Coming soon – SharEd 2.0! Keep an eye out for updates and redirection to a new landing page in the coming months. Thanks for visiting.

 

Read Liberia: Let's Read Grade 2 Student Activity Booklet

Read Liberia Activity Student Activity book for Grade 2

Read Liberia: Let's Read Grade 1 Student Activity Booklet

Let's Read Grade 1-- student activity book developed by the Read Liberia Activity

READ Liberia Let's Read Grade 1 Text Book

Let's Read Grade One-- student textbook developed under Liberia READ Activity

READ Liberia Grade 1 Supplemental Readers

10 Grade one student supplemental reading books

READ Liberia Grade 1 Supplemental Reader

15 Grade 1 supplemental reading books

READ Liberia Grade 2 Supplemental Reader

15 Grade Two Supplemental Reading Books (B)

Read Liberia: Grade 2 Supplemental Reader

10 Grade Two student supplemental reading books

CIES 2019 Presentation: An examination of executive function skills in primary 1 students from Liberia

Executive functions are a cognitive skill set that underlie our goal-directed, planning, and problem solving behavior, and include the components of working memory, inhibitory control, and cognitive flexibility. EF skills undergo the majority of development during the pre-primary years of a child’s life and have been shown to contribute to academic success. However, most of our knowledge about children’s EF skills have been based on research with children living in high-income countries. This presentation reports on findings from the administration of an EF assessment with children from a West African country. Students entering Primary 1 grade for the first time from Kindergarten class were sampled. All students were administered four pre-literacy tasks and a set of questions measuring socio-economic status. Half of the sample also received EF touch games, including two training modules, two tasks measuring inhibitory control and 1 task measuring working memory. The presentation will focus on the findings of the use of EF Touch with this sample of children from a West African country. First, a brief description of the process of adapting and revising the tools for use in Liberia is reported. Second, a descriptive analysis is presented in order to describe the feasibility of using EF Touch with young children in this context. Third, children’s performance on the three tasks is summarized and correlations among the scores on the three tasks is reported and discussed. Fourth, a model exploring the unique contributions of simple reaction time and demographic characteristics is presented. Finally, the overall contribution to the field of early childhood assessment and executive function measurement in LMICs is discussed.

Nigeria Reading Access and Research Activity (RARA): Development of Teaching and Learning Materials for Early Grade Reading Instruction

This document focuses on the instructional materials for early reading in Hausa developed under Nigeria RARA. It documents the process through which the materials were conceptualized. The intention is to provide guidance to similar projects implemented by donors, ministries of education, non-government organizations (NGOs), and private publishers. The lessons documented are most applicable in contexts in which existing materials do not adequately support early reading instruction or are very scarce. While Nigeria RARA materials are exemplars of a research-based approach to materials development, they are pilot versions. Similar initiatives are encouraged to build upon this model and make improvements of their own.

Ghana Teacher Questionnaire

Under the USAID Partnership for Education: Testing activity, a teacher questionnaire was introduced to the 2015 national EGRA/EGMA survey in Ghana. This was in response to the 2013 EGRA/EGMA pupil data, which raised questions about how both pupils and their teachers experienced the language of instruction (LOI) policy, which stipulates that pupils should be taught in the Ghanaian language of the local area in the early grades and transition to English by P4. In an effort to learn more about how the LOI policy is implemented in schools, this teacher questionnaire was added in 2015 to collect more information about teacher preparation and instructional practices related to language use. The questionnaire was administered to 671 P2 teachers.

Pages