新冠肺炎疫情对印度青少年识字率和学业成绩的性别影响。

IF 3.6 1区 心理学 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH npj Science of Learning Pub Date : 2023-09-22 DOI:10.1038/s41539-023-00193-8
Arindam Nandi, Nicole Haberland, Meredith Kozak, Thoại D Ngô
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摘要

新冠肺炎疫情扰乱了世界各地的教育提供,学校关闭影响了全球超过16亿学生。在印度,学校停课超过18个月,2.48亿学生受到影响。这项研究估计了疫情对印度青少年识字率和学业成绩的影响。我们使用了来自全国家庭健康调查的数据。(NFHS-5),从2019年6月到2021年4月,覆盖了印度所有地区的636699户家庭。我们将2020年3月后接受调查的15-17岁青少年视为新冠肺炎后组,而之前接受调查的青少年则被纳入新冠肺炎前组。我们使用倾向得分匹配和反向倾向得分加权回归方法来解释两组之间社会经济特征的差异。与新冠肺炎前的类似女孩相比,新冠肺炎后女孩的识字率(阅读完整句子的能力)低1.5-1.6%。在财富最低的五分之一人群中,新冠肺炎后女孩的识字率比新冠肺炎前的女孩低3.1-3.8%。在财富最高的五分之一人群中,新冠肺炎后女孩的识字率没有下降。与城市地区相比,农村地区因新冠肺炎导致的女孩识字率下降是城市地区的两倍,与特权种姓群体相比,社会经济弱势种姓群体的识字率大幅上升。新冠肺炎后女孩的完成学业年限也比新冠肺炎前类似女孩低0.08-0.1年,但失学率没有差异。在15-17岁男孩的较小子样本中,新冠肺炎后组的失学率低2%,与匹配的新冠肺炎前男孩相比,识字率或完成学业的年限没有差异。而居住、种姓和贫困等脆弱性标志进一步放大了学习的风险。对于女孩来说,损失并没有对男孩产生同样的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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The gendered effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on adolescent literacy and schooling outcomes in India.

The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted education delivery around the world, with school closures affecting over 1.6 billion students worldwide. In India, schools were closed for over 18 months, affecting 248 million students. This study estimates the effect of the pandemic on adolescent literacy and schooling outcomes in India. We used data from the National Family Health Survey. (NFHS-5) which covered 636,699 households across all districts of India from June 2019 to April 2021. We considered 15-17 year old adolescents who were surveyed after March 2020 as the post-COVID group while those surveyed earlier were included in the pre-COVID group. We used propensity score matching and inverse propensity score weighted regression methods to account for differences in socioeconomic characteristics between the two groups. Rates of literacy (ability to read a complete sentence) were 1.5-1.6% lower among post-COVID girls as compared with similar pre-COVID girls. Among post-COVID girls in the lowest wealth quintile, rates of literacy were 3.1-3.8% lower than similar pre-COVID girls. There was no loss in literacy among post-COVID girls in the highest wealth quintile. COVID-induced loss in literacy among girls was twice in rural areas as compared to urban areas, and substantially higher among socioeconomically disadvantaged caste groups as compared with privileged caste groups. Post-COVID girls also had 0.08-0.1 lower years of schooling completed than similar pre-COVID girls but there was no difference in out-of-school rates. In a smaller subsample of 15-17 year old boys, the post-COVID group had 2% lower out-of-school rates and there was no difference in literacy or years of schooling completed as compared with matched pre-COVID boys. While markers of vulnerability such as residence, caste, and poverty further amplified the risk of learning. loss for girls, they did not have the same effect on boys.

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