A Practical Approach to In-Country Systems Research

Abstract

Although this paper is about education systems research, it does not pretend to be a standard academic paper. It is, instead, an academically supported suggestion or “light advocacy” paper. Its focus is also a practical one. The authors are assuming that even as forms of international aid such as budget support for education ministries are questioned, non-project assistance and policy reform will continue to be relevant to the donor community. They also assume that traditional projects aimed at producing systemwide lessons for reformism will continue to be useful. As such, practical, evidence-based knowledge on how to support such programs will continue to be needed. One of the coauthors is a member of the RISE program’s Intellectual Leadership Team (ILT), and has been involved in the design of the program since its early days. As of May 2015 it seemed as if certain aspects of the program still could use sharper definition or a sharper statement of options - in particular when it comes to operationalizing things at the country level. This paper hopes to contribute to how RISE approaches the challenge of research into systems change. In particular, it draws on years of experience and research dealing with the complexities of education reform to consider how to link changes in system-level capacity to appreciable improvements in learning outcomes.

Citation

Crouch, L.; DeStefano, J. A Practical Approach to In-Country Systems Research. Presented at Research on Improving Systems of Education (RISE) Program Launch Conference, Washington, DC, June 18–19, 2015. (2015) 39 pp.

A Practical Approach to In-Country Systems Research

Updates to this page

Published 1 January 2015