as follows: • UNICEF report (2009) entitled Socio Economic and Cultural Barriers to Schooling in South Sudan. This study was conducted in the capital cities of three states—Lakes, Upper Nile, and Western Bahr Ghazal. Using qualitative and quantitative methods, the analysis focuses on the con- text of schooling in selected counties. The study includes interviews and focus group discussions with state, county, payam, and school per- sonnel, in addition to a questionnaire administered to 1,195 house- holds. • Surveys done by the International Organization for Migration (IOM 2009a, 2009b, and 2009c) in three states—Northern Bahr Ghazal, Unity, and Warrap.1 The surveys include group discussions, individual interviews, observations, and the completion of a village assessment form. The sample included 1,738 villages in Northern Bahr Ghazal, 1,785 villages in Unity, and 2,049 villages in Warrap. • A 2010 Ministry of Education Service Delivery Study (SDS) done in four states: Central Equatoria, Upper Nile, Western Bahr Ghazal, and Lakes. These states are representative of the major regions in South Sudan. Central Equatoria represents the Equatoria region; Upper Nile, the northern region; Western Bahr Ghazal, the Bahr Ghazal region; and Lakes, the Central region. A random sample of counties, payams, and schools in the four states was identified to participate in this study. However, due to security issues, inhospitable terrains, and challenging weather conditions, researchers were unable to ensure the randomness of the sample. While in the states, the research teams were forced to substitute counties and schools in the sample with those that were accessible and safe. This resulted in a convenience sample, with most of the schools located in urban areas. Data from predominantly urban schools are likely to underestimate the gravity of the situation of serv- ice delivery and learning outcomes in the average school. The Service Delivery Study included questionnaires, observation, and student assessment tests in language and mathematics.2 The sample (table A.1), representing an average of 10 percent of schools in each state, consisted of 40 schools in Central Equatoria, 28 in Lakes, 24 in Upper Nile, and 15 in Western Bahr Ghazal. The head teacher and one or two 138 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Table A.1 Sample Schools for the Service Delivery Study Central Western Bahr Total Basic education (public schools) Equatoria Lakes Upper Nile Ghazal sampled Total 431 281 289 128 1,129 Number of Sampled 40 28 24 15 107 schools visited Sampled % of total 9.3 10.0 8.3 11.7 9.5 Classrooms observed 123 84 72 41 320 Total 4,306 2,211 2,388 1,104 10,009 Number of teachers interviewed Sampled 40 56 50 33 179 and tested Sampled % of total 0.9 2.5 2.1 3.0 1.8 Total 138,934 110,315 202,425 52,990 504,664 Number of Sampled 693 433 424 271 1,821 pupils tested Sampled % of total 0.5 0.4 0.2 0.5 0.4 Source: Analysis of SDS 2010 and EMIS 2009. teachers (mathematics and/or language teachers) from each school (a total of 179 teachers) were interviewed using questionnaires. In addition, enumerators observed a grade 3, 4, and 5 class in each school (a total of 320 classes). Twenty randomly selected grade 6 students from each school (1,821 students) took a mathematics and language test. The section on student learning below describes the tests in more detail. Teachers inter- viewed also completed the same learning assessment tests administered to students. The analysis provided in the teacher management chapter (chapter 7) uses EMIS data, government and donor documentation and studies, and case studies done in five states on teacher management. The case studies were done at the same time as the Service Delivery Study, in the same four states (Central Equatoria, Upper Nile, Lakes, and Western Bahr Ghazal). The instruments used to collect data included a detailed set of questions for state and county officials related to different aspects of teacher man- agement. Later, the same instruments were also used to collect data in Eastern Equatoria. NOTES 1. The IOM gathered information on the availability and accessibility of basic infrastructure concerning water and sanitation, health, and education. IOM iden- tified villages using the Global Positioning System (GPS). Appendixes • 139 2. The South Sudan Multi-Donor Trust Fund (education), administered by the World Bank, financed the Service Delivery Study. Juba University organized and led the data collection in the four states, while the Southern Sudan Centre for Census, Statistics and Evaluation (SSCCSE) was responsible for data entry and col- lation. The World Bank provided technical assistance. The same study was carried out in northern Sudan for their Education Status Report. 