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Linkages Between Microfinance and Effective Education with a Focus on Parental Involvement

How can microfinance institutions aid parental involvement in education?
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This study examines the potential impact of microfinance on the quality of education, by looking into what happens when microfinance clients send their children to school.It addresses the following questions:

  • What are the educational situations of the children?
  • What could be the impact of parents and teachers upon educational outcomes?

The study looks at:

  • The perceived value of education among parents and their involvement levels in their children's education;
  • The effectiveness of teachers and their motivation levels.

The study researches one of the possibilities to improve the existing government school system: the involvement of parents. It also identifies possible ways in which microfinance institutions (MFIs) could affect parental involvement by grassroots approaches, and finds that:

  • Parents view education as a means to get a good job and a better life in the future irrespective of the gender of the child;
  • Microfinance clients are eager to invest in the education of their children;
  • However, they are not involved in their children's schooling.

The study concludes that:

  • Parental involvement could make schools accountable, with positive results for the quality of education;
  • Due to their direct and frequent interaction with their clients, MFIs would be able to affect educational outcomes in ways that top-down development approaches would not;
  • MFIs could therefore become an important channel for grassroots education reform.

About this Publication

By Quaegebeur, M. & Marthi, S.
Published