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Global Monitoring
Report
2014
Putting the Pieces Together in Research,
Monitoring, and Evaluation
Dear Friends,
It is a great pleasure to introduce Room to Read’s seventh annual Global
Monitoring Report.
The pages that follow present evidence of the progress that we have
made as an organization on several fronts. Following the lead of our 2014
Annual Report (Solving the Puzzle: Children’s Literacy and Girls’ Education1
),
I particularly want to highlight the progress Room to Read has made
in our continued efforts to bring together the various elements of our work into an effective,
comprehensive whole.
Over the past few years we have brought together a range of once-separate program components,
such as libraries and literacy instruction, to establish our integrated Literacy Program. This shift
in program implementation requires a corresponding shift in our approach to measurement and
reporting. Reflecting this shift, the structure of this year’s report has been updated to present a
consolidated view of the results of our Literacy Program.
The report’s structure also reflects our efforts to better integrate the components of research,
monitoring, and evaluation. When deployed strategically, these complement one another:
• Research enables us to tackle forward-looking, exploratory questions of critical interest to
programs teams;
• Monitoring tracks our activities and results on an ongoing basis, shows trends over time, and
raises questions for further study;
• Evaluation tells us whether outcomes are improving for children and whether Room to Read
is responsible for this improvement. This includes our Reading Skills Evaluations—a highlight
in this year’s report, as 2014 marks the first year we are able to report findings for every
country where we have implemented literacy instruction.
Each of these components represents an essential part of our strategy as a learning organization.
As such, for each section that follows, we have reported our most important 2014 findings from
all three areas of work.
The Global Monitoring Report is one element of our commitment to being transparent about our
results and to holding ourselves accountable to our global stakeholders. We hope that the strength
of our results will encourage others to adopt similar approaches, so that we can all work together
toward the systemic changes needed to promote lifelong learning for children around the globe.
Sincerely,
Dr. Matthew Jukes
Senior Director, Global Research, Monitoring and Evaluation
1
	 www.roomtoread.org/AnnualReport/2014
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014
Introduction 	
Literacy Program	
Program Outcomes	 	
Program Reach		
Monitoring Program Activities
Girls' Education Program	
Program Outcomes	 	
Program Reach		 	
Monitoring Program Activities 	
Conclusion 			
Appendix:
Global Indicators		
About This Report		
A S I A
Sri Lanka
India
Nepal
Laos
Vietnam
Cambodia
Bangladesh
A
F R I C A
South Africa
Zambia
Tanzania
Table of Contents
1
4
6
11
13
19
21
25
26
29
30
33
Where We Work
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014
Figures
Figure 1. Total Children Benefited to Date				 2
Figure 2. Average Words Read per Minute in Program and
Comparison Schools						 6
Figure 3. Average Words Read per Minute—Vietnam		 7
Figure 4. Percentage of Children Reading for Enjoyment at Home	 8
Figure 5. Average Number of Books Checked Out per Student	 9
Figure 6. Percentage of Children Checking Out Books	 9
Figure 7. Total Literacy Program Schools to Date	 		 11
Figure 8. Total Literacy Program Schools to Date by Country		 12
Figure 9. Teachers Receiving Professional Development in
Literacy Instruction						 13
Figure 10. Percentage of Teachers Conducting Key Steps in
Reading Activities						 14
Figure 11. Change in Library Ratings, 2014				 16
Figure 12. Top Ten Most Popular Book Titles, by Publisher		 17
Figure 13. Total Secondary School Graduates to Date			 21
Figure 14. Retention and Dropout					 22
Figure 15. Total Girls' Education Program Participants to Date	 25
Figure 16. Girls' Education Program Participants to Date by Country	 25
Textboxes
Textbox 1. Testing New Ways to Track Children's Habit of Reading	 10
Textbox 2. Evaluating Librarian and Teacher Training with the
Reading Promotion Study						 14
Textbox 3. Piloting a Protocol to Reduce Dropout Risk		 22
Textbox 4. Rapid Assessment in Four Countries Highlights
Program Benefits for Girls		 				 24
List of Figures and Textboxes
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014
Introduction
Room to Read seeks to transform the lives of
children in low-income countries by focusing
on literacy and gender equality in education.
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 1
Six years ago, we set an ambitious goal to
improve educational access and opportunity for
10 million children by the end of 2015.2
As shown
in Figure 1, we are rapidly nearing this goal: as of
the end of 2014, more than 9.7 million children
have benefited from our programs. As a point
of comparison, that is more than the total
population of Sweden.3
2
	 Room to Read. “Envisioning Our Future: A Roadmap for Learning.” http://www.roomtoread.org/document.doc?id=220.
3	
The World Bank Open Data, http://data.worldbank.org, retrieved 11 August, 2015
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 2
Our annual Global Monitoring Report helps us chart our progress toward this and other goals,
presenting key results across the 10 countries where we work. Highlights of this year’s report include:
•	Our Reading Skills Evaluations continue to show that students in schools with Room to Read
literacy instruction have better reading skills than students at other schools.
•	Our School Libraries Cross-National Evaluation showed that students in schools with Room to
Read libraries are more likely to read for enjoyment than students in other schools.
•	The average number of books checked out by each child increased for the fifth consecutive
year. This growth demonstrates that Room to Read libraries are getting better and better at
strengthening children’s habit of reading.
•	As of 2014, our Girls’ Education Program has supported more than 30,000 girls to help them
stay in school and build the skills to navigate key life decisions.
In the following sections, each program—Literacy and Girls’ Education—is assessed in terms of its
outcomes, its reach, and the activities that make up the program.
The data and stories presented in this report are drawn from ongoing monitoring efforts in
2014 and from evaluations and research into our programs’ impacts on children’s educational
outcomes.4
We share our findings with our program participants, investors, partners and the
broader international education community.
4
	 For more information about our research and evaluation activities, please visit our website at
http://www.roomtoread.org/measuringresults.
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 3
Literacy Program
Our Literacy Program enables primary school
children to become independent readers.
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 4
Literacy is not only the foundation of all future
learning; it is fundamental for participation in
modern global society. Yet nearly 800 million
people across the globe—more than one out of
every seven adults—lack the ability to read and
write. That means being unable to understand
every medicine bottle, employment ad or ballot
form they encounter. Of all the illiterate people
in the world today, two-thirds are female. More
than 90 percent live in low-income countries.
Room to Read’s Literacy Program is designed
to address this challenge by transforming
primary schools into child-friendly learning
environments that enable every child to
become an independent reader. We define an
“independent reader” as a child who is able to
read and does so regularly.
Our approach includes working with schools to
help them establish libraries with books in the
children’s local languages, as well as ensuring
that teachers and librarians are trained in the
best practices of literacy instruction. By bringing
these components together, our Literacy
Program helps put children on a path toward
lifelong learning.
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 5
Program Outcomes
This section describes our 2014 progress toward our program goal to enable children to
become independent readers, with both reading skills and a habit of reading.
Reading Skills
Children have more advanced reading skills in Room to Read program schools than in nearby
comparison schools.
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 6
Reading Skills Evaluations
In our 2012 and 2013 Global Monitoring Reports, we presented the results of evaluations underway
to measure the impact of our Literacy Program on reading skills. We report children’s reading
fluency, measured in words per minute, because this measure is a good indication of whether a
child is reading fast enough to understand what he or she has read. Key to these evaluations is
a comparison of our projects with similar schools that do not benefit from our programs, which
tells us whether or not improvements in children’s reading outcomes are attributable to our work.
This year, for the first time we are able to report first and second grade results for every country
where we have implemented literacy instruction. The graphs on the previous page reflect the
scores of more than 20,000 children we have tested as part of our Reading Skills Evaluations.
Across diverse contexts, these evaluations demonstrate that children in Room to Read program
schools read more fluently than children in nearby comparison schools.
While the degree of improvement varied, Figure 2 on the previous page shows that this overall
trend was consistent across eight countries—Bangladesh, Cambodia, India, Laos, Nepal, South
Africa, Sri Lanka, and Zambia. In each of these countries, students in Room to Read program
schools showed statistically significant gains in reading fluency when compared to their peers in
other schools.
These successes are remarkable when compared with similarly focused education interventions
around the world. In a recent review of 75 evaluations of teacher training programs in low-income
countries,5
only two studies found a moderate or large effect of the kind seen in nearly all Room
to Read evaluations. The results above therefore demonstrate that overall, our Literacy Program is
making an impact in challenging environments where success has often been elusive.
In just one country—Vietnam—our
assessments were unable to show a
statistically significant difference between
students in program and comparison
schools. This does not mean that students
in program schools were struggling to
read—on the contrary, their scores were
the highest of any country we evaluated.
Rather, the lack of observed impact
resulted from the fact that students in
Vietnamese comparison schools also had
high reading scores, as shown in Figure 3.
This result from Vietnam was critical—it
meant that government schools were
already successfully building children’s
literacy skills in these communities. As such, there was no need to continue our instruction work
in Vietnam. We were thus able to re-allocate these resources toward other components of our
Literacy Program that better align with the country’s needs, such as establishing libraries and
publishing children’s books.
5
	 Ewan, Patrick J. (2015). “Improving Learning in Primary Schools of Developing Countries: a Meta-Analysis of Randomized
Experiments.” Publication forthcoming.
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 7
In the eight countries where we are continuing our instruction activities, we have efforts
underway to set specific second-grade fluency targets based on the number of words per minute
that are required for comprehension. Since word length and grammar vary among languages, this
target fluency will also differ from one language to the next.6
We will continue to collect and report data on children’s reading fluency each year to ensure our
program delivers its desired benefits. We are also preparing to launch instruction activities in
Tanzania, our newest program country, in early 2016.
