Moving Teachers to Malawi's Remote Communities: A Data-Driven Approach to Teacher Deployment

There are severe geographical disparities in pupil-teacher ratios (PTR) across Malawi, with most teachers concentrated near commercial centers and in rural schools with better amenities. Most of the variation in PTR is concentrated in small sub-district areas, suggesting a central role for micro-geographic factors in teacher distribution. Employing administrative data from several government sources, regression analysis reveals that school-level factors identified by teachers as desirable are closely associated with PTR, including access to roads, electricity, and water, and distance to the nearest trading center, suggesting a central role for teachers' interests in PTR variation. Political economy network mapping reveals that teachers leverage informal networks and political patronage to resist placement in remote schools, while administrative officials are unable to stand up to these formal and informal pressures, in part because of a lack of reliable databases and objective criteria for the allocation of teachers. This study curates a systematic database of the physical placement of all teachers in Malawi and links it with data on school facilities and geo-spatial coordinates of commercial centers. The study develops a consistent and objective measure of school remoteness, which can be applied to develop policies to create rules for equitable deployments and targeting of incentives. Growing awareness of disparities in PTRs among district education officials is already showing promising improvements in targeting of new teachers. Simulation results of planned policy applications show significant potential impacts of fiscally-neutral approaches to targeted deployments of new cohorts, as well as retention of teachers through data-calibrated incentives.

[1]  L. Wild,et al.  Fragmented governance and local service delivery in Malawi , 2014 .

[2]  V. Y. Mgomezulu,et al.  Impact of monetary incentives on teacher retention in and attraction to rural primary schools: Case of the rural allowance in Salima District of Malawi , 2018, African Educational Research Journal.

[3]  L. Crouch,et al.  Raising the Floor on Learning Levels: Equitable Improvement Starts with the Tail , 2017 .

[4]  Andrew B. Ragatz,et al.  Teacher Reform in Indonesia: The Role of Politics and Evidence in Policy Making , 2013 .

[5]  Tamar Manuelyan Atinc,et al.  Information for accountability: Transparency and citizen engagement for improved service delivery in education systems , 2017 .

[6]  A. Rosser,et al.  The political economy of teacher management reform in Indonesia , 2018, International Journal of Educational Development.

[7]  B. Chinsinga The Political Economy of Agricultural Policy Processes in Malawi: A Case Study of the Fertilizer Subsidy Programme , 2012 .

[8]  Daniel Carpenter,et al.  The forging of bureaucratic autonomy : reputations, networks, and policy innovation in executive agencies, 1862-1928 , 2001 .

[9]  M. Walton,et al.  Civil Society, Public Action and Accountability in Africa , 2011 .

[10]  Gianna Barbieri,et al.  The determinants of teacher mobility: Evidence using Italian teachers’ transfer applications , 2011 .

[11]  Tara Béteille,et al.  Getting the right teachers into the right schools : managing India’s teacher workforce , 2017 .

[12]  Oshua,et al.  USING MAIMONIDES’ RULE TO ESTIMATE THE EFFECT OF CLASS SIZE ON SCHOLASTIC ACHIEVEMENT* , 2003 .

[13]  A. Mingat,et al.  Education in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Comparative Analysis , 2012 .

[14]  Electoral Politics and Bureaucratic Discretion : Evidence from Environmental Licenses and Local Elections in Brazil ∗ , 2007 .

[15]  G. Kingdon,et al.  A Political Economy of Education in India: The Case of Uttar Pradesh , 2009 .

[16]  J. Angrist,et al.  Using Maimonides&Apos; Rule to Estimate the Effect of Class Size on Student Achievement , 1997 .

[17]  Koch,et al.  Judicial Review of Administrative Discretion , 1986 .

[18]  Martin R. West,et al.  Class-size effects in school systems around the world: Evidence from between-grade variation in TIMSS , 2006 .

[19]  Robinson The African , 2020, The Works of Mary Robinson.

[20]  Aidan Mulkeen Teachers in Anglophone Africa: Issues in Teacher Supply, Training, and Management , 2009 .

[21]  Siddharth Sharma,et al.  World Development Report 2017 : governance and the law , 2017 .

[22]  Jee‐Peng Tan,et al.  Facing Forward: Schooling for Learning in Africa , 2018 .

[23]  Henry May,et al.  The Magnitude, Destinations, and Determinants of Mathematics and Science Teacher Turnover , 2010 .