Telementoring and homeschooling during school closures: A randomized experiment in rural Bangladesh

Resource type
Report
Authors/contributors
Title
Telementoring and homeschooling during school closures: A randomized experiment in rural Bangladesh
Abstract
Prolonged school closures due to political unrests, teacher strikes, natural disasters, and public health crises can be detrimental to student learning in developing countries. Using a randomized controlled experiment in 200 Bangladeshi villages, we evaluate the impact of over-the-phone mentoring and homeschooling support delivered by volunteers on the learning outcomes of primary school children during school closures caused by the coronavirus pandemic. The telementoring program improved the learning outcomes of treated children by 0.75 SD and increased homeschooling involvement of treated mothers by 0.64 SD. The impacts on learning are driven primarily by the direct mentoring of children and to some extent also by the increased homeschooling involvement of mothers. Academically weaker children and households from relatively lower socioeconomic backgrounds benefitted the most from telementoring. These findings suggest that learning crises in low-resource settings can be addressed by simple and very low-cost technology solutions.
Report Type
Working Paper
Series Title
CDES Working Paper Series
Place
Monash University
Institution
Centre for Development Economics and Sustainability
Date
August 2021
Pages
54
Language
en
Library Catalogue
Zotero
Citation
Hassan, H., Islam, A., Siddique, A., & Wang, L. C. (2021). Telementoring and homeschooling during school closures: A randomized experiment in rural Bangladesh (CDES Working Paper Series, p. 54) [Working Paper]. Centre for Development Economics and Sustainability. https://www.monash.edu/__data/assets/pdf_file/0007/2651416/WP2021n03_V1.pdf