Institutionalizing Health and Education for All: Global Goals, Innovations, and Scaling Up

Health for All and Education for All have been rallying cries for a host of international development activities for more than a quarter century. Where did these global goals come from? Why have the health goals seemingly advanced so much faster than those in education? In this book, author Colette Chabbott explores the foundational role that international development organizations and the innovations they champion have played in shaping and advancing such goals. Chabbott demonstrates the importance of science and measurement in rendering some innovations more universal and compelling than others. Her analysis includes in-depth case studies of innovations developed at the grassroots and scaled up at the national and international levels by the International Center for Diarrheal Disease Research and by BRAC, once a Bangladeshi now a major international NGO. These studies all suggest that greater investment in new types of education research, based in the Third World, but with strong ties to research centers of international scope in the First World, are likely the prerequisites for achieving better, cheaper, faster universal education. This important book will provoke scholars, students, and international development practitioners to think more deeply about the cultural and scientific underpinnings of education and international development. The author’s careful analyses are particularly needed as the international community defines new global goals for the post-2015 era.

Book Features:

  • Introduces the key international organizations and movements in the field of education for development.
  • Provides a unique interpretation of the many tensions that characterize the field: government vs. non-government organizations; institutions vs. actors; and loose coupling between policies and action.
  • Addresses the current debate about research methods in education, including quantitative indicators, randomized controlled trials, and case studies.
  • Identifies new activities and potential directions related to the global goals phenomenon.

“This is that rare book, one that is grounded in decades of policy experiences in the international development field, yet is also theoretically motivated.”
—From the Foreword by Francisco O. Ramirez

“Colette Chabbott brings years of development experience and exacting sociological analysis to challenge status quo understandings about the world development enterprise in this unique, ambitious, and important book.”
David P. Baker, professor of education and sociology, Penn State University, and author of The Schooled Society

“In a masterful review of more than 50 years of global interventions aimed at achieving Education and Health for All, Chabbott utilizes the best in institutional theory and comparative analysis to provide a thought-provoking account of the organizational and institutional dynamics that structure, shape, and limit our ability to achieve some of the world’s most compelling goals.”
Karen Mundy, president, Comparative and International Education Society

1120383943
Institutionalizing Health and Education for All: Global Goals, Innovations, and Scaling Up

Health for All and Education for All have been rallying cries for a host of international development activities for more than a quarter century. Where did these global goals come from? Why have the health goals seemingly advanced so much faster than those in education? In this book, author Colette Chabbott explores the foundational role that international development organizations and the innovations they champion have played in shaping and advancing such goals. Chabbott demonstrates the importance of science and measurement in rendering some innovations more universal and compelling than others. Her analysis includes in-depth case studies of innovations developed at the grassroots and scaled up at the national and international levels by the International Center for Diarrheal Disease Research and by BRAC, once a Bangladeshi now a major international NGO. These studies all suggest that greater investment in new types of education research, based in the Third World, but with strong ties to research centers of international scope in the First World, are likely the prerequisites for achieving better, cheaper, faster universal education. This important book will provoke scholars, students, and international development practitioners to think more deeply about the cultural and scientific underpinnings of education and international development. The author’s careful analyses are particularly needed as the international community defines new global goals for the post-2015 era.

Book Features:

  • Introduces the key international organizations and movements in the field of education for development.
  • Provides a unique interpretation of the many tensions that characterize the field: government vs. non-government organizations; institutions vs. actors; and loose coupling between policies and action.
  • Addresses the current debate about research methods in education, including quantitative indicators, randomized controlled trials, and case studies.
  • Identifies new activities and potential directions related to the global goals phenomenon.

“This is that rare book, one that is grounded in decades of policy experiences in the international development field, yet is also theoretically motivated.”
—From the Foreword by Francisco O. Ramirez

“Colette Chabbott brings years of development experience and exacting sociological analysis to challenge status quo understandings about the world development enterprise in this unique, ambitious, and important book.”
David P. Baker, professor of education and sociology, Penn State University, and author of The Schooled Society

“In a masterful review of more than 50 years of global interventions aimed at achieving Education and Health for All, Chabbott utilizes the best in institutional theory and comparative analysis to provide a thought-provoking account of the organizational and institutional dynamics that structure, shape, and limit our ability to achieve some of the world’s most compelling goals.”
Karen Mundy, president, Comparative and International Education Society

34.99 In Stock
Institutionalizing Health and Education for All: Global Goals, Innovations, and Scaling Up

Institutionalizing Health and Education for All: Global Goals, Innovations, and Scaling Up

by Colette Chabbott
Institutionalizing Health and Education for All: Global Goals, Innovations, and Scaling Up

Institutionalizing Health and Education for All: Global Goals, Innovations, and Scaling Up

by Colette Chabbott

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Overview

Health for All and Education for All have been rallying cries for a host of international development activities for more than a quarter century. Where did these global goals come from? Why have the health goals seemingly advanced so much faster than those in education? In this book, author Colette Chabbott explores the foundational role that international development organizations and the innovations they champion have played in shaping and advancing such goals. Chabbott demonstrates the importance of science and measurement in rendering some innovations more universal and compelling than others. Her analysis includes in-depth case studies of innovations developed at the grassroots and scaled up at the national and international levels by the International Center for Diarrheal Disease Research and by BRAC, once a Bangladeshi now a major international NGO. These studies all suggest that greater investment in new types of education research, based in the Third World, but with strong ties to research centers of international scope in the First World, are likely the prerequisites for achieving better, cheaper, faster universal education. This important book will provoke scholars, students, and international development practitioners to think more deeply about the cultural and scientific underpinnings of education and international development. The author’s careful analyses are particularly needed as the international community defines new global goals for the post-2015 era.