Habit of Reading
Room to Read libraries demonstrably improve children’s reading behaviors.
School Libraries Cross-National Evaluation
We recently released a report7
that compared schools with and without Room to Read libraries.
This external evaluation, funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, collected data from
Room to Read libraries in India, Laos, Nepal, South Africa, Sri Lanka, and Zambia—more than 2,400
schools in all, with more than 20,000 children interviewed.
This study demonstrated that Room to Read libraries help to improve children’s habit of reading.
As shown in Figure 4, 56 percent of the children in schools with a Room to Read library report
reading for enjoyment at home, as compared to 40 percent in comparison schools.
6
	 In the past, we have used a target fluency rate of 45 – 60 words per minute, which was based on studies in a variety of languages.
7
	 Available at http://www.roomtoread.org/document.doc?id=1362.
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 8
Global Indicators
As further evidence of the impact of our
libraries, our ongoing monitoring showed
that the average number of books checked
out by each child increased for the fifth
consecutive year. Children checked out more
than 9.5 million books in 2014—an average
of 2,192 books in each library we supported.
As shown in Figure 5, the average number
of books checked out by each student has
steadily increased since we began tracking
this indicator, to a new high of 9.7 books per
student. This growth suggests that Room to
Read libraries are succeeding in their objec-
tive of building children’s habit of reading.8
Book Checkout Preferences Study
To better understand the details behind our
checkout figures, we completed a research
study that examined book checkout trends
among primary school children in Room to
Read libraries in Nepal, South Africa, and Sri
Lanka. In each country, Room to Read staff
visited a small sample of libraries to analyze
book checkout records and conducted focus
group discussions with primary grade students
and teachers.
One finding that held across all three
countries was that most children in these
schools are checking out books—with
percentages ranging from 65 percent of
children in South Africa to 82 percent of
children in Tamil-language schools in Sri
Lanka (see Figure 6). However, it was also
found that checkout was low in early grades. In most cases, first grade students were less than half
as likely to check out books compared with children from other grades. This finding suggests a way
to increase checkout—by publishing more book titles for early readers and by training teachers to
encourage checkout among younger students.9
How can we improve habits even further? Our recently completed Reading Promotion Study10
suggests that librarian training may be one of the most important drivers of students’ reading.
For more on the study and its implications for improving checkout in the future, see the textbox
on page 14.
8
	 Of course, we know that children also read books in the library without checking them out, and likely read materials other than
library books as well. For more on our ongoing work to develop a more comprehensive set of measures of children’s habit of reading,
please see the textbox on page 10.
9
	 For more on the Book Checkout Preferences Study, see the summary report at http://www.roomtoread.org/document.doc?id=1445.
10
Summary report forthcoming.
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 9
TESTING NEW WAYS TO TRACK CHILDREN’S HABIT OF READING
While the increasing book checkout rates reported above represent one
clear signal that our libraries are effectively building children’s habit of
reading, these figures alone do not tell the whole story, as children may
read many more books than they check out. To complete the picture, we are
now in the process of integrating a broader assessment of students’ habit
of reading into our global monitoring of school libraries.
As a first step, we are piloting a reading habit assessment methodology in
South Africa in 2015. The pilot builds on the methods used for the Reading
Promotion Study to develop measures that track reading behaviors
beyond checkout. Measures being piloted include students' ability to
demonstrate knowledge of popular titles, their self-reported reading frequency, and the number of titles
they can list from memory. During the pilot, Room to Read literacy coaches are assessing various measures
through interviewing students and reviewing book checkout records. The results of this pilot will inform
the development of one or more global metrics to be rolled out worldwide in 2016.
Through our research, we have been able to test reading habit measures, survey methods, and tracking
tools with the goal of establishing systems that are relevant, effective, and can be used long term.
	 Textbox 1
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 10
Program Reach
We have partnered with more than 17,000 schools across 10 countries through our
Literacy Program.
By the end of 2014, more than 9 million children had benefited from our Literacy Program—and the
number will be nearly 10 million by the time this report is released. In 2014 this number included
more than 1 million children in schools with actively supported Room to Read libraries, while nearly
85,000 children benefited from our literacy instruction component (most of whom also had access
to a Room to Read library).
In 2014, we implemented our literacy instruction activities in more than 2,900 classes in 1,206
schools. We partner with education ministries in each country to supplement gaps that exist in
the standard reading and writing curriculum—providing resources, in-service teacher training
and classroom enhancements.
We established new school libraries in 984 schools. These libraries provide children with access to
engaging books, trained librarians and a safe space to read. To ensure that Room to Read libraries
continue to serve children long into the future, we actively support each new library for three years
until it can operate sustainably on its own. A total of 4,370 libraries were under active support in 2014.
We constructed 405 libraries and classrooms across 162 schools, and upgraded 197 existing rooms in
another 47. This helps us address the unmet need for adequate learning environments for children.
In 2014, 92 percent of instruction projects were implemented at schools that also had libraries.
Implementing these components as a combined package at the same schools means that each
child benefits from a more intensive and comprehensive investment in his or her reading. In
each of these schools, our work has helped to bring new focus and rigor to the challenge of
strengthening children’s literacy.
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 11
GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 12
Monitoring Program Activities
Part of the work of our Research, Monitoring, and Evaluation team is to track the
implementation of our program activities to ensure our standards are met. The following
sections describe key findings for this activity monitoring for the Literacy Program in 2014.
Professional Development
Each year we train thousands of teachers,
librarians, and others in the skills they need to
provide effective learning environments
for children.
As demonstrated by our Reading Promotion
Study (see textbox on page 14), teachers and
librarians play a critical role in the development
of children’s reading. For this reason, our
Literacy Program provides professional
development and support so teachers and
librarians can contribute to children’s literacy
development in ways that incorporate the latest
evidence and global best practices.
In 2014 we provided professional development
to roughly 10,000 teachers, librarians, and other
school staff.
This includes 2,316 teachers who received training
in literacy instruction. We provide workshops and
on-site coaching twice per month, training teachers
in the use of evidence-based instructional routines
and regular student assessments to improve
classroom instruction. We provided a total of 206
professional development workshops in 2014.
Of the classes we supported in 2014, 84 percent
were visited by Room to Read literacy coaches
twice per month, as specified in our program design. While an improvement over 2013, we
continue to strive for a 100 percent result for this figure, and have hired additional in-country field
staff to meet this goal.
We also provided professional training in library management, reading activities, and sustainability to
librarians and other school staff in 97 percent of the more than 4,000 schools with libraries under
active support, for an average of four days per training. More than 35,000 teachers had access to an
actively supported Room to Read library in 2014.
To develop our children’s book titles, we recruit and develop local talent to ensure culturally and
linguistically relevant material, which often cannot be found locally in the countries where we work.
We host in-country workshops to introduce authors and illustrators to the basic concepts of creating
age-appropriate, engaging storybooks for children. In 2014 we trained 269 local authors and illustrators
in story and book production, and ultimately commissioned 194 to develop content for books.
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 13
Textbox 2
EVALUATING LIBRARIAN  TEACHER TRAINING WITH THE READING
PROMOTION STUDY
As part of our priority to continue improving our professional development, our recently completed
Reading Promotion Study sought to understand how librarians and teachers encourage or discourage
children’s reading.
In 2013 Room to Read established global guidelines for training teachers to conduct reading activities with
children. Observations conducted during library periods as part of this study showed that this training is
effective in helping teachers to adopt proven best practices. The majority of teachers are carrying out most of
the key steps in reading activities according to their training.
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 14
By analyzing students’ reading behavior, we further found that well-trained teachers and librarians
play a critical role in encouraging students to read, supporting our growing emphasis on professional
development and providing validation for the design of our reading activities, which are based on best
practices from high-income countries. Students read more frequently and with greater motivation when:
•	 Teachers at the school are trained by Room to Read and are supported by the principal;
•	 Teachers at the school conduct a combination of reading activities such as reading aloud, shared
reading, paired reading, and independent reading;
•	 The school has frequent library periods with a library that houses books that are favorable to children; and
•	 The language teacher uses library books to reinforce learning.
An additional major determinant of children’s motivation and behavior around reading is their level of
reading fluency. Children with better reading skills show a greater interest in reading and ultimately read
more books. However, when library periods—rather than classroom lessons—were used to teach reading
skills, students found this demotivating and read less. This finding supports Room to Read’s approach of
devoting separate time to the development of a habit of reading on the one hand and the ability to read on
the other, which then reinforce one another.
The study also pointed to ways we can improve our program. Teachers requested more hands-on and
participatory training methods to increase their confidence in carrying out reading activities, something
we have already started to incorporate into our training programs. We also need to help teachers carve out
time to carry out these activities, which one in three teachers cited as a major challenge.
Overall, the study provided valuable insights that will allow us to help teachers effectively use school
libraries to encourage children to develop a lifelong love of reading.
TEACHERS AT THE SCHOOL
HAVE BEEN TRAINED BY ROOM
TO READ AND ARE SUPPORTED
BY THE SCHOOL PRINCIPAL
TEACHERS CONDUCT A
COMBINATION OF READING
ACTIVITIES SUCH AS READ-
ING ALOUD, SHARED READ-
ING, PAIRED READING, AND
INDEPENDENT READING
THE SCHOOL HAS
FREQUENT LIBRARY
PERIODS WITH A LIBRARY
THAT HOUSES BOOKS THE
CHILDREN LIKE
THE LANGUAGE TEACHER
USES LIBRARY BOOKS
IN CLASS TO REINFORCE
LEARNING
LESSON
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 15
Library Management
Ongoing monitoring helps ensure well-run, effective libraries.
