Grant Monica J, Lloyd Cynthia B, Mensch Barbara S
University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Population Council.
Comp Educ Rev. 2013 May 1;57(2):260-284. doi: 10.1086/669121.
The provision of toilets and menstrual supplies has emerged as a promising programmatic strategy to support adolescent girls' school attendance and performance in less developed countries. We use the first round of the Malawi Schooling and Adolescent Survey (MSAS) to examine the individual- and school-level factors associated with menstruation-related school absenteeism. The MSAS is a school-based longitudinal survey of adolescent students enrolled in coed public primary schools in the southern districts of Machinga and Balaka who were aged 14-16 in 2007. Although one-third of female students report missing at least one day of school at their last menstrual period, our data suggest that menstruation only accounts for a small proportion of all female absenteeism and does not create a gender gap in absenteeism. We find no evidence for school-level variance in menstruation-related absenteeism, suggesting that absenteeism is not sensitive to school environments. Rather, co-residence with a grandmother and spending time on school work at home reduce the odds of absence during the last menstrual period.
提供厕所和经期用品已成为一种有前景的项目策略,以支持欠发达国家少女的入学率和学业表现。我们利用马拉维学校教育与青少年调查(MSAS)的第一轮数据,来研究与经期相关的缺课情况相关的个人和学校层面因素。MSAS是一项基于学校的纵向调查,对象是2007年年龄在14至16岁、就读于马钦加和巴拉卡南部地区男女混合公立小学的青少年学生。尽管三分之一的女学生报告称在上次经期至少缺课一天,但我们的数据表明,经期仅占所有女生缺课情况的一小部分,且并未造成缺课方面的性别差距。我们没有发现与经期相关的缺课情况存在学校层面差异的证据,这表明缺课情况对学校环境不敏感。相反,与祖母同住以及在家做作业的时间会降低上次经期缺课的几率。