140 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan APPENDIX B: SCHOOL-AGE POPULATION IN THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH SUDAN, 2000–09 METHODOLOGY FOR SMOOTHING POPULATION DATA For the purpose of this report, the population data for the 2–24 age group were smoothed, which simply means redistributed across single ages while holding the total population constant. The smoothing was done at the level of Sudan’s 25 states and then aggregated to national-level data. The methodology is explained for Lakes State below (figure B.1). The first series in the left panel shows the raw population data for Lakes State by single age group; this graph is very uneven across ages as discussed in chapter 1. The right panel is based on the same data but aggregated into the following age groups, 2–4, 5–9, 10–14, 15–19, and 20–24. This graph is much smoother. The second panel also shows how a polynomial curve or function was fitted to the population data. In the case of Lakes, a polynomial function of the third order fit the data very well as reflected in the high R2. The equation of this fitted curve is also shown in the chart; this equation is the basis of calculating the smoothed population by age shown as the second series in the left panel. This pro- cedure was repeated for all 25 states of Sudan, each time fitting a polyno- mial curve, although at times only a second-order polynomial function to get the best possible fit. Tables B.1 and B.2 provide the resulting smoothed population data for South Sudan. Figure B.1 Population by Age in Lakes State, Raw Data and Smoothed Population, 2008 a. Raw population data b. Smoothed population data 30,000 30,000 y = 365.86x3 – 3,171.7x2 + 25,000 25,000 4,871.3x + 21,856 R2 = 0.99998 20,000 20,000 Population Population 15,000 15,000 10,000 10,000 5,000 Raw data 5,000 Smoothed data Smoothed data 0 0 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 2–4 5–9 10–14 15–19 20–24 Age Age Source: Analysis of 2008 Population Census data. Table B.1 Estimated Population Figures for the Republic of South Sudan, 2000–09 (based on 2008 census population) Age 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 6 222,045 228,105 233,905 239,334 244,285 250,656 256,405 261,437 267,662 272,690 7 212,681 218,775 224,727 230,422 235,748 240,603 246,865 252,514 257,458 263,573 8 203,771 209,786 215,780 221,634 227,230 232,461 237,226 243,388 248,946 253,808 9 195,591 201,220 207,148 213,051 218,813 224,318 229,462 234,144 240,214 245,687 10 188,199 193,354 198,910 204,757 210,578 216,255 221,677 226,740 231,346 237,331 11 180,063 184,613 189,670 195,120 200,856 206,567 212,137 217,457 222,425 226,946 12 172,961 176,813 181,280 186,245 191,597 197,230 202,838 208,309 213,535 218,415 13 166,955 170,013 173,798 178,188 183,068 188,329 193,867 199,380 204,759 209,897 All ages (‘000) 6,763 6,941 7,121 7,304 7,490 7,679 7,870 8,064 8,260 8,460 Source: World Bank estimation based on the 2008 Population Census. 141 142 Table B.2 Estimated Primary School-Age Population by State in the Republic of South Sudan, 2009 (based on 2008 census population) Central Eastern Western Western Bahr Northern Age Equatoria Equatoria Equatoria Jonglei Unity Upper Nile Lakes Warrap Ghazal Bahr Ghazal 6 33,254 28,018 16,840 45,317 21,940 31,914 22,774 34,866 10,542 27,225 7 32,419 27,997 16,572 44,058 20,731 30,987 22,177 32,945 10,112 25,575 8 31,570 27,924 16,297 42,619 19,523 29,964 21,425 31,025 9,647 23,815 9 30,889 27,820 16,075 41,369 18,569 29,095 20,739 29,508 9,261 22,363 10 30,203 27,660 15,848 40,043 17,628 28,184 19,991 28,014 8,867 20,892 11 29,179 27,120 15,407 38,103 16,650 26,847 19,075 26,539 8,532 19,494 12 28,500 26,821 15,172 36,698 15,760 25,890 18,263 25,121 8,141 18,049 13 27,825 26,436 14,931 35,269 14,904 24,916 17,441 23,756 7,764 16,656 6–13 243,840 219,795 127,144 323,476 145,706 227,796 161,885 231,773 72,865 174,068 Source: World Bank estimation based on the 2008 Population Census. Appendixes • 143 APPENDIX C: COMPARISON OF ENROLLMENT DATA FROM DIFFERENT SOURCES TREND IN STUDENT ENROLLMENTS BETWEEN 2000 AND 2004 There are no official, definitive data on school enrollments for the years before the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA). Table C.1 presents enrollment data from various sources for an overview of available data on enrollments during the last five