The professional development we provide helps to build the knowledge and skills needed to
implement key library management systems. In 2014 nearly all of our libraries had implemented
our standardized and recommended systems:
•	98 percent of libraries had functional checkout systems, which allow children to borrow and
take home books from the library, and
•	100 percent of libraries had book leveling systems, which enable children, teachers and
parents to identify books appropriate for students’ reading levels.
Room to Read staff utilize a Library Rating
System to evaluate each library twice
per year against a prioritized checklist of
indicators related to its physical setup,
scheduling, professional development,
and engagement with families and
communities. This helps our staff to
quickly determine the highest priority
areas for improvement, and to allocate
their school visits effectively, making
sure those with the greatest challenges
receive the most support.
Our 2014 results show that this system
is continuing to make a difference
in schools, with the percentage of
libraries receiving the lowest rating of
“Developing” decreasing from 15 percent
in the first assessment of the year to just
5 percent in the second.
Children’s Books and Instructional Materials
We published 129 titles in 15 languages in 2014.
We publish original, high-quality, developmentally appropriate children’s books in the local
languages of the countries where we work, and we also procure titles from other publishers where
available. Since we began producing children’s books, we have published 1,158 titles in 29 languages.
Our Book Checkout Preferences Study (see above under “Habit of Reading”) investigated children’s
reading preferences by assessing the characteristics of the books that were checked out most
often. One key result: children prefer Room to Read-published titles to those not published
by Room to Read by wide margins, as shown in Figure 12 on the following page. Focus group
discussions with children revealed that children prefer these titles for their colorful illustrations
and the fact that their fonts, letter sizes, and number of words per page make them easier to read.
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 16
In 2014, we distributed more than 600,000
copies of Room to Read published books
to the schools and libraries we support.
Including purchased and donated books,
the 2014 total rises to more than 2 million.
At this rate of distribution, libraries will
receive an average of 7.2 books for each
student in primary grades over the three
years of Room to Read support. We
distributed nearly 120,000 copies of
books published by Room to Read to other
entities, such as public libraries, other
nongovernmental organizations or schools
where we are not working.
We also develop materials that help
children learn to read, such as workbooks,
letter cards, and classroom posters. In
2014, 98 percent of schools where we
support literacy instruction received
these materials.
Sustainable School Infrastructure
Nearly all school infrastructure projects remain in use and in good condition long after Room to
Read’s involvement ends.
In some communities, building or
upgrading school infrastructure is one of
the most important ways Room to Read
can contribute to children’s learning. We
recognize that such facilities are unlikely
to thrive in the long run unless they are
supported by a local commitment to their
success. To promote sustainability, we ask
any communities where we work to invest
some of their own cash, materials, and/or labor to cover a portion of the total construction cost.
Communities also invest time and energy by monitoring the progress of construction and keeping
basic project records. In 2014 100 percent of school construction projects were completed with
community co-investment. This marks the fifth consecutive year in which co-investment was
achieved universally.
100% OF INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS
FROM ROOM TO READ WERE COMPLETED WITH
SIGNIFICANT SUPPORT FROM THE COMMUNITY
FINANCIAL
INVESTMENT
DONATED
MATERIALS
VOLUNTEER
LABOR
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 17
After our formal support to these infrastructure projects ends, we conduct monitoring visits
for three consecutive years following project completion. We monitor our previously completed
projects to (1) identify and repair any projects with major structural damage and (2) learn more
about the sustainability of our projects. For 2014 reporting, we visited 744 projects constructed in
2011, 2012, and 2013. Our findings included:
•	98 percent of infrastructure projects were still in use as classrooms or libraries. Most of the
remaining two percent are instead being used as teachers’ rooms, head teachers’ offices or
another administrative office. When this occurs, country teams meet with school officials to
advocate that such rooms be returned to their intended purpose per our agreements with schools.
•	Less than one percent of infrastructure projects showed signs of major structural damage,
which we have already worked with the communities to repair. We are providing both financial
and logistical support to these communities to ensure these buildings are returned to a
condition of safety. Findings are also helping to improve our designs going forward. For example,
two Cambodian projects that were damaged by heavy flooding in 2013 led to insights that will
enable us to improve the flood-readiness of future projects.
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 18
Girls, Education
Our Girls’ Education Program supports girls
to complete secondary school with the skills
necessary to negotiate key life decisions.
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 19
Educating girls and women is one of the most
powerful ways to address global poverty. Our
Girls’ Education Program works to turn the tide
against gender inequality in education across
Asia and Africa.
We focus on girls in secondary school because
that is where the biggest, most persistent gaps
in gender equality in education arise. Girls who
finish secondary school go on to earn more, have
smaller and healthier families, and are more
likely to educate their own children—helping to
end the cycle of poverty.
Key to our program are our social mobilizers,
local women who act as life skills facilitators,
mentors, and role models, working closely with
girls to help them stay in school. We assess each
girl’s individual needs to ensure she gets the
support she needs to navigate the challenges of
adolescence with the ability to make her own life
choices, both personally and professionally.
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 20
Program Outcomes
This section describes our 2014 progress toward our program goal—to ensure that girls
complete secondary school with the skills to negotiate key life decisions.
Secondary School Completion
In 2014, young women supported by the program successfully graduated from secondary school.
A total of 1,636 program participants to date have graduated from secondary school since our first
class of graduates in 2007.
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 21
Program Retention
In 2014, 91 percent of participants either remained in the
program or graduated.
Two percent of participants left a program school but enrolled
at another school, and seven percent dropped out of school.
When a girl drops out of school, her social mobilizer talks
with her and her family to understand the factors that led
to this decision. In 2014, economic challenges remained the
most frequently cited primary reason, responsible for the
dropout of 1.8 percent of program participants. Economics
were the most common factor cited in 2013 as well. Other
reasons for dropout included academic challenges (1.6
percent of participants), relocation (1.4 percent), and
marriage (1 percent).
Over the past several years, we have seen a trend of
increasing dropout among our Girls’ Education scholars,
which in part reflects the increased challenges that girls face as they grow older and advance
through school—such as early marriage, pregnancy, high-stakes exams, and pressure to earn
income. The textbox below describes one part of our strategy to address these growing challenges
with targeted support for those most in need.
PILOTING AN EARLY WARNING SYSTEM TO REDUCE DROPOUT RISK
One of the key goals of our monitoring system is to put in place processes that help us move quickly from
data to action. Last year’s report discussed the work being done in Nepal to develop an early-warning
system that would enable us to identify those girls most at risk of dropout and quickly intervene with
additional targeted support.
In 2014, our team in Nepal tracked a set of risk factors among all 3,015 girls who participated in the
program. Risk factors included: 1) missing school; 2) failing an exam; 3) missing life skills sessions; and 4)
parents/guardians missing meetings.
	 Textbox 3
3 CONSECUTIVE DAYS
OF ABSENCE FROM SCHOOL
1+ MISSED LIFE
SKILLS SESSIONS
EXAM FAILURE PARENTS’ FAILURE TO ATTEND
A ROOM TO READ PARENT MEETING
LIFE SKILLS
LESSON
ABSENCES
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20
PARENTS MEETING
EXAM
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 22
Academic Advancement and Transition11
Advancement and transition rates increased year-over-year.
In 2014, 95 percent of Girls’ Education Program participants who remained in school advanced
to the next grade level, an increase from 94 percent in 2013. Additionally, 88 percent of girls who
finished a school level and were required to pass a gatekeeping exam12
successfully transitioned to
the next school level, an increase from 84 percent in 2013.
We track these academic advancement and transition rates to monitor progress toward our goal
of supporting girls to complete secondary school. This advancement is critical to a girl’s long-term
wellbeing: for each additional year of schooling she completes, her future income increases by an
estimated 15 – 25 percent.13
The growth in these rates year over year helps to demonstrate that girls in the program are receiving
the support they need to progress toward graduation and to secure a better future for themselves
and their families.
Transitions to Tertiary Education
Though Room to Read ends our formal support to each girl after she completes her secondary
school education, we stay in touch with our program alumnae to learn how schooling has
contributed to their lives in the long term. The data we have collected to date show that 72 percent
of program graduates have pursued tertiary education through enrollment in colleges, universities,
or vocational schools.
Results like these are critical to helping us understand the long-term impacts of our programs. In
2015, we are putting in place an alumnae survey process that will enable us to report on such results
in a more systematic, ongoing way. We will report on the first set of survey results in next year’s
Global Monitoring Report.
Over the course of the year, girls who exhibited one or more risk factors were more than five times as
likely to drop out of school as girls who did not. Identifying girls most at risk to drop out has enabled our
social mobilizers in Nepal to provide additional support such as home visits, mentoring, and summarizing
the content of missed sessions.
Based on the findings in Nepal, we are now piloting this system in Tanzania and Zambia. Social mobilizers
will track the four identified risk factors among the girls on their program and assign a risk level that is
associated with a particular set of interventions. The results of the pilot in Africa will inform the Risk and
Response Protocol that will soon be rolled out to all nine Girls' Education Program countries.
11
Please note that these results do not include full 2014 results from Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, which were not yet available due to the
timing of their academic years.
12
A gatekeeping exam is a national test that students must pass to advance to the next school grade or level. We support girls who
have gaps in basic skills to tackle the challenges they face with these exams.
13
Schultz, Paul T. “Why Governments Should Invest More to Educate Girls.” World Development 30 (2): 207-25.
