Location

The impact of school mapping in the development of education in Tanzania: an assessment of the experiences of six districts

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
The impact of school mapping in the development of education in Tanzania: an assessment of the experiences of six districts
Abstract
In this study the authors have looked at the impact of school mapping in the development of education in Tanzania. The study examined the experiences of six districts where school mapping exercises were carried out. The key question that guided the study is what happened after school mapping. Through a combination of instruments and/or techniques—interviews, questionnaires, focus group discussion, and document analysis, the study found that school mapping impacted in varying degrees positively on the development of education in the districts in terms of increased enrollment and attendance, decreased incidents of dropping out, improved information for decision making, and enhanced capacities of field actors to plan and take action. The authors conclusively argued that for the benefits of school mapping to be maximized and sustained, it should not be a one shot activity for data collection purposes only. Rather, it should be an on-going process of assessment, analysis, and action.
Publication
Evaluation and Program Planning
Volume
25
Issue
1
Pages
23-33
Date
February 1, 2002
Journal Abbr
Evaluation and Program Planning
Language
en
ISSN
0149-7189
Short Title
The impact of school mapping in the development of education in Tanzania
Accessed
30/01/2021, 18:46
Library Catalogue
ScienceDirect
Citation
Galabawa, J. C. J., Agu, A. O., & Miyazawa, I. (2002). The impact of school mapping in the development of education in Tanzania: an assessment of the experiences of six districts. Evaluation and Program Planning, 25(1), 23–33. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0149-7189(01)00046-5