Access to Primary Education in Sierra Leone: the perceived gap between policy and practice, and the role of religious affiliation and British aid

This research paper is based on my PhD pilot study, in which I examined issues of access to primary education in Sierra Leone and its partnership with Britain. Prior to the fieldwork, I piloted a questionnaire with parents aiming to investigate the difficulties which underlie regular access to schoo...

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Main Author: Mikako Nishimuko
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University College London 2006-12-01
Series:Educate~
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.educatejournal.org/index.php?journal=educate&page=article&op=view&path%5B%5D=84
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spelling doaj-b38b21d4371345209ab26c24536434fc2020-11-25T02:25:52ZengUniversity College London Educate~1477-55572006-12-01623241Access to Primary Education in Sierra Leone: the perceived gap between policy and practice, and the role of religious affiliation and British aidMikako NishimukoThis research paper is based on my PhD pilot study, in which I examined issues of access to primary education in Sierra Leone and its partnership with Britain. Prior to the fieldwork, I piloted a questionnaire with parents aiming to investigate the difficulties which underlie regular access to schooling in Sierra Leone. In the country, religious affiliation crucially informs patterns of education provision. I hypothesised that religion had a strong connection to how education was perceived and accessed in Sierra Leone. This short article presents the results of the pilot study and focuses on two issues: 1) parents’ perception of the role and influence of main stream religions in the country, Christianity and Islam, and 2) whether British aid is viewed as having played a significant role in alleviating the financial burdens and therefore widening access and participation in education. http://www.educatejournal.org/index.php?journal=educate&page=article&op=view&path%5B%5D=84Primary schoolingeducation for all, religious tolerance, poverty, British aid
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mikako Nishimuko
spellingShingle Mikako Nishimuko
Access to Primary Education in Sierra Leone: the perceived gap between policy and practice, and the role of religious affiliation and British aid
Educate~
Primary schooling
education for all, religious tolerance, poverty, British aid
author_facet Mikako Nishimuko
author_sort Mikako Nishimuko
title Access to Primary Education in Sierra Leone: the perceived gap between policy and practice, and the role of religious affiliation and British aid
title_short Access to Primary Education in Sierra Leone: the perceived gap between policy and practice, and the role of religious affiliation and British aid
title_full Access to Primary Education in Sierra Leone: the perceived gap between policy and practice, and the role of religious affiliation and British aid
title_fullStr Access to Primary Education in Sierra Leone: the perceived gap between policy and practice, and the role of religious affiliation and British aid
title_full_unstemmed Access to Primary Education in Sierra Leone: the perceived gap between policy and practice, and the role of religious affiliation and British aid
title_sort access to primary education in sierra leone: the perceived gap between policy and practice, and the role of religious affiliation and british aid
publisher University College London
series Educate~
issn 1477-5557
publishDate 2006-12-01
description This research paper is based on my PhD pilot study, in which I examined issues of access to primary education in Sierra Leone and its partnership with Britain. Prior to the fieldwork, I piloted a questionnaire with parents aiming to investigate the difficulties which underlie regular access to schooling in Sierra Leone. In the country, religious affiliation crucially informs patterns of education provision. I hypothesised that religion had a strong connection to how education was perceived and accessed in Sierra Leone. This short article presents the results of the pilot study and focuses on two issues: 1) parents’ perception of the role and influence of main stream religions in the country, Christianity and Islam, and 2) whether British aid is viewed as having played a significant role in alleviating the financial burdens and therefore widening access and participation in education.
topic Primary schooling
education for all, religious tolerance, poverty, British aid
url http://www.educatejournal.org/index.php?journal=educate&page=article&op=view&path%5B%5D=84
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