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 23
RAPID ASSESSMENT IN FOUR COUNTRIES HIGHLIGHTS PROGRAM
BENEFITS FOR GIRLS
One of our ongoing Girls’ Education Program priorities is to understand how
the program is perceived by its stakeholders—including parents, teachers,
community members, and program staff as well as the girls themselves. In
2014, we commissioned an independent consultant to conduct focus group
discussions and in-depth interviews in Cambodia, India, Nepal, and Zambia.
Key among the consultant’s findings were that the program increases girls’
motivation to study, their desire to stay in school, and their life skills competency.
This represents a strong validation of our efforts through the program to date.
Confidence, in and out of school, was the most common theme in discussing the benefits of life skills education.
“Earlier I was afraid of broad roads … talking to strangers. I have never been out of my village. After
learning visits to different areas, I am more confident taking public transport and talking to different
people.” (Girl interviewee)
“I have noticed every time we have assembly programs, the girls take a leading role … even in the lower
grades, you find that girls are taking a leading role.” (Head Teacher interviewee)
The program had expanded the educational goals of girls and their parents.
“My parents gave me a narrow vision of education. I only wanted to study until eighth grade. I dreamed of
cooking, marriage, and roaming with my husband in the future. But now I want to study more and more
and I have a career goal in my life.” (Girl interviewee)
“I have two elder sisters and both are primary school drop outs. When I reached eighth grade, my father
wanted me to stop coming to school and leave study. I directly talked to my father and shared my
aspiration of completing secondary education. He said, ‘You are a very confident girl.’ He promised me that
he will not stop my education in future.” (Girl focus group participant)
Girls also share their goals with other girls and influence them to set long and short term goals.
“I love attending the life skill sessions. Because of it my elder sister decided to study beyond 12th grade and
wants to become a doctor. I have been sharing all my learning from the life skill sessions with two of my
sisters who are not part of the GEP. We are now all looking to fulfill our goals.” (Girl interviewee)
The evaluation also produced a number of recommendations to improve the program. It helped to inform the
development of our Risk  Response pilot (see page 22), and inspired improvements in our approach to life
skills education. We are also acting on recommendations to expand the use of study groups for peer tutoring,
encourage more interaction between participants and program alumnae, and expand the involvement of school
teachers in the program.
Overall, the evaluation found strong evidence that participants perceive benefits of the Girls’ Education Program
in line with the two main goals of the program—improving life skills and completing secondary school. The
evaluation also helped to inform the design of our upcoming large-scale randomized controlled trial of the
program, to take place from 2016 – 18 in Rajasthan, India. This will be the first rigorous quantitative evaluation
of the program and will provide valuable information on the effectiveness of life-skills education in low-income
country contexts. Future reports will provide updates on the progress of this evaluation.
	 Textbox 4
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 24
Program
Reach
Our Girls’ Education
Program has supported
more than 30,000 girls
across nine countries.
The cumulative total of
31,733 includes 26,016
girls supported by the
program in 2014. As
Figure 15 shows, we
have steadily increased
the number of girls
receiving our support
since the program began.
31,733
Figure 15
Total Girls’ Education Program Participants to Date
10,000
0
20,000
30,000
2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 20132002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 25
Monitoring Program Activities
Our program uses a multifaceted approach, combining life skills education, mentoring,
material and academic support, and parental engagement activities. We recognize that
each girl has her own challenges to education, and we tailor the support we provide to
her needs.
The following sections describe the activities that constituted our implementation of the
Girls’ Education Program in 2014.
Life Skills Education
In 2014, 87 percent of participants received life skills education.
Our program is increasing its emphasis on building the life skills our participants will need
to succeed in school and after graduation. Life skills education includes camps, workshops
and experiential training. Topics covered include self-awareness, empathy, communication,
interpersonal skills, decision-making and problem-solving, critical and creative thinking, and
coping with stress.
This year, we are able to report new evidence that our life skills education component is
associated with lower dropout. A recent analysis of project data going back to the early years
of the Girls’ Education Program showed that girls in the program who participated in life skills
education had a 14 percent lower dropout rate than girls in the program who did not participate.
It further showed that girls who participated in life skills education had a 16 percent higher
advancement rate than girls who did not.
These findings suggest that we are on the right track. In 2016, we will launch an evaluation
in 100 schools in India that will provide a far more in-depth, rigorous assessment of the Girls’
Education Program, with a particular emphasis on life skills.
An additional area of focus around life skills education is ensuring that more girls receive it.
While the vast majority of program participants participate, achieving our goal of 100 percent
attendance has been a challenge, particularly in poorer areas. Country teams are deploying a
range of strategies to address the shortfall, including working with school districts to schedule
sessions at times that make it easier for girls to attend.
AN ADVANCEMENT
RATE THAT WAS
A DROPOUT RATE
THAT WAS
16% HIGHER
14% LOWER
THAN GIRLS WHO DID NOT PARTICIPATE
LIF
E
SKILLS
LESSON
LIFE SKILLS EDUCATION WAS ASSOCIATED WITH....
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 26
Mentoring
Social mobilizers provided mentoring to each of the more than 26,000 girls currently on the program.
Each girl participating in the program benefits from the mentoring support of her social mobilizer.
Part of a social mobilizer’s role is to be a trustworthy adult who can serve as an advisor, role model
and advocate—something that, for some girls, would be unavailable otherwise. As such, a social
mobilizer can make an enormous difference during a critical period in a girl’s emotional development.
In addition, social mobilizers identify girls who need additional mentoring by keeping a close
watch on each girl’s attendance, actions, and academic performance. In 2014, 23 percent of the
girls in the program received additional mentoring in response to demonstrated need.
Material Support
We provided material support to 38 percent of participants in 2014.
Material support addresses some of the common economic barriers that can keep a girl from
finishing secondary school.
This type of support can include coverage of school-related and non-school-related costs. School-
related costs include school and exam fees or the costs of textbooks, school supplies and clean
uniforms. Non-school-related costs can take the form of a new bike, bus fares, feminine hygiene
products, or a room in a boarding house closer to school.
Each girl’s need for material support is assessed annually to ensure that available support is
provided to those girls who need it most. As we reported in 2013’s Global Monitoring Report, we
have shifted our program toward providing more in-depth life skills education, while
de-emphasizing material support. Our increasing focus on life skills acknowledges that girls
face a wide range of challenges that go beyond the economic. Life skills education seeks
to provide girls with the tools they will need to stand on their own and become proactive,
independent adults throughout their lives. In keeping with this re-alignment of priorities, we
continued to reduce the number of girls receiving material support in 2014.
Academic Support
In 2014, 80 percent of Girls’ Education Program participants received support from local tutors
engaged by Room to Read.
We seek to ensure that girls have the knowledge they need to succeed in class.
We provide academic support in the form of remedial instruction, tutoring and exam preparation.
A 2014 review of project data from all nine countries where we have implemented the program
found that girls who received academic support were less likely to drop out and more likely to
advance to the next grade than girls who did not.
Beginning in 2015, we are making several changes to the way academic support is provided that
are intended to improve cost-effectiveness and sustainability. Large-scale hiring of external tutors
is costly, and as the availability of skilled tutors varied significantly across contexts, quality was
difficult to guarantee in some areas.
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 27
Our new approach integrates academic support elements across the program, rather than
treating it as a distinct component. For example, life skills education will include special focus
on academic behaviors, persistence, and other skills required to succeed in school. Additional
mentoring sessions will be provided to girls who struggle academically. In some cases, exam
preparation will still be provided as an element of material support; however, this will be more
strictly targeted based on a girl's individual needs.
We will report on progress toward this new approach in next year’s Global Monitoring Report.
Parent and Guardian Engagement
In 2014, 82 percent of Girls’ Education Program participants’ parents and guardians attended
parents’ meetings.
Parent and guardian engagement in their daughters’ education is essential for program
sustainability and larger program transformation.
One way our Girls’ Education Program seeks to engage parents is through bimonthly meetings, which
allow parents and guardians the opportunity to learn from each other in supporting their daughters.
These meetings help us to shift parents’ attitudes toward greater support and engagement. In
Tanzania, one participant described the impact of the meetings as follows:
“We don’t talk to our girls at home. We don’t know what they are doing at school. But now we
come here to talk and now we know that, yes, this is what we are supposed to do. We must help
our girls go to school.”
This kind of parental engagement is critical in helping girls to stay in school. In an analysis of
multiple years of project data worldwide, we found that girls whose parents attended meetings
were more than 20 percent less likely to drop out than girls whose parents did not attend. In
a separate analysis in Nepal, girls whose parents attended every meeting were more than 90
percent less likely to drop out.
In light of this finding, teams are making significant efforts to increase parents’ attendance, such
as more engaging content and procedures for follow-up with parents who don’t attend.
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 28
Conclusion
This report is a synthesis of evidence collected
through a range of processes across 10 different
countries. By putting the pieces of the puzzle
together and combining insights from our
research, monitoring, and evaluation, we can see
the complete picture: what we are doing well,
what can be improved, and how.
This year’s report provides further evidence that our programs are working. Children’s reading
skills are markedly improved, and they continue to check out more books each year. More than
a thousand girls have finished secondary school with help from Room to Read—and those who
participate in our life skills education are more likely to stay in school and continue to advance.
We are pleased to share this information with external audiences as part of our commitment to
remaining transparent about our work and accountable to our beneficiaries, donors and other key
stakeholders. We look forward to continuing to share these results in next year’s report and beyond.