Book Features:

  • Introduces the key international organizations and movements in the field of education for development.
  • Provides a unique interpretation of the many tensions that characterize the field: government vs. non-government organizations; institutions vs. actors; and loose coupling between policies and action.
  • Addresses the current debate about research methods in education, including quantitative indicators, randomized controlled trials, and case studies.
  • Identifies new activities and potential directions related to the global goals phenomenon.

“This is that rare book, one that is grounded in decades of policy experiences in the international development field, yet is also theoretically motivated.”
—From the Foreword by Francisco O. Ramirez

“Colette Chabbott brings years of development experience and exacting sociological analysis to challenge status quo understandings about the world development enterprise in this unique, ambitious, and important book.”
David P. Baker, professor of education and sociology, Penn State University, and author of The Schooled Society

“In a masterful review of more than 50 years of global interventions aimed at achieving Education and Health for All, Chabbott utilizes the best in institutional theory and comparative analysis to provide a thought-provoking account of the organizational and institutional dynamics that structure, shape, and limit our ability to achieve some of the world’s most compelling goals.”
Karen Mundy, president, Comparative and International Education Society


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780807773444
Publisher: Teachers College Press
Publication date: 12/04/2014
Series: International Perspectives in Educational Reform Series
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 5 MB

About the Author

Author,Chabbott,Colette

Table of Contents

Foreword Francisco O. Ramirez vii

Acknowledgments ix

1 Introduction 1

On the Same Track, at Different Speeds 1

Can Education Learn Something from Health? 3

Framework and Constructs 6

International Development as an Institution 8

Case Selection, Sources, and Methods 11

Terminology and Acronyms 15

Conclusions 18

2 Imagining: From Universal Rights to Universal Goals 20

Constructing Education and Health as Human Rights 21

Does Talk Matter? 24

The 1970s: Health and Education on the Same Track 25

The 1980s: Health and Education Diverge 31

The 1990s: Education Comes in from the Cold 37

Conclusions 42

3 Inventing: Carrot Soup, Magic Bullets, and Scientific Research 48

The Science of Health and Education Research 50

Oral Rehydration Therapy (ORT): Developing a Deliverable 55

Health Research: Less Heat, More Light 63

Conclusions 66

4 Adapting: A Tale of Two Sectors Mushtaque Chowdhury 69

Bangladesh and BRAC 70

BR AC: Learning Before Lobon-Gur 73

Adapting Oral Rehydration Solution (ORS): Testing the Lobon-Gur Solution 77

Adapting Nonformal Primary Education (NFPE): Learning by Doing 83

Conclusions 95

5 Scaling Up: Blueprints, Bureaucrats, and Babies in the Bathwater Mushtaque Chowdhury 99

The Oral Therapy Extension Program (OTEP): Scaling Up Nation-Wide 101

NFPE: Scaling Up … to a Point 108

Conclusions 130

6 Scaling Out: From the Basket, Into the World 137

ORT: Into the World 138

NFPE: Scaling Out 148

Conclusions 159

7 Reimagining: What Can Data Do? 163

Halfway to 2010: "They Can't Read …" 165

From Oral Reading Fluency to Early Grades Reading 168

Imagining the Parallels with Health 173

Non-Government Organizations (NGOs): The Link Between Early Grades Reading Assessments and Reading Improvement 176

Government Efforts to Improve Early Grades Reading 180

Institutionalization: Growing an Early Grades Reading Community of Practice 182

Working Conclusions 191

8 Conclusions: Why Compare? 195

Why Two Sectors? 196

Why Organize? 198

Why Professionals? 201

Why Innovate? 202

What About Science? 204

What Is to Be Learned? 206

What Will It Cost? 208

A Future for Global Education Goals? 210

Notes 213

References 223

Index 243

About the Authors 251

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

Institutionalizing Health and Education for All is that rare book, one that is grounded in decades of policy experiences in the international development field yet is also theoretically motivated.”
—From the Foreword by Francisco O. Ramirez, Stanford University School of Education


“Who sets the world agenda for massive health and educational development campaigns? Why are goals never fully achieved yet continually expanded? What happens to these agendas on the ground in developing nations? Colette Chabbott brings years of development experience and exacting sociological analysis to challenge status quo understandings about the world development enterprise in this unique, ambitious, and important book.”
David P. Baker, professor of education and sociology, Penn State University, and author of The Schooled Society


“In a masterful review of more than 50 years of global interventions aimed at achieving Education and Health for All, Chabbott utilizes the best in institutional theory and comparative analysis to provide a thought-provoking account of the organizational and institutional dynamics that structure, shape, and limit our ability to achieve some of the world’s most compelling goals.”
Karen Mundy, president, Comparative and International Education Society

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