The legacy of colonial language policies and their impact on student learning: Evidence from an experimental program in Cameroon.

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
The legacy of colonial language policies and their impact on student learning: Evidence from an experimental program in Cameroon.
Abstract
The relative educational returns on colonial versus indigenous language instruction in sub-Saharan countries have yet to be decisively estimated. To address this unanswered question, this paper provides an impact assessment of an experiment in Cameroon in which the first 3 years of schooling were conducted in a local language instead of in English. Test results in examinations in both English and math reveal that treated students exhibit gains of 1.1–1.4 of a standard deviation in grades 1 and 3 compared with the control students. It also increases the probability of being present in grades 3 and 5 by 22 and 14 percentage points, respectively. However, by the end of fifth grade, 2 years after reverting to the English stream, treated students still exhibit gains of 0.40–0.60 of a standard deviation, although the absolute scores for both groups are low enough to suggest limited learning is taking place. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Publication
Economic Development & Cultural Change
Volume
68
Issue
1
Pages
239-272
Date
2019-10
Journal Abbr
Economic Development & Cultural Change
ISSN
00130079
Archive
Business Source Premier
Library Catalogue
EBSCOhost
Citation
Laitin, D. D., Ramachandran, R., & Walter, S. L. (2019). The legacy of colonial language policies and their impact on student learning: Evidence from an experimental program in Cameroon. Economic Development & Cultural Change, 68(1), 239–272. Business Source Premier. https://doi.org/10.1086/700617