Bilingual Education in Latin America: Does Quechua-Medium Education Improve Peruvian Indigenous Children’s Academic Achievement?

This study uses Peruvian school-level data to investigate the effect of Quechua-medium instruction on academic achievement

Abstract

This study uses Peruvian school-level data from the Young Lives international study of childhood poverty to investigate the effect of Quechua-medium instruction on academic achievement. We estimate an education production function and find that indigenous children who attend Quechua-medium schools achieve mathematics scores 0.54 standard deviations higher than indigenous children who attend Spanish-medium schools. We find weak and inconclusive evidence that indigenous children who attend Quechua-medium schools attain higher language test scores. There is no evidence that these effects are caused by quantitative or language achievement prior to entering school. Our findings suggest that indigenous-language-medium education for Latin American indigenous children may play a role in ameliorating the indigenous test score gap.

Citation

Hynsjö, D.; Damon, A. Bilingual Education in Latin America: Does Quechua-Medium Education Improve Peruvian Indigenous Children’s Academic Achievement? Young Lives, Oxford, UK (2015) 36 pp. ISBN 978-1-909403-50-5

Bilingual Education in Latin America: Does Quechua-Medium Education Improve Peruvian Indigenous Children’s Academic Achievement?

Updates to this page

Published 1 January 2015