Impact of School Dropout on Human Development in Bangladesh
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.18034/ra.v7i3.266Keywords:
School dropout, human development index, education index, mean year of schooling, expected year of schoolingAbstract
The Human Development Index (HDI) is the geometric mean of normalized indices for each of the three dimensions: Education Index, Life expectancy at birth and Gross National Income (GNI) per capita. As per Human Development Report of UNDP, Bangladesh was in 136th position among 189 countries in 2017. Education index is one of the important components of HDI of a country. The lack of education, forces the poor household to engage in less productive activities which results in lower GNI. Thus we can see that education has both direct and indirect influence on HDI of a country. Education index is the function of mean year of schooling and expected year of schooling. In 2015, dropout rates of secondary and primary schools were 40.29 percent, and 22.70 percent respectively. By reducing school dropout, the mean year of schooling of any country can be increased which results in a positive change in education index and thus human development index. The present research is an attempt to examine the influence of school dropout on Human Development Index. This study is based on both primary data and secondary data. Primary data have been collected through convenience sampling technique from 200 children who dropped out at different levels of primary and secondary schools in Bangladesh. Results show that the important reasons for school dropout are poor economic conditions, poor performance in school, less interest of parents, less interest of education, lack of school facilities, broken family, orphanage & migration of parents. The study recommends some ways to reduce school dropout. The study also suggests that the mean year of schooling can be increased through the establishment of residential schools, night schools, and through implementing learn and earn scheme by the Government of Bangladesh or other organizations.
Downloads
References
Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics (2002-2003), Planning Division, Ministry of Planning, Government of the Peo-ple’s Republic of Bangladesh.
Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics (2009), Planning Division, Ministry of Planning, Government of the People’s Republic of Bangladesh.
Bridgeland JM, Dilulio JJ, Morison KB (2006) The silent epidemic. New York: Civic Enterprises, LLC.
Brown, G. “Child Labor and Educational Disadvantages- Breaking the link, Building opportunity.” The office of the UN special envoy for global education, London EC2PJF.
Bunnak, P.(2007) “ Child workers in Brick Factories: Causes and Consequences, A Research Study for cam-paign of combating the worst forms of child labor in Cambodia.” Licadho and World Vision Cambo-dia.
Chuard D, Mingat A (1996) An analysis of dropout and student leaving in primary education in Pakistan. Ma-nila, Philippines: Asian Development Bank (ADB).
Coleman JS (1988) Social Capital in the Creation of Human Capital. The American Journal of Sociology 94: 95-120.
Dorn S (1993) Origins of the "Dropout Problem". History of Education Quarterly 33: 353-373
Government of Bangladesh, (2005) Unlocking the Potential: National Strategy for Accelerated Poverty Reduc-tion, Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper, Dhaka.
Haq R (2013) Over 27 million children out of school
Hossain, M. A. (2012) “ Socio-economic Problems of Child Labor in Rajshahi City Corporation of Bangla-desh: A Reality and Challenges” Research on Humanities and Social Sciences, ISSN2224-5766, Vol-2, No-4.
Hossain, Md. Afzal (2012), “Socio-Economic Problems of Child Labor in Rajshahi City Corporation of Bang-ladesh: A Reality and Challenges”.
ILO, (1999), Convention 182: Convention on the Worst Forms of Child Labor, Geneva, International Labor Organization.
ILO-IPEC, (2006) Preventing and Eliminating the Worst Forms of Child Labor in selected formal and informal sectors in Bangladesh, Final Technical Progress Report, Geneva, p-2.
Jeynes WH (2007) The Relationship between parental involvement and urban secondary school Academic achievement. Ameta-analysis, urban Education 42: 82-110
Jingrong L (2004) High Dropout Rates in Rural School.
Kalam, I.M.S. (2007) “Glimpse on Child Labor Situation in Dhaka City Corporation Area”, Brac University Journal, 4(1), pp. 19-29
Khan AA (2008) Recalling Aligarh and Udaipur Dawn
Martins G, Oswald AS, Comassetto SH, Kieling JO, Goncalves C, et al. (2006) A package of interventions to reduce school dropout in public schools in a developing country: A feasibility study. European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry 8: 442-449.
Mohsin AO, Aslam M, Bashir F (2004) Causes of dropouts at the secondary level in the Barani areas of the Punjab (a case study of Rawalpindi district). Journal of Applied Sciences 4: 55-158.
Perter F. Orazem & Victoria Gunnarsson (2003). Child labour, School attendance and performance: A review on ILO/IPEC working paper.
Policy Paper (2014): Out-of-school Children and Child Labour. Global March Against Child Labour.
Rani UR (2011) Reasons For Rising School Dropout Rates Of Rural Girls In India- An Analysis Using Soft Computing Approach. International Journal of Current Research 3: 140-143
Roderick M (1993) The path to dropping out: Evidence for intervention. Westport, CT: Auburn House
Saadi AM, Saeed M (2010) Perceptions of students, educators and principals about quality assurance of ele-mentary teacher education. Journal of Educational Research 13: 92-104
Staff Writer (2007) Why Pakistani primary school students drop out
Todaro PM (1994) Economic development, 5th Edition .New York: Longman publishers.
Zarif T, Haider K, Ahmed AA, Bano F (2014) Probing Reasons of High Student Dropout Rate in Grade 5-6 at Public Schools of District Thatta, Sindh-Pakistan, Asian Journal of Social Sciences & Humanities 3: 158-169.
--0--
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2019 MUKTASHA DEENA CHOWDHURY
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
ABC Research Alert is an Open Access journal. Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms:
- Authors retain copyright and grant the journal the right of first publication with the work simultaneously licensed under a CC BY-NC 4.0 International License that allows others to share the work with an acknowledgment of the work's authorship and initial publication in this journal.
- Authors are able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the non-exclusive distribution of the journal's published version of their work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), with an acknowledgment of its initial publication in this journal. We require authors to inform us of any instances of re-publication.