Self-Learning at the Right Level, COVID-19 School Closure, and Non-cognitive Abilities

Publication | April 2024
SHARE THIS PAGE

A resilient education system can benefit from supplementary individualized learning programs.

The COVID-19 pandemic and associated school closures exacerbated the global learning crisis, especially for children in developing countries. Teaching at the right level is gaining greater importance in the policy arena to recover the learning loss. However, the focus on the noncognitive abilities of students influencing their ability to bridge learning gaps is still very limited. We investigate the long-term effects of the "self-learning at the right level" program, which is found to be effective in the short run in improving the cognitive and non-cognitive abilities of disadvantaged students in Bangladesh. We revisit these students almost 6 years after the intervention to find that its effects on non-cognitive abilities remain perceptible, whereas those on cognitive abilities might have been attenuated. This study is among the few to examine the long-term effects of experimental educational interventions and shows that such interventions can effectively sustain students’ non-cognitive abilities amid academic disruptions.

WORKING PAPER 1441

Additional Details

Authors
Type
Series
Subjects
  • Education
Countries
  • Bangladesh