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 29
Appendix: Global Indicators
Most of the figures presented in this report come from our Global Indicators process. The Global
Indicators are a set of key metrics we collect on an ongoing basis across all 10 countries where we
work and report publicly each year. Although we revisit and update these indicators periodically,
most remain the same from year to year, enabling us to report on trends over time. Results from
the past three years for each indicator are presented in the tables below.
Literacy
Indicator 2012 2013 2014
New school libraries established 1,925 1,457 984*
Cumulative school libraries established 15,094 16,550 17,534
Schools with instruction component 599 1,046 1,206
Classes with instruction component 1,173 2,043 2,914
Average number of books checked out per student across school
libraries under active support
8.2 8.9 9.7
Average number of books checked out per library 1,670 1,904 2,192
Total books checked out in supported libraries 9,732,468 10,104,899 9,514,469*
Children with access to school libraries under active support 1,296,989 1,173,036 1,001,393*
Children benefiting from instruction component 37,964 62,597 84,958
Average number of children per school library under
active support
222 222 230
Teachers with access to school libraries under active support 41,942 39,861 35,925*
Teachers benefiting from instruction component 1,071 1,749 2,316
Literacy instruction workshops delivered 112 174 206
New infrastructure projects completed 246 225 209
New rooms constructed 550 464 405
Rooms repaired  renovated (new indicator) — — 197
New Room to Read titles published 167 155 129
Cumulative Room to Read titles 874 1,029 1,158
Local authors and illustrators trained 305 229 269
Local authors and illustrators commissioned to develop content 245 223 194
Room to Read books distributed to Room to Read projects 1,357,610 1,194,362 647,733*
*Note: In recent years, we have intentionally shifted from establishing libraries alone to implementing our
more intensive, full Literacy Program at each school. As such, the number of libraries established each year has
reduced, as are other related indicators.
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 30
Literacy (Continued)
Indicator 2012 2013 2014
Room to Read books distributed to other organizations 212,299 155,449 119,892
Average number of books provided per student per year
to supported libraries
2.66 2.09 2.11
Percentage supported libraries where school personnel
received training
99% 93% 97%
Percentage of supported libraries with book leveling systems 96% 100% 100%
Percentage of supported libraries with functional
checkout systems
99% 99% 98%
Percentage of new infrastructure projects constructed with
community co-investment
100% 100% 100%
Percentage of rooms built in previous three most recent years
that are still in use
95% 96% 98%
Percentage of projects built in previous three project years
with major structural damage
0.3% 0.6% 0.9%
Percentage of instruction classes receiving two coaching
visits per month
88% 80% 84%
Percentage of instruction classes receiving required materials 86% 100% 100%
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 31
Girls' Education
Indicator 2012 2013 2014
New graduates 289 399 441
Cumulative graduates 798 1,195 1,636
School dropout rate 5% 4% 7%
Advancement rate 94% 94% 95%
Transition rate 85% 84% 88%
Number of Girls’ Education Program participants
supported this year
17,741 21,792 26,016
Cumulative number of Girls’ Education Program
participants supported
20,375 25,830 31,733
Percentage of program participants who received
academic support
84% 84% 80%
Percentage of program participants who participated in life
skills education
86% 88% 87%
Percentage of program participants whose parent/guardian(s)
participated in program meetings
88% 86% 82%
Percentage of program participants who received
material support
65% 52% 38%
Percentage of program participants who received additional
mentoring based on need
43% 38% 23%
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 32
About This Report
Data Collection
This report is based on data collected by our country-based staff. We collected data on each of the
more than 4,000 projects we actively supported in 2014. Our country teams upload data collected
through ongoing monitoring and support visits into a common web-based database. In the first
quarter of the following year, each country’s Research, Monitoring and Evaluation team leads a
reflection process, reviewing both programs to examine trends in the data and identify areas for
improvement. The team documents these discussions and ensures that they feed into the next
programmatic annual planning cycle.
Acknowledgments
Many individuals contributed to this report. The report was produced by the Global Research,
Monitoring and Evaluation team led by Matthew Jukes. Ryan Hebert led worldwide data collection
and analysis and managed report development. Editorial feedback and programmatic review were
provided by Alisha Berger, Celia Bolam, Bryson Brown, Peter Cooper, Julie Elis, Erin Ganju, Monica
Griffith, Rebecca Hankin, Cory Heyman, Emily Leys, Geetha Murali, Kerri Thomsen, and Linda Tran.
Emily Witt provided database support, and Steve Cox provided marketing and communications
support. Graphic design was completed by Melanie Doherty Design.
Our worldwide Research, Monitoring  Evaluation team led in-country data collection, entry,
analysis, and reflection. The team includes Kala Ahikari, Md. Sarwar Basher, Peter Cooper,
Padmanav Dutta, Liana Epstein, Ryan Hebert, Chantou Heng, Mini Joshi, Matthew Jukes, Victor
Kabwe, Badruzzaman Khan, Abdullah Mamun, Geetha Mayadunne, Prisca Mdee, Pradeep Mishra,
Khanthanouphone Mixaykone, Neha Nagpal, Zukiswa Nee-Whang, Khanyisa Phaweni, Thinh
Nguyen Quang, Annika Rigole, Vijay Sastry, Tonin Seoun, Mayank Sharma, Viet Ta, Prashanta Thapa,
Dileesh Varghese, and Soulinthone Vilayphanh.
Finally, we would like to offer a special thank you to the staff of our Literacy and Girls’ Education
Programs around the world for providing us with the opportunity to report on your excellent work.
We are grateful to all of you.
Feedback?
We welcome your feedback on this report. Please e-mail your questions and comments to
info@roomtoread.org with “2014 Global Monitoring Report” in the subject line.
	 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 33
World Change Starts with Educated Children.®
WWW.ROOMTOREAD.ORG

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Room_to_Read_2014_Global_Monitoring_Report

  • 2.
  • 3. Putting the Pieces Together in Research, Monitoring, and Evaluation Dear Friends, It is a great pleasure to introduce Room to Read’s seventh annual Global Monitoring Report. The pages that follow present evidence of the progress that we have made as an organization on several fronts. Following the lead of our 2014 Annual Report (Solving the Puzzle: Children’s Literacy and Girls’ Education1 ), I particularly want to highlight the progress Room to Read has made in our continued efforts to bring together the various elements of our work into an effective, comprehensive whole. Over the past few years we have brought together a range of once-separate program components, such as libraries and literacy instruction, to establish our integrated Literacy Program. This shift in program implementation requires a corresponding shift in our approach to measurement and reporting. Reflecting this shift, the structure of this year’s report has been updated to present a consolidated view of the results of our Literacy Program. The report’s structure also reflects our efforts to better integrate the components of research, monitoring, and evaluation. When deployed strategically, these complement one another: • Research enables us to tackle forward-looking, exploratory questions of critical interest to programs teams; • Monitoring tracks our activities and results on an ongoing basis, shows trends over time, and raises questions for further study; • Evaluation tells us whether outcomes are improving for children and whether Room to Read is responsible for this improvement. This includes our Reading Skills Evaluations—a highlight in this year’s report, as 2014 marks the first year we are able to report findings for every country where we have implemented literacy instruction. Each of these components represents an essential part of our strategy as a learning organization. As such, for each section that follows, we have reported our most important 2014 findings from all three areas of work. The Global Monitoring Report is one element of our commitment to being transparent about our results and to holding ourselves accountable to our global stakeholders. We hope that the strength of our results will encourage others to adopt similar approaches, so that we can all work together toward the systemic changes needed to promote lifelong learning for children around the globe. Sincerely, Dr. Matthew Jukes Senior Director, Global Research, Monitoring and Evaluation 1 www.roomtoread.org/AnnualReport/2014 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014
  • 4. Introduction Literacy Program Program Outcomes Program Reach Monitoring Program Activities Girls' Education Program Program Outcomes Program Reach Monitoring Program Activities Conclusion Appendix: Global Indicators About This Report A S I A Sri Lanka India Nepal Laos Vietnam Cambodia Bangladesh A F R I C A South Africa Zambia Tanzania Table of Contents 1 4 6 11 13 19 21 25 26 29 30 33 Where We Work GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014
  • 5. Figures Figure 1. Total Children Benefited to Date 2 Figure 2. Average Words Read per Minute in Program and Comparison Schools 6 Figure 3. Average Words Read per Minute—Vietnam 7 Figure 4. Percentage of Children Reading for Enjoyment at Home 8 Figure 5. Average Number of Books Checked Out per Student 9 Figure 6. Percentage of Children Checking Out Books 9 Figure 7. Total Literacy Program Schools to Date 11 Figure 8. Total Literacy Program Schools to Date by Country 12 Figure 9. Teachers Receiving Professional Development in Literacy Instruction 13 Figure 10. Percentage of Teachers Conducting Key Steps in Reading Activities 14 Figure 11. Change in Library Ratings, 2014 16 Figure 12. Top Ten Most Popular Book Titles, by Publisher 17 Figure 13. Total Secondary School Graduates to Date 21 Figure 14. Retention and Dropout 22 Figure 15. Total Girls' Education Program Participants to Date 25 Figure 16. Girls' Education Program Participants to Date by Country 25 Textboxes Textbox 1. Testing New Ways to Track Children's Habit of Reading 10 Textbox 2. Evaluating Librarian and Teacher Training with the Reading Promotion Study 14 Textbox 3. Piloting a Protocol to Reduce Dropout Risk 22 Textbox 4. Rapid Assessment in Four Countries Highlights Program Benefits for Girls 24 List of Figures and Textboxes GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014
  • 6. Introduction Room to Read seeks to transform the lives of children in low-income countries by focusing on literacy and gender equality in education. GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 1
  • 7. Six years ago, we set an ambitious goal to improve educational access and opportunity for 10 million children by the end of 2015.2 As shown in Figure 1, we are rapidly nearing this goal: as of the end of 2014, more than 9.7 million children have benefited from our programs. As a point of comparison, that is more than the total population of Sweden.3 2 Room to Read. “Envisioning Our Future: A Roadmap for Learning.” http://www.roomtoread.org/document.doc?id=220. 3 The World Bank Open Data, http://data.worldbank.org, retrieved 11 August, 2015 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 2
  • 8. Our annual Global Monitoring Report helps us chart our progress toward this and other goals, presenting key results across the 10 countries where we work. Highlights of this year’s report include: • Our Reading Skills Evaluations continue to show that students in schools with Room to Read literacy instruction have better reading skills than students at other schools. • Our School Libraries Cross-National Evaluation showed that students in schools with Room to Read libraries are more likely to read for enjoyment than students in other schools. • The average number of books checked out by each child increased for the fifth consecutive year. This growth demonstrates that Room to Read libraries are getting better and better at strengthening children’s habit of reading. • As of 2014, our Girls’ Education Program has supported more than 30,000 girls to help them stay in school and build the skills to navigate key life decisions. In the following sections, each program—Literacy and Girls’ Education—is assessed in terms of its outcomes, its reach, and the activities that make up the program. The data and stories presented in this report are drawn from ongoing monitoring efforts in 2014 and from evaluations and research into our programs’ impacts on children’s educational outcomes.4 We share our findings with our program participants, investors, partners and the broader international education community. 4 For more information about our research and evaluation activities, please visit our website at http://www.roomtoread.org/measuringresults. GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 3