years before the signing of the CPA. PRIMARY EDUCATION Around the early 2000s, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) supported the organization of two School Baseline Assessments (SBAs) that surveyed primary schools in areas of the Republic of South Sudan controlled by the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement/Army (SPLM/A).1 The first SBA was conducted in 1999–2001 and the second in late 2002. The two SBAs found that primary school enrollments grew slightly from an estimated 331,000 around 2000 to about 343,000 at the end of 2002. By 2003–04, UNICEF estimated that primary school enrollments had grown to about 400,000. During this time, the Federal Ministry of General Education in Khar- toum also published data on school enrollments in the southern states of Sudan. According to their yearbooks, primary school enrollments in the three regions that make up South Sudan—Bahr El Ghazal, Equatoria, and Upper Nile—grew from 137,330 in 2000 to about 200,000 in 2003, to almost 400,000 in 2004, and more than 500,000 in 2005. SECONDARY EDUCATION According to the Federal Ministry of General Education yearbooks, enroll- ment in South Sudan’s secondary schools was 17,465 in 2004. However, the 2006 Sudan Household Health Survey (SHHS) indicated that as many as 60,000 were attending secondary school in 2004.2 As discussed later in chapter 2, administrative data and household data still give widely differ- ent enrollment estimates for secondary schools today. HIGHER EDUCATION For this level, data from the Federal Ministry for Higher Education and Scientific Research state a total enrollment of 15,102 in public universities 144 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Table C.1 Sample Schools for the Service Delivery Study Source 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 Primary education: 1. UNICEF SBAa 331,000 — 343,000 ~400,000 — 2. SHHSb — — — — ~505,000 3. Khartoum Yearbooksc 137,330 135,782 169,167 201,467 394,356 Secondary education: 1. SHHSb — — — — ~60,000 2. Khartoum Yearbooksc 7,740 8,163 10,215 11,951 17,465 Vocational trainingc 724 616 826 — — Higher educationc — — 15,102 — — Sources: a. UNICEF School-Based Assessments conducted in 1999–2000 and end of 2002 as quoted by UNICEF (2004). The SBA covered southern Sudan SPLM/A-controlled areas only. b. Sudan Household Health Survey published in 2006, which collected data on enrollments in 2004 and 2005. c. Data collected in Khartoum (Federal Ministry of General Education or Federal Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research). Note: When several sources are shown, bold font indicates preferred estimate. — Not available. in South Sudan in 2002 (1,444 at University of Bahr El Ghazal, 11,785 at Juba University, and 1,873 at Upper Nile University). TREND IN STUDENT ENROLLMENTS BETWEEN 2005 AND 2009 Table C.2 presents data on enrollments between 2005 and 2009. For pri- mary school enrollments, data from several different sources are shown, including EMIS and various household surveys. Data from different sources are largely consistent for primary education. Data from different sources on secondary school enrollments are not consistent. EMIS records secondary school enrollments at 44,027 in 2009, only the second year that such data were collected by school census. These data are inconsistent with data from household surveys: around 150,000 in secondary school based on the 2009 National Baseline Household sur- vey (and 250,000 in secondary school according to the 2008 Long Form Questionnaire). Clearly, data on secondary education are inconsistent, which is a problem that will likely be resolved over time as the data sys- tem matures and the school system stabilizes. A part of the inconsistency may be linked to youth who study abroad. In this report, the EMIS data for secondary school enrollments are used, although these may underes- timate the actual secondary school population. Appendixes • 145 Table C.2 Data on Student Enrollments in the Republic of South Sudan, 2005–09 Source 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 Primary education: 1. RALS and EMISa — 784,600 1,127,963 1,284,252 1,380,580 2. SHHS or NBHSb ~669,000 — — — 1,405,316 3. Long-form questionnairec — — — 1,534,247 — 4. Khartoum Yearbooksd 519,442 — — — — Secondary education: 1. EMISa — — — 25,144 44,027 2. SHHS or NBHSb ~61,000 — — — ~150,000 3. Long-form questionnairec — — — 248,709 — 4. Khartoum Yearbooksd 17,465 — — — — Higher educationa — — — — 23,968 Teacher traininga — — — 1,259 2,445 Vocational traininga — — — 2,594 2,760 AESa — — — 90,221 217,239 Sources: a. MoE-EMIS (2010). b. Sudan Household Health Survey (SHHS) published in 2006, which collected data on enrollments in 2004 and 2005, and National Baseline Household Survey (NBHS) that collected data for 2009. c. Long-form questionnaire of the 2008 Population Census. d. Data collected in Khartoum (Federal Ministry of General Education or Federal Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research). Note: When several sources are shown, bold font indicates preferred estimate. — = not available. EMIS = Education Management Information Systems; RALS = Rapid Assessment of Learning Spaces. NOTES 1. UNICEF (2004). 