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消除低收入和中等收入国家女童入学和学习中与性别相关障碍的政策与干预措施:证据的系统评价

Policies and interventions to remove gender-related barriers to girls' school participation and learning in low- and middle-income countries: A systematic review of the evidence.

作者信息

Psaki Stephanie, Haberland Nicole, Mensch Barbara, Woyczynski Lauren, Chuang Erica

机构信息

Population Council Washington District of Columbia USA.

Population Council New York New York USA.

出版信息

Campbell Syst Rev. 2022 Jan 19;18(1):e1207. doi: 10.1002/cl2.1207. eCollection 2022 Mar.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Gender disparities in education continue to undermine girls' opportunities, despite enormous strides in recent years to improve primary enrolment and attainment for girls in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). At the regional, country and subnational levels gender gaps remain, with girls in many settings less likely to complete primary school, less likely to complete secondary, and often less likely to be literate than boys. The academic and policy literatures on the topic of gender-related barriers to girls' education are both extensive. However, there remain gaps in knowledge regarding which interventions are most likely to work in contexts with different combinations of barriers.

OBJECTIVES

This systematic review identified and assessed the strength of the evidence of interventions and exposures addressing gender-related barriers to schooling for girls in LMICs.

SEARCH METHODS

The AEA RCT Registry, Africa Bibliography, African Education Research Database, African Journals Online, DEC USAID, Dissertation Abstracts, EconLit, ELDIS, Evidence Hub, Global Index Medicus, IDEAS-Repec, Intl Clinical Trials Registry, NBER, OpenGrey, Open Knowledge Repository, POPLINE, PsychINFO, PubMed, Research for Development Outputs, ScienceDirect, Sociological Abstracts, Web of Science, as well as relevant organization websites were searched electronically in March and April of 2019. Further searches were conducted through review of bibliographies as well as through inquiries to authors of included studies, relevant researchers and relevant organizations, and completed in March 2020.

SELECTION CRITERIA

We included randomized controlled trials as well as quasi-experimental studies that used quantitative models that attempted to control for endogeneity. Manuscripts could be either published, peer-reviewed articles or grey literature such as working papers, reports and dissertations. Studies must have been published on or after 2000, employed an intervention or exposure that attempted to address a gender-related barrier to schooling, analyzed the effects of the intervention/exposure on at least one of our primary outcomes of interest, and utilized data from LMICs to be included.

DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS

A team of reviewers was grouped into pairs to independently screen articles for relevance, extract data and assess risk of bias for each included study. A third reviewer assisted in resolving any disputes. Risk of bias was assessed either through the RoB 2 tool for experimental studies or the ROBINS-I tool for quasi-experimental studies. Due to the heterogeneity of study characteristics and reported outcome measures between studies, we applied the GRADE (Grading of Recommendation, Assessment, Development and Evaluation) approach adapted for situations where a meta-analysis is not possible to synthesize the research.

RESULTS

Interventions rated as effective exist for three gender-related barriers: inability to afford tuition and fees, lack of adequate food, and insufficient academic support. Promising interventions exist for three gender-related barriers: inadequate school access, inability to afford school materials, and lack of water and sanitation. More research is needed for the remaining 12 gender-related barriers: lack of support for girls' education, child marriage and adolescent pregnancy, lack of information on returns to education/alternative roles for women, school-related gender-based violence (SRGBV), lack of safe spaces and social connections, inadequate sports programs for girls, inadequate health and childcare services, inadequate life skills, inadequate menstrual hygiene management (MHM), poor policy/legal environment, lack of teaching materials and supplies, and gender-insensitive school environment. We find substantial gaps in the evidence. Several gender-related barriers to girls' schooling are under-examined. For nine of these barriers we found fewer than 10 relevant evaluations, and for five of the barriers-child marriage and adolescent pregnancy, SRGBV, inadequate sports programs for girls, inadequate health and childcare services, and inadequate MHM-we found fewer than five relevant evaluations; thus, more research is needed to understand the most effective interventions to address many of those barriers. Also, nearly half of programs evaluated in the included studies were multi-component, and most evaluations were not designed to tease out the effects of individual components. As a result, even when interventions were effective overall, it is often difficult to identify how much, if any, of the impact is attributable to a given program component. The combination of components varies between studies, with few comparable interventions, further limiting our ability to identify packages of interventions that work well. Finally, the context-specific nature of these barriers-whether a barrier exists in a setting and how it manifests and operates-means that a program that is effective in one setting may not be effective in another.

AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: While some effective and promising approaches exist to address gender-related barriers to education for girls, evidence gaps exist on more than half of our hypothesized gender-related barriers to education, including lack of support for girls' education, SRGBV, lack of safe spaces and social connections, inadequate life skills, and inadequate MHM, among others. In some cases, despite numerous studies examining interventions addressing a specific barrier, studies either did not disaggregate results by sex, or they were not designed to isolate the effects of each intervention component. Differences in context and in implementation, such as the number of program components, curricula content, and duration of interventions, also make it difficult to compare interventions to one another. Finally, few studies looked at pathways between interventions and education outcomes, so the reasons for differences in outcomes largely remain unclear.