  • 9. Literacy Program Our Literacy Program enables primary school children to become independent readers. GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 4
  • 10. Literacy is not only the foundation of all future learning; it is fundamental for participation in modern global society. Yet nearly 800 million people across the globe—more than one out of every seven adults—lack the ability to read and write. That means being unable to understand every medicine bottle, employment ad or ballot form they encounter. Of all the illiterate people in the world today, two-thirds are female. More than 90 percent live in low-income countries. Room to Read’s Literacy Program is designed to address this challenge by transforming primary schools into child-friendly learning environments that enable every child to become an independent reader. We define an “independent reader” as a child who is able to read and does so regularly. Our approach includes working with schools to help them establish libraries with books in the children’s local languages, as well as ensuring that teachers and librarians are trained in the best practices of literacy instruction. By bringing these components together, our Literacy Program helps put children on a path toward lifelong learning. GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 5
  • 11. Program Outcomes This section describes our 2014 progress toward our program goal to enable children to become independent readers, with both reading skills and a habit of reading. Reading Skills Children have more advanced reading skills in Room to Read program schools than in nearby comparison schools. GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 6
  • 12. Reading Skills Evaluations In our 2012 and 2013 Global Monitoring Reports, we presented the results of evaluations underway to measure the impact of our Literacy Program on reading skills. We report children’s reading fluency, measured in words per minute, because this measure is a good indication of whether a child is reading fast enough to understand what he or she has read. Key to these evaluations is a comparison of our projects with similar schools that do not benefit from our programs, which tells us whether or not improvements in children’s reading outcomes are attributable to our work. This year, for the first time we are able to report first and second grade results for every country where we have implemented literacy instruction. The graphs on the previous page reflect the scores of more than 20,000 children we have tested as part of our Reading Skills Evaluations. Across diverse contexts, these evaluations demonstrate that children in Room to Read program schools read more fluently than children in nearby comparison schools. While the degree of improvement varied, Figure 2 on the previous page shows that this overall trend was consistent across eight countries—Bangladesh, Cambodia, India, Laos, Nepal, South Africa, Sri Lanka, and Zambia. In each of these countries, students in Room to Read program schools showed statistically significant gains in reading fluency when compared to their peers in other schools. These successes are remarkable when compared with similarly focused education interventions around the world. In a recent review of 75 evaluations of teacher training programs in low-income countries,5 only two studies found a moderate or large effect of the kind seen in nearly all Room to Read evaluations. The results above therefore demonstrate that overall, our Literacy Program is making an impact in challenging environments where success has often been elusive. In just one country—Vietnam—our assessments were unable to show a statistically significant difference between students in program and comparison schools. This does not mean that students in program schools were struggling to read—on the contrary, their scores were the highest of any country we evaluated. Rather, the lack of observed impact resulted from the fact that students in Vietnamese comparison schools also had high reading scores, as shown in Figure 3. This result from Vietnam was critical—it meant that government schools were already successfully building children’s literacy skills in these communities. As such, there was no need to continue our instruction work in Vietnam. We were thus able to re-allocate these resources toward other components of our Literacy Program that better align with the country’s needs, such as establishing libraries and publishing children’s books. 5 Ewan, Patrick J. (2015). “Improving Learning in Primary Schools of Developing Countries: a Meta-Analysis of Randomized Experiments.” Publication forthcoming. GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 7
  • 13. In the eight countries where we are continuing our instruction activities, we have efforts underway to set specific second-grade fluency targets based on the number of words per minute that are required for comprehension. Since word length and grammar vary among languages, this target fluency will also differ from one language to the next.6 We will continue to collect and report data on children’s reading fluency each year to ensure our program delivers its desired benefits. We are also preparing to launch instruction activities in Tanzania, our newest program country, in early 2016. Habit of Reading Room to Read libraries demonstrably improve children’s reading behaviors. School Libraries Cross-National Evaluation We recently released a report7 that compared schools with and without Room to Read libraries. This external evaluation, funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, collected data from Room to Read libraries in India, Laos, Nepal, South Africa, Sri Lanka, and Zambia—more than 2,400 schools in all, with more than 20,000 children interviewed. This study demonstrated that Room to Read libraries help to improve children’s habit of reading. As shown in Figure 4, 56 percent of the children in schools with a Room to Read library report reading for enjoyment at home, as compared to 40 percent in comparison schools. 6 In the past, we have used a target fluency rate of 45 – 60 words per minute, which was based on studies in a variety of languages. 7 Available at http://www.roomtoread.org/document.doc?id=1362. GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 8
  • 14. Global Indicators As further evidence of the impact of our libraries, our ongoing monitoring showed that the average number of books checked out by each child increased for the fifth consecutive year. Children checked out more than 9.5 million books in 2014—an average of 2,192 books in each library we supported. As shown in Figure 5, the average number of books checked out by each student has steadily increased since we began tracking this indicator, to a new high of 9.7 books per student. This growth suggests that Room to Read libraries are succeeding in their objec- tive of building children’s habit of reading.8 Book Checkout Preferences Study To better understand the details behind our checkout figures, we completed a research study that examined book checkout trends among primary school children in Room to Read libraries in Nepal, South Africa, and Sri Lanka. In each country, Room to Read staff visited a small sample of libraries to analyze book checkout records and conducted focus group discussions with primary grade students and teachers. One finding that held across all three countries was that most children in these schools are checking out books—with percentages ranging from 65 percent of children in South Africa to 82 percent of children in Tamil-language schools in Sri Lanka (see Figure 6). However, it was also found that checkout was low in early grades. In most cases, first grade students were less than half as likely to check out books compared with children from other grades. This finding suggests a way to increase checkout—by publishing more book titles for early readers and by training teachers to encourage checkout among younger students.9 How can we improve habits even further? Our recently completed Reading Promotion Study10 suggests that librarian training may be one of the most important drivers of students’ reading. For more on the study and its implications for improving checkout in the future, see the textbox on page 14. 8 Of course, we know that children also read books in the library without checking them out, and likely read materials other than library books as well. For more on our ongoing work to develop a more comprehensive set of measures of children’s habit of reading, please see the textbox on page 10. 9 For more on the Book Checkout Preferences Study, see the summary report at http://www.roomtoread.org/document.doc?id=1445. 10 Summary report forthcoming. GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 9
  • 15. TESTING NEW WAYS TO TRACK CHILDREN’S HABIT OF READING While the increasing book checkout rates reported above represent one clear signal that our libraries are effectively building children’s habit of reading, these figures alone do not tell the whole story, as children may read many more books than they check out. To complete the picture, we are now in the process of integrating a broader assessment of students’ habit of reading into our global monitoring of school libraries. As a first step, we are piloting a reading habit assessment methodology in South Africa in 2015. The pilot builds on the methods used for the Reading Promotion Study to develop measures that track reading behaviors beyond checkout. Measures being piloted include students' ability to demonstrate knowledge of popular titles, their self-reported reading frequency, and the number of titles they can list from memory. During the pilot, Room to Read literacy coaches are assessing various measures through interviewing students and reviewing book checkout records. The results of this pilot will inform the development of one or more global metrics to be rolled out worldwide in 2016. Through our research, we have been able to test reading habit measures, survey methods, and tracking tools with the goal of establishing systems that are relevant, effective, and can be used long term. Textbox 1 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 10
  • 16. Program Reach We have partnered with more than 17,000 schools across 10 countries through our Literacy Program. By the end of 2014, more than 9 million children had benefited from our Literacy Program—and the number will be nearly 10 million by the time this report is released. In 2014 this number included more than 1 million children in schools with actively supported Room to Read libraries, while nearly 85,000 children benefited from our literacy instruction component (most of whom also had access to a Room to Read library). In 2014, we implemented our literacy instruction activities in more than 2,900 classes in 1,206 schools. We partner with education ministries in each country to supplement gaps that exist in the standard reading and writing curriculum—providing resources, in-service teacher training and classroom enhancements. We established new school libraries in 984 schools. These libraries provide children with access to engaging books, trained librarians and a safe space to read. To ensure that Room to Read libraries continue to serve children long into the future, we actively support each new library for three years until it can operate sustainably on its own. A total of 4,370 libraries were under active support in 2014. We constructed 405 libraries and classrooms across 162 schools, and upgraded 197 existing rooms in another 47. This helps us address the unmet need for adequate learning environments for children. In 2014, 92 percent of instruction projects were implemented at schools that also had libraries. Implementing these components as a combined package at the same schools means that each child benefits from a more intensive and comprehensive investment in his or her reading. In each of these schools, our work has helped to bring new focus and rigor to the challenge of strengthening children’s literacy. GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 11