2. The SHHS published in 2006 asked for children’s enrollment status during two consecutive years, 2004 and 2005. 146 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan APPENDIX D: METHODOLOGY FOR CALCULATION OF INDICATORS OF STUDENT FLOW CALCULATION OF THE SCHOOLING PROFILE FOR PRIMARY AND SECONDARY EDUCATION Figure D.1 shows two cross-sectional schooling profiles, one based on EMIS and another based on household survey data.1 The schooling pro- file is not a measure of one cohort's flow through the system. Instead, it is simply a picture of the extent of access to different parts of the school system at a single point in time. The schooling profile for the Republic of South Sudan shows a system in rapid expansion. Both schooling profiles show that access to the early grades of primary school is far larger than access to upper parts of the sys- tem. Rapid expansion of coverage and dropout explain this pattern. There are considerable differences between the two schooling profiles, however: EMIS finds much higher access to the early grades of primary than the household survey does, but lower rates of access to grade 5 onwards than the household survey.2 These differences translate into large differences between the gross intake rate (GIR) and the primary completion rate (PCR), as can be seen in figure D.1 and table D.1. Table D.1 compares the gross intake and primary completion rates corresponding to the two schooling profiles shown above. Given the wide Figure D.1 Cross-Sectional Schooling Profiles Based on EMIS and NBHS, 2009 a. EMIS data b. NBHS data 160 160 140 145 GIR 140 120 120 GIR 101 100 100 86 Percent Percent 85 85 79 80 66 80 62 60 60 PCR 42 47 37 40 26 PCR 40 29 24 19 20 15 8 20 13 16 10 7 5 3 1 0 0 P1 P2 P3 P4 P5 P6 P7 P8 S1 S2 S3 S4 P1 P2 P3 P4 P5 P6 P7 P8 S1 S2 S3 S4 Grade Grade Source: Analyses of EMIS 2009 and NBHS 2009. Note: The data points of the schooling profiles are calculated as nonrepeaters divided by population of relevant age. PCR = primary completion rate; GIR = gross intake rate. Appendixes • 147 Table D.1 Gross Intake and Completion Rates, Primary Education, 2009 Rate EMIS NBHS Gross intake rate 145% 86% Primary completion rate, grade 6 26% 37% Primary completion rate, grade 8 8% 24% Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009 and NBHS 2009. differences in the schooling profiles (and repetition structures), it is not obvious which set of intake and completion rates are more reliable. With its higher primary completion rate of 24 percent, the NBHS seems to over- estimate attainment of the primary cycle, considering that only 13 percent of primary schools even offer grade 8 (as discussed in chapter 2). This sug- gests that the rates based on EMIS are more appropriate, although the EMIS gross intake rate does seem very high at 145 percent. The estimates of intake and completion rates can be improved by com- bining EMIS and NBHS. Figure D.2 presents an adjusted schooling pro- file that is based on EMIS enrollment data but with the repetition struc- ture of NBHS. As shown, the adjusted profile suggests a much lower GIR of 124 percent (instead of 145 percent) but a similar primary completion rate (7 percent instead of 8 percent). Figure D.2 Adjusted Cross-Sectional Schooling Profile Based on EMIS, with the Repetition Structure of NBHS, 2009 160 140 124 Enrollments, net of repeaters, as proportion of population 120 100 of relevant age (%) 100 84 80 64 60 40 40 25 14 20 7 6 4 3 1 0 P1 P2 P3 P4 P5 P6 P7 P8 S1 S2 S3 S4 Grade Source: Combination of data from EMIS 2009 and NBHS 2009. 