摘要

背景

尽管近年来中低收入国家(LMICs)在提高女童小学入学率和学业成就方面取得了巨大进展,但教育领域的性别差距仍在继续损害女童的机会。在区域、国家和次国家层面,性别差距依然存在,在许多情况下,女童完成小学学业的可能性低于男孩,完成中学学业的可能性也较低,而且识字的可能性往往也比男孩小。关于女童教育中与性别相关障碍这一主题的学术和政策文献都很丰富。然而,在哪些干预措施最有可能在存在不同障碍组合的背景下发挥作用方面,仍存在知识空白。

目的

本系统评价确定并评估了针对中低收入国家女童教育中与性别相关障碍的干预措施和暴露因素的证据强度。

检索方法

2019年3月和4月,对AEA随机对照试验注册库、非洲文献目录、非洲教育研究数据库、非洲在线期刊、美国国际开发署发展效果目录、论文摘要、经济文献数据库、发展中国家教育资源中心、证据中心、全球医学索引数据库、IDEAS - Repec、国际临床试验注册库、美国国家经济研究局、OpenGrey、开放知识存储库、人口信息在线、心理学文摘数据库、医学期刊数据库、发展研究成果数据库、科学Direct、社会学文摘数据库、科学引文索引数据库以及相关组织网站进行了电子检索。2020年3月,通过查阅参考文献以及向纳入研究的作者、相关研究人员和相关组织进行咨询,进一步开展了检索。

入选标准

我们纳入了随机对照试验以及使用定量模型试图控制内生性的准实验研究。稿件可以是已发表的、经过同行评审的文章,也可以是灰色文献,如工作论文、报告和学位论文。研究必须在千禧年之后发表,采用了试图解决与性别相关的入学障碍的干预措施或暴露因素,分析了干预措施/暴露因素对我们至少一项主要关注结果的影响,并使用了来自中低收入国家的数据。

数据收集与分析

一组评审人员两两分组,独立筛选文章的相关性,提取数据,并评估每项纳入研究的偏倚风险。第三位评审人员协助解决任何争议。通过用于实验研究的RoB 2工具或用于准实验研究的ROBINS - I工具评估偏倚风险。由于研究特征和报告的结果测量在不同研究之间存在异质性,我们采用了适用于无法进行荟萃分析情况的GRADE(推荐分级、评估、制定和评价)方法来综合研究。

结果

对于三种与性别相关的障碍,即无力支付学费、缺乏足够食物和学业支持不足,存在被评为有效的干预措施。对于三种与性别相关的障碍,即上学机会不足、无力购买学习用品以及缺乏水和卫生设施,存在有前景的干预措施。对于其余12种与性别相关的障碍,即缺乏对女童教育的支持、童婚和青少年怀孕、缺乏关于教育回报/女性替代角色的信息、学校相关的性别暴力(SRGBV)、缺乏安全空间和社会联系、女童体育项目不足、卫生和儿童保育服务不足、生活技能不足、经期卫生管理(MHM)不足、政策/法律环境不佳、缺乏教材和用品以及对性别不敏感的学校环境,还需要更多研究。我们发现证据存在很大差距。几种与性别相关的女童上学障碍研究不足。对于其中九种障碍,我们发现相关评估少于10项,对于其中五种障碍,即童婚和青少年怀孕、SRGBV、女童体育项目不足、卫生和儿童保育服务不足以及MHM不足,我们发现相关评估少于五项;因此,需要更多研究来了解解决这些障碍的最有效干预措施。此外,纳入研究中评估的项目近一半是多成分的,而且大多数评估并非旨在梳理各个成分的效果。因此,即使干预措施总体上有效,通常也很难确定有多少影响(如果有的话)可归因于特定的项目成分。不同研究之间成分的组合各不相同,可比的干预措施很少,这进一步限制了我们识别有效干预措施组合的能力。最后,这些障碍的具体背景性质,即某个障碍是否存在于某个环境中以及它如何表现和起作用,意味着在一个环境中有效的项目在另一个环境中可能无效。

作者结论

虽然存在一些有效的和有前景的方法来解决与性别相关的女童教育障碍,但在我们假设的一半以上与性别相关的教育障碍方面存在证据空白,包括缺乏对女童教育的支持、SRGBV、缺乏安全空间和社会联系、生活技能不足以及MHM不足等。在某些情况下,尽管有大量研究考察了解决特定障碍的干预措施,但研究要么没有按性别分解结果,要么没有设计用于分离每个干预成分的效果。背景和实施方面的差异,如项目成分的数量、课程内容和干预持续时间,也使得难以相互比较干预措施。最后,很少有研究探讨干预措施与教育成果之间的途径,因此结果差异的原因在很大程度上仍不清楚。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/cddb/8770660/4d042e078e85/CL2-18-e1207-g014.jpg

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