  • 18. Monitoring Program Activities Part of the work of our Research, Monitoring, and Evaluation team is to track the implementation of our program activities to ensure our standards are met. The following sections describe key findings for this activity monitoring for the Literacy Program in 2014. Professional Development Each year we train thousands of teachers, librarians, and others in the skills they need to provide effective learning environments for children. As demonstrated by our Reading Promotion Study (see textbox on page 14), teachers and librarians play a critical role in the development of children’s reading. For this reason, our Literacy Program provides professional development and support so teachers and librarians can contribute to children’s literacy development in ways that incorporate the latest evidence and global best practices. In 2014 we provided professional development to roughly 10,000 teachers, librarians, and other school staff. This includes 2,316 teachers who received training in literacy instruction. We provide workshops and on-site coaching twice per month, training teachers in the use of evidence-based instructional routines and regular student assessments to improve classroom instruction. We provided a total of 206 professional development workshops in 2014. Of the classes we supported in 2014, 84 percent were visited by Room to Read literacy coaches twice per month, as specified in our program design. While an improvement over 2013, we continue to strive for a 100 percent result for this figure, and have hired additional in-country field staff to meet this goal. We also provided professional training in library management, reading activities, and sustainability to librarians and other school staff in 97 percent of the more than 4,000 schools with libraries under active support, for an average of four days per training. More than 35,000 teachers had access to an actively supported Room to Read library in 2014. To develop our children’s book titles, we recruit and develop local talent to ensure culturally and linguistically relevant material, which often cannot be found locally in the countries where we work. We host in-country workshops to introduce authors and illustrators to the basic concepts of creating age-appropriate, engaging storybooks for children. In 2014 we trained 269 local authors and illustrators in story and book production, and ultimately commissioned 194 to develop content for books. GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 13
  • 19. Textbox 2 EVALUATING LIBRARIAN TEACHER TRAINING WITH THE READING PROMOTION STUDY As part of our priority to continue improving our professional development, our recently completed Reading Promotion Study sought to understand how librarians and teachers encourage or discourage children’s reading. In 2013 Room to Read established global guidelines for training teachers to conduct reading activities with children. Observations conducted during library periods as part of this study showed that this training is effective in helping teachers to adopt proven best practices. The majority of teachers are carrying out most of the key steps in reading activities according to their training. GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 14
  • 20. By analyzing students’ reading behavior, we further found that well-trained teachers and librarians play a critical role in encouraging students to read, supporting our growing emphasis on professional development and providing validation for the design of our reading activities, which are based on best practices from high-income countries. Students read more frequently and with greater motivation when: • Teachers at the school are trained by Room to Read and are supported by the principal; • Teachers at the school conduct a combination of reading activities such as reading aloud, shared reading, paired reading, and independent reading; • The school has frequent library periods with a library that houses books that are favorable to children; and • The language teacher uses library books to reinforce learning. An additional major determinant of children’s motivation and behavior around reading is their level of reading fluency. Children with better reading skills show a greater interest in reading and ultimately read more books. However, when library periods—rather than classroom lessons—were used to teach reading skills, students found this demotivating and read less. This finding supports Room to Read’s approach of devoting separate time to the development of a habit of reading on the one hand and the ability to read on the other, which then reinforce one another. The study also pointed to ways we can improve our program. Teachers requested more hands-on and participatory training methods to increase their confidence in carrying out reading activities, something we have already started to incorporate into our training programs. We also need to help teachers carve out time to carry out these activities, which one in three teachers cited as a major challenge. Overall, the study provided valuable insights that will allow us to help teachers effectively use school libraries to encourage children to develop a lifelong love of reading. TEACHERS AT THE SCHOOL HAVE BEEN TRAINED BY ROOM TO READ AND ARE SUPPORTED BY THE SCHOOL PRINCIPAL TEACHERS CONDUCT A COMBINATION OF READING ACTIVITIES SUCH AS READ- ING ALOUD, SHARED READ- ING, PAIRED READING, AND INDEPENDENT READING THE SCHOOL HAS FREQUENT LIBRARY PERIODS WITH A LIBRARY THAT HOUSES BOOKS THE CHILDREN LIKE THE LANGUAGE TEACHER USES LIBRARY BOOKS IN CLASS TO REINFORCE LEARNING LESSON GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 15
  • 21. Library Management Ongoing monitoring helps ensure well-run, effective libraries. The professional development we provide helps to build the knowledge and skills needed to implement key library management systems. In 2014 nearly all of our libraries had implemented our standardized and recommended systems: • 98 percent of libraries had functional checkout systems, which allow children to borrow and take home books from the library, and • 100 percent of libraries had book leveling systems, which enable children, teachers and parents to identify books appropriate for students’ reading levels. Room to Read staff utilize a Library Rating System to evaluate each library twice per year against a prioritized checklist of indicators related to its physical setup, scheduling, professional development, and engagement with families and communities. This helps our staff to quickly determine the highest priority areas for improvement, and to allocate their school visits effectively, making sure those with the greatest challenges receive the most support. Our 2014 results show that this system is continuing to make a difference in schools, with the percentage of libraries receiving the lowest rating of “Developing” decreasing from 15 percent in the first assessment of the year to just 5 percent in the second. Children’s Books and Instructional Materials We published 129 titles in 15 languages in 2014. We publish original, high-quality, developmentally appropriate children’s books in the local languages of the countries where we work, and we also procure titles from other publishers where available. Since we began producing children’s books, we have published 1,158 titles in 29 languages. Our Book Checkout Preferences Study (see above under “Habit of Reading”) investigated children’s reading preferences by assessing the characteristics of the books that were checked out most often. One key result: children prefer Room to Read-published titles to those not published by Room to Read by wide margins, as shown in Figure 12 on the following page. Focus group discussions with children revealed that children prefer these titles for their colorful illustrations and the fact that their fonts, letter sizes, and number of words per page make them easier to read. GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 16
  • 22. In 2014, we distributed more than 600,000 copies of Room to Read published books to the schools and libraries we support. Including purchased and donated books, the 2014 total rises to more than 2 million. At this rate of distribution, libraries will receive an average of 7.2 books for each student in primary grades over the three years of Room to Read support. We distributed nearly 120,000 copies of books published by Room to Read to other entities, such as public libraries, other nongovernmental organizations or schools where we are not working. We also develop materials that help children learn to read, such as workbooks, letter cards, and classroom posters. In 2014, 98 percent of schools where we support literacy instruction received these materials. Sustainable School Infrastructure Nearly all school infrastructure projects remain in use and in good condition long after Room to Read’s involvement ends. In some communities, building or upgrading school infrastructure is one of the most important ways Room to Read can contribute to children’s learning. We recognize that such facilities are unlikely to thrive in the long run unless they are supported by a local commitment to their success. To promote sustainability, we ask any communities where we work to invest some of their own cash, materials, and/or labor to cover a portion of the total construction cost. Communities also invest time and energy by monitoring the progress of construction and keeping basic project records. In 2014 100 percent of school construction projects were completed with community co-investment. This marks the fifth consecutive year in which co-investment was achieved universally. 100% OF INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS FROM ROOM TO READ WERE COMPLETED WITH SIGNIFICANT SUPPORT FROM THE COMMUNITY FINANCIAL INVESTMENT DONATED MATERIALS VOLUNTEER LABOR GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 17
  • 23. After our formal support to these infrastructure projects ends, we conduct monitoring visits for three consecutive years following project completion. We monitor our previously completed projects to (1) identify and repair any projects with major structural damage and (2) learn more about the sustainability of our projects. For 2014 reporting, we visited 744 projects constructed in 2011, 2012, and 2013. Our findings included: • 98 percent of infrastructure projects were still in use as classrooms or libraries. Most of the remaining two percent are instead being used as teachers’ rooms, head teachers’ offices or another administrative office. When this occurs, country teams meet with school officials to advocate that such rooms be returned to their intended purpose per our agreements with schools. • Less than one percent of infrastructure projects showed signs of major structural damage, which we have already worked with the communities to repair. We are providing both financial and logistical support to these communities to ensure these buildings are returned to a condition of safety. Findings are also helping to improve our designs going forward. For example, two Cambodian projects that were damaged by heavy flooding in 2013 led to insights that will enable us to improve the flood-readiness of future projects. GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 18
  • 24. Girls, Education Our Girls’ Education Program supports girls to complete secondary school with the skills necessary to negotiate key life decisions. GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 19
  • 25. Educating girls and women is one of the most powerful ways to address global poverty. Our Girls’ Education Program works to turn the tide against gender inequality in education across Asia and Africa. We focus on girls in secondary school because that is where the biggest, most persistent gaps in gender equality in education arise. Girls who finish secondary school go on to earn more, have smaller and healthier families, and are more likely to educate their own children—helping to end the cycle of poverty. Key to our program are our social mobilizers, local women who act as life skills facilitators, mentors, and role models, working closely with girls to help them stay in school. We assess each girl’s individual needs to ensure she gets the support she needs to navigate the challenges of adolescence with the ability to make her own life choices, both personally and professionally. GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 20