148 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan CALCULATION OF RETENTION RATES FOR PRIMARY EDUCATION Roughly one-third of students are retained until the end of the primary cycle based on reconciling the following two methods of calculation: • The pseudo-longitudinal retention rate based on two years of EMIS data is 18 percent (table D.2). This means that 18 percent of those enrolled in grade 1 are still in school by grade 8. This rate is calculated as the product of all the promotion rates that can be observed by com- paring the enrollment of nonrepeaters in one grade with the enroll- ment of nonrepeaters in the next grade the following year (details are shown in table D.2). • The retention rate based on the household survey is 43 percent. This is calculated as the share of respondents who reported ever having been in school, who also say they were still in school by grade 8. CALCULATION OF PRIMARY SCHOOL GER BY STATE The primary school gross enrollment rate (GER3) was calculated based on two different data sources, (a) EMIS enrollment data combined with data Table D.2 Promotion Rates and Retention Profile Based on Two Years of EMIS Data (pseudo-longitudinal) Retention profile, Nonrepeaters Nonrepeaters Promotion rate (pseudo- Grade 2008 2009 2008–09 (%) longitudinal) (%) P1 362,612 396,153 — 100 P2 219,230 265,848 73 73 P3 169,987 216,699 99 72 P4 127,038 163,317 96 70 P5 77,119 98,878 78 54 P6 46,718 58,228 76 41 P7 25,215 31,796 68 28 P8 13,038 16,192 64 18 S1 9,437 13,467 103 100 S2 6,829 9,275 98 98 S3 5,356 6,291 92 91 S4a 865 1,157 — — Source: Analysis of EMIS 2008 and 2009 combined with population data. Note: a. The table does not provide the promotion rate between S3 and S4, because many students attend a three-year secondary school. — Not applicable. Appendixes • 149 Figure D.3 Comparison of the Primary School GER across States Based on Two Sources, 2009 120 100 80 Percent 60 40 20 0 EQ ile Q BG ity G s lei p Q n ke ra da CE NB EE rN ng Un W W La ar Su Jo W pe h Up ut So State NBHS EMIS Source: Analysis of EMIS 2009 combined with population data, and NBHS 2009. on school-age population, and (b) the NBHS. Both are shown in figure D.3. For South Sudan as a whole, the two sources produce a similar GER: 72 percent based on EMIS and 69 percent based on the NBHS. But across states, the GERs are not consistent based on the two data sources, at least not for about half the states. Of the two sources, the GER resulting from the household survey data are mostly consistent with our prior knowl- edge about the states, based on literacy rates and other indicators, and the NBHS is therefore chosen as the primary source for analyzing regional disparities in this report.4 NOTES 1. Each data point in the schooling profile corresponds to an “access rate� to that grade, which is calculated as the nonrepeaters in the grade (that is, enroll- ments net of repeaters) divided by the population of relevant age for the grade. The first data point is equivalent to the primary gross intake rate (GIR), while the P8 data point is equivalent to the primary completion rate (PCR). 2. Several different factors can contribute to the differences between the two schooling profiles, including flaws in age structure of the population data used for the EMIS schooling profile or sample issues in the household survey. 3. Reminder: the GER is calculated as total enrollments divided by the popu- lation of relevant age for the cycle, that is, 6–13 for primary education. 4. Perhaps the reason for the inconsistency is that the household survey rates are based on a single data source, while the rate based on EMIS and population data combines two data sources and is therefore subject to a greater margin of error. 150 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan APPENDIX E: DECOMPOSITION OF RECURRENT EDUCATION SPENDING IN THE STATES Table E.1 Preprimary: Number of Staff on Payroll and Average Salary, 2009 Number of staff on Annual salary per State payroll staff on payroll Total wage bill Central Equatoria 172 2,203 378,964 Eastern Equatoria 239 3,250 776,832 Source: Estimation based on analysis of the payroll database. Table E.2 Primary: Decomposition of Recurrent Spending by State and by Level of Education, 2009 State Salary Operating Total Central Equatoria 20.5 5.5 26.0 Eastern Equatoria 12.7 3.4 16.2 Jonglei 10.4 2.8 13.2 Lakes 9.7 2.6 12.3 Northern Bahr Ghazal 12.9 3.5 16.4 Unity 13.5 3.6 17.1 Upper Nile 6.7 1.8 8.5 Warrap 14.5 3.9 18.4 Western Bahr Ghazal 9.0 2.4 11.4 Western Equatoria 11.5 3.1 14.6 Total 121.5 32.7 154.2 Source: Estimation based on analysis of the payroll database. Note: Figures include MoE’s central budget broken down and distributed across levels of education and states. Appendixes • 151 Table E.3 Secondary: Decomposition of Recurrent Spending by State and by Level of Education, 2009 State Salary Operating Total National secondary 2.7 0.7 