Skip to main content

Benefiting from Basic Education, School Quality and Functional Literacy in Kenya

  • 1st Edition, Volume 2 - April 12, 1987
  • Latest edition
  • Author: T. O. Eisemon
  • Language: English

Studies of the retention of literacy and numeracy by adults who have only obtained primary schooling have given little encouragement to the belief that the cognitive effects of… Read more

World Book Day celebration

Where learning shapes lives

Up to 25% off trusted resources that support research, study, and discovery.

Description

Studies of the retention of literacy and numeracy by adults who have only obtained primary schooling have given little encouragement to the belief that the cognitive effects of schooling are enduring for many school leavers. How these findings can be reconciled with the claims made for the importance of schooling as an instrument of social and economic change is the subject ofinvestigation in this volume. The cognitive outcomes of literacy acqusition and secular schools in coastal Kenya are the focus of this ethnographic study, which stresses the relevance of an international understanding of the particular problems and dilemmas that face the educational systems of individual countries.

Readership

For researchers interested in the comparative study of schooling from a sociological, historical or economic point of view.

Table of contents

Introduction: the acquisition and uses of literacy in a coastal society. Benefiting from basic education. Qualitative consequences of school expansion in Kenya. The implantation of Western schooling in coastal Kenya. Religious education in a secular society. Literacy and cognition. The uses of literacy in daily life. Conclusion. Index.

Product details

  • Edition: 1
  • Latest edition
  • Volume: 2
  • Published: June 28, 2014
  • Language: English

About the author

TE

T. O. Eisemon

Affiliations and expertise
McGill University, Montreal, Canada

View book on ScienceDirect

Read Benefiting from Basic Education, School Quality and Functional Literacy in Kenya on ScienceDirect