Should Bridge International
Academies be allowed to experiment on African children? That’s the
crux of a question academics, politicians and parents have been
trying to answer for the last year.
In principle, it sounds like a
great idea to get solid experimental evidence before implementing a
large-scale reform in education. But in practice, nothing is quite
so simple.
Bridge, which is backed the
World Bank, Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg among other luminaries,
has been at the center of intense controversies across Africa.
Earlier this year, the Ugandan government ordered Bridge to
close down 63 of its schools, citing the use of unqualified
teachers working in unsafe premises at unregistered schools. Bridge
refused to stop its operations and took the government to court.
This month, the High Court ruled in favor of the government, but
Bridge
plans to challenge the ruling.
While Bridge claims parents and
teachers want schools to stay open, a coalition of teacher unions,
parents and NGOs want it out of Africa. The stakes are high,
since the outcome of this court battle in Uganda will reverberate
across the continent. This American firm has expanded rapidly since
2008, and has 450 private schools in Uganda, Kenya, Nigeria and
India, with ambitious plans for expansion into Liberia. To expand
quickly, they use
community members who are trained for six weeks (pdf). They
then hire them at wages around 30% lower than local teachers
(though they are paid more regularly than many public school
teachers) to deliver the curriculum by script via
tablets.
“Step into any classroom at
Bridge and the chances are that the teacher will be uttering
exactly the same words that are being uttered in every single
Bridge school,” said a report
from Vox. So the American firm promises to herald a genuine
revolution in education. Much like McDonalds was to fast food,
Bridge enables the mass roll-out of cheap, highly standardized
curricula across Africa using low-skilled workers.
While Bridge claims that parents
and teachers
want schools to stay open, a broad coalition of teacher unions,
parent associations and NGOs in Uganda and Kenya have called for
the company
to stop operations on the continent. This was followed by an
independent
report by Education International (pdf), which found that,
contrary to Bridge’s claims about being affordable for poor
families, these families have to invest about 25% of their earnings
to send one child to a Bridge school. The report also found that
Bridge provides poor quality education in unsafe and unhygienic
buildings, and that their curriculum is divorced from the country’s
context in ways that echo colonial education.
Women's rights and gender
equality,we highlights issues affecting women,
girls and transgender people.
Nevertheless, earlier this year
Liberia announced it was outsourcing its entire education system to
Bridge. Teachers protested this decision by going on
strike. And the United Nations’ Special Rapporteur on the right
to education, Kishore Singh, has condemned the program,
arguing that it “violates Liberia’s legal and moral
obligations” to provide public education to its citizens. He added
that these plans are “a blatant violation of Liberia’s
international obligations under the right to education, and have no
justification under Liberia’s constitution.”
It is striking that Liberia
plans to implement Bridge as an experiment, or randomized
controlled trial. However, Bridge is backed by powerful
investors, including the World Bank and the UK Department for
International Development. And as the economic difficulties across
Africa deepen, the pressure to privatize and outsource public
education will only increase. So while the Bridge program in
Liberia has been
scaled back and altered slightly, it is likely that it will
still be implemented.
It is striking that Liberia
plans to implement Bridge as an experiment, or randomized
controlled trial (RCT). This means that economists will first test
to see if the new Bridge model works as a pilot before rolling it
out nationally. To do so, they will likely assign one group of
children to Bridge schools, and another group to conventional
public schools. Because the children are randomly chosen,
economists don’t need to worry that maybe something else is
responsible for their marks (like whether their parents are
well-educated or not). So experiments can precisely quantify the
results of a given intervention and how cost-effective it is likely
to be. For this reason, experiments are considered the new
“gold standard” for research on policy reforms.
In principle, it sounds like a
great idea to get solid experimental evidence before implementing a
large-scale reform in education. But in practice, nothing is quite
so simple.
Take the example of a large-scale
experiment in Kenya in 2011, which involved some of the same
economists who are now playing a role in the Bridge experiment in
Liberia. The Kenyan experiment tested the effects of cutting
teachers’ salaries and hiring them on short-term contracts. The
program was run by the Kenyan Government and World Vision Kenya, an
evangelical Christian NGO based in the United States. The
evaluation was funded by the UK’s Department for International
Development and conducted by economists from Oxford, Stockholm and
Nairobi.
The experimenters theorized that
contract teachers would cut costs while improving learning outcomes
out of fear of dismissal. But the government was forced to shut
down the program after teacher unions and parents’ associations
engaged in year-long
protests and successfully took the government to court. The
court ruled that employing a subset of teachers on contract and at
much lower wages was discriminatory and violated
constitutional provisions for equal and fair employment.
Worryingly, when the experimenters wrote of the failed experiment,
they described democratic opposition from teachers and parents as a
form of political meddling that “undermines” the
reform.
Apparently, there are two moral
standards: one for African children and teachers, and another for
the people who experiment on them. What is remarkable is that
many of the actors who designed and implemented this experiment did
not live in Kenya, did not receive the low wages they set for
teachers, and therefore did not need to send their children to the
schools they were experimenting on. So they were free to implement
reforms without experiencing any of the consequences. Apparently,
there are two moral standards: one for African children and
teachers, and another for the people who experiment on them. In
fact, as a columnist in the
New York Times made clear this year, experiments on children
are only palatable in African contexts, because “if experimentation
is justified anywhere, it’s there.”
In a recent paper, Angus
Deaton and Nancy Cartwright warn against the paternalism of
experiments, writing that “RCTs should not become yet another
technical fix that is imposed on people by bureaucrats or
foreigners … most RCTs in economics have been carried out by rich
people on poor people, and the fact should make us especially
sensitive to avoid charges of paternalism.”
But the problem of
experimentation in Africa is manifestly not simply a problem of
paternalism. It is a problem of powerful actors who resist, and in
some cases,undermine the principles of equality, democracy and the
rule of law. And they often seem to do so without
consequence.
Such cases invoke a painful
history of experimentation in Africa. In the 1930s, colonial
scientists conducted wide-ranging experiments in British colonies
that provided the underpinning for contemporary tropical medicine,
agriculture and ecology. These experiments were extensive and
influential enough for historians to call Africa a
“living laboratory”.
This time round, African
children are at the centre of experiments. There are serious
questions to be asked about whether private companies and
development agencies should be allowed to experiment on African
children.
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