3.4 Central Equatoria n.a. n.a. n.a. Eastern Equatoria 4.6 1.2 5.9 Jonglei 3.6 1.0 4.6 Lakes 0.7 0.2 0.9 Northern Bahr Ghazal 2.5 0.7 3.1 Unity 1.9 0.5 2.5 Upper Nile 7.5 2.0 9.5 Warrap 3.2 0.8 4.0 Western Bahr Ghazal 2.6 0.7 3.3 Western Equatoria 3.8 1.0 4.8 Total 33.0 8.9 41.8 Source: Estimation based on analysis of the payroll database. Note: Figures include MoE’s central budget broken down and distributed across levels of education and states. n.a. = Not available. Table E.4 Alternative Education System: Decomposition of Recurrent Spending by State and by Level of Education, 2009 State Salary Operating Total Mobile teachers 2.9 0.8 3.6 Central Equatoria n.a. n.a. n.a. Eastern Equatoria 1.1 0.3 1.3 Jonglei 0.6 0.2 0.8 Lakes 0.9 0.3 1.2 Northern Bahr Ghazal 3.2 0.9 4.1 Unity 2.8 0.8 3.6 Upper Nile 1.0 0.3 1.3 Warrap 0.4 0.1 0.5 Western Bahr Ghazal 0.5 0.1 0.7 Western Equatoria 0.3 0.1 0.4 Total 13.8 3.7 17.6 Source: Estimation based on analysis of the payroll database. Note: Figures include MoE’s central budget broken down and distributed across levels of education and states. n.a. = Not available. 152 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan APPENDIX F: EDUCATIONAL PROFILE BY STATE Appendixes • 153 154 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Appendixes • 155 156 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Appendixes • 157 158 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Appendixes • 159 160 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Appendixes • 161 162 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Appendixes • 163 164 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Appendixes • 165 166 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Appendixes • 167 168 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Appendixes • 169 170 • Education in the Republic of South Sudan Appendixes • 171 References Avenstrup, R., X. Liang, and S. Nellemann. 2004. Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi and Uganda: Universal Primary Education and Poverty Reduction. Washington, DC: World Bank. 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Washington, DC: World Bank. ———. 2011a. Sudan Poverty Assessment: Part II. Poverty Profile for Southern States. Draft. Washington, DC: World Bank. ———. 2011b. Sudan Poverty Assessment: Population Health Profile. Draft. Washing- ton, DC: World Bank. World Bank. 2012. The Status of the Education Sector in Sudan. Washington, DC: World Bank. A s part of the Africa Human Development Series, this book provides a comprehensive review of the status of education in post-conflict Republic of South Sudan. It is a result of collaborative work between the Ministry of Education, key national education stakeholders, and the World Bank. The aim of this book is to contribute to the development of a shared vision for the future of the education system among government, citizens, and partners of the Republic of South Sudan. With the signing of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement in 2005 began the establishment of a new education system specifically for South Sudan. Primary school enrollments approximately doubled between 2005 and 2009, from 0.7 million to 1.4 million, evidence of both strong demand for education and recent years’ efforts to expand the school network. Yet the recent rapid growth has resulted in a concentration of students in the early primary grades; a high proportion of overage students, repetition, and dropout; and weak levels of student learning. Because of the rich detail it offers, this book provides a solid foundation for dialogue about the future of education in the Republic of South Sudan and will immediately be used to inform the preparation of an Education Sector Plan for the new country. The volume underlines the strong progress that the Republic of South Sudan has made in terms of expanding access to education, as well as the many challenges that lie ahead. In particular, it sheds light on such questions as: Is everyone getting a chance at education? How much are students learning? What is the current status of schools and service delivery? What resources is the Republic of South Sudan investing in education and how is it using these resources? Are the resources well deployed and well managed to ensure efficient functioning of the education system? The book offers a valuable and comprehensive resource for all who are interested in education in the Republic of South Sudan. ISBN 978-0-8213-8891-4 Republic of South Sudan Ministry of General Education & Instruction SKU 18891