  • 26. Program Outcomes This section describes our 2014 progress toward our program goal—to ensure that girls complete secondary school with the skills to negotiate key life decisions. Secondary School Completion In 2014, young women supported by the program successfully graduated from secondary school. A total of 1,636 program participants to date have graduated from secondary school since our first class of graduates in 2007. GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 21
  • 27. Program Retention In 2014, 91 percent of participants either remained in the program or graduated. Two percent of participants left a program school but enrolled at another school, and seven percent dropped out of school. When a girl drops out of school, her social mobilizer talks with her and her family to understand the factors that led to this decision. In 2014, economic challenges remained the most frequently cited primary reason, responsible for the dropout of 1.8 percent of program participants. Economics were the most common factor cited in 2013 as well. Other reasons for dropout included academic challenges (1.6 percent of participants), relocation (1.4 percent), and marriage (1 percent). Over the past several years, we have seen a trend of increasing dropout among our Girls’ Education scholars, which in part reflects the increased challenges that girls face as they grow older and advance through school—such as early marriage, pregnancy, high-stakes exams, and pressure to earn income. The textbox below describes one part of our strategy to address these growing challenges with targeted support for those most in need. PILOTING AN EARLY WARNING SYSTEM TO REDUCE DROPOUT RISK One of the key goals of our monitoring system is to put in place processes that help us move quickly from data to action. Last year’s report discussed the work being done in Nepal to develop an early-warning system that would enable us to identify those girls most at risk of dropout and quickly intervene with additional targeted support. In 2014, our team in Nepal tracked a set of risk factors among all 3,015 girls who participated in the program. Risk factors included: 1) missing school; 2) failing an exam; 3) missing life skills sessions; and 4) parents/guardians missing meetings. Textbox 3 3 CONSECUTIVE DAYS OF ABSENCE FROM SCHOOL 1+ MISSED LIFE SKILLS SESSIONS EXAM FAILURE PARENTS’ FAILURE TO ATTEND A ROOM TO READ PARENT MEETING LIFE SKILLS LESSON ABSENCES 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 PARENTS MEETING EXAM GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 22
  • 28. Academic Advancement and Transition11 Advancement and transition rates increased year-over-year. In 2014, 95 percent of Girls’ Education Program participants who remained in school advanced to the next grade level, an increase from 94 percent in 2013. Additionally, 88 percent of girls who finished a school level and were required to pass a gatekeeping exam12 successfully transitioned to the next school level, an increase from 84 percent in 2013. We track these academic advancement and transition rates to monitor progress toward our goal of supporting girls to complete secondary school. This advancement is critical to a girl’s long-term wellbeing: for each additional year of schooling she completes, her future income increases by an estimated 15 – 25 percent.13 The growth in these rates year over year helps to demonstrate that girls in the program are receiving the support they need to progress toward graduation and to secure a better future for themselves and their families. Transitions to Tertiary Education Though Room to Read ends our formal support to each girl after she completes her secondary school education, we stay in touch with our program alumnae to learn how schooling has contributed to their lives in the long term. The data we have collected to date show that 72 percent of program graduates have pursued tertiary education through enrollment in colleges, universities, or vocational schools. Results like these are critical to helping us understand the long-term impacts of our programs. In 2015, we are putting in place an alumnae survey process that will enable us to report on such results in a more systematic, ongoing way. We will report on the first set of survey results in next year’s Global Monitoring Report. Over the course of the year, girls who exhibited one or more risk factors were more than five times as likely to drop out of school as girls who did not. Identifying girls most at risk to drop out has enabled our social mobilizers in Nepal to provide additional support such as home visits, mentoring, and summarizing the content of missed sessions. Based on the findings in Nepal, we are now piloting this system in Tanzania and Zambia. Social mobilizers will track the four identified risk factors among the girls on their program and assign a risk level that is associated with a particular set of interventions. The results of the pilot in Africa will inform the Risk and Response Protocol that will soon be rolled out to all nine Girls' Education Program countries. 11 Please note that these results do not include full 2014 results from Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, which were not yet available due to the timing of their academic years. 12 A gatekeeping exam is a national test that students must pass to advance to the next school grade or level. We support girls who have gaps in basic skills to tackle the challenges they face with these exams. 13 Schultz, Paul T. “Why Governments Should Invest More to Educate Girls.” World Development 30 (2): 207-25. GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 23
  • 29. RAPID ASSESSMENT IN FOUR COUNTRIES HIGHLIGHTS PROGRAM BENEFITS FOR GIRLS One of our ongoing Girls’ Education Program priorities is to understand how the program is perceived by its stakeholders—including parents, teachers, community members, and program staff as well as the girls themselves. In 2014, we commissioned an independent consultant to conduct focus group discussions and in-depth interviews in Cambodia, India, Nepal, and Zambia. Key among the consultant’s findings were that the program increases girls’ motivation to study, their desire to stay in school, and their life skills competency. This represents a strong validation of our efforts through the program to date. Confidence, in and out of school, was the most common theme in discussing the benefits of life skills education. “Earlier I was afraid of broad roads … talking to strangers. I have never been out of my village. After learning visits to different areas, I am more confident taking public transport and talking to different people.” (Girl interviewee) “I have noticed every time we have assembly programs, the girls take a leading role … even in the lower grades, you find that girls are taking a leading role.” (Head Teacher interviewee) The program had expanded the educational goals of girls and their parents. “My parents gave me a narrow vision of education. I only wanted to study until eighth grade. I dreamed of cooking, marriage, and roaming with my husband in the future. But now I want to study more and more and I have a career goal in my life.” (Girl interviewee) “I have two elder sisters and both are primary school drop outs. When I reached eighth grade, my father wanted me to stop coming to school and leave study. I directly talked to my father and shared my aspiration of completing secondary education. He said, ‘You are a very confident girl.’ He promised me that he will not stop my education in future.” (Girl focus group participant) Girls also share their goals with other girls and influence them to set long and short term goals. “I love attending the life skill sessions. Because of it my elder sister decided to study beyond 12th grade and wants to become a doctor. I have been sharing all my learning from the life skill sessions with two of my sisters who are not part of the GEP. We are now all looking to fulfill our goals.” (Girl interviewee) The evaluation also produced a number of recommendations to improve the program. It helped to inform the development of our Risk Response pilot (see page 22), and inspired improvements in our approach to life skills education. We are also acting on recommendations to expand the use of study groups for peer tutoring, encourage more interaction between participants and program alumnae, and expand the involvement of school teachers in the program. Overall, the evaluation found strong evidence that participants perceive benefits of the Girls’ Education Program in line with the two main goals of the program—improving life skills and completing secondary school. The evaluation also helped to inform the design of our upcoming large-scale randomized controlled trial of the program, to take place from 2016 – 18 in Rajasthan, India. This will be the first rigorous quantitative evaluation of the program and will provide valuable information on the effectiveness of life-skills education in low-income country contexts. Future reports will provide updates on the progress of this evaluation. Textbox 4 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 24
  • 30. Program Reach Our Girls’ Education Program has supported more than 30,000 girls across nine countries. The cumulative total of 31,733 includes 26,016 girls supported by the program in 2014. As Figure 15 shows, we have steadily increased the number of girls receiving our support since the program began. 31,733 Figure 15 Total Girls’ Education Program Participants to Date 10,000 0 20,000 30,000 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 20132002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 25
  • 31. Monitoring Program Activities Our program uses a multifaceted approach, combining life skills education, mentoring, material and academic support, and parental engagement activities. We recognize that each girl has her own challenges to education, and we tailor the support we provide to her needs. The following sections describe the activities that constituted our implementation of the Girls’ Education Program in 2014. Life Skills Education In 2014, 87 percent of participants received life skills education. Our program is increasing its emphasis on building the life skills our participants will need to succeed in school and after graduation. Life skills education includes camps, workshops and experiential training. Topics covered include self-awareness, empathy, communication, interpersonal skills, decision-making and problem-solving, critical and creative thinking, and coping with stress. This year, we are able to report new evidence that our life skills education component is associated with lower dropout. A recent analysis of project data going back to the early years of the Girls’ Education Program showed that girls in the program who participated in life skills education had a 14 percent lower dropout rate than girls in the program who did not participate. It further showed that girls who participated in life skills education had a 16 percent higher advancement rate than girls who did not. These findings suggest that we are on the right track. In 2016, we will launch an evaluation in 100 schools in India that will provide a far more in-depth, rigorous assessment of the Girls’ Education Program, with a particular emphasis on life skills. An additional area of focus around life skills education is ensuring that more girls receive it. While the vast majority of program participants participate, achieving our goal of 100 percent attendance has been a challenge, particularly in poorer areas. Country teams are deploying a range of strategies to address the shortfall, including working with school districts to schedule sessions at times that make it easier for girls to attend. AN ADVANCEMENT RATE THAT WAS A DROPOUT RATE THAT WAS 16% HIGHER 14% LOWER THAN GIRLS WHO DID NOT PARTICIPATE LIF E SKILLS LESSON LIFE SKILLS EDUCATION WAS ASSOCIATED WITH.... GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 26
  • 32. Mentoring Social mobilizers provided mentoring to each of the more than 26,000 girls currently on the program. Each girl participating in the program benefits from the mentoring support of her social mobilizer. Part of a social mobilizer’s role is to be a trustworthy adult who can serve as an advisor, role model and advocate—something that, for some girls, would be unavailable otherwise. As such, a social mobilizer can make an enormous difference during a critical period in a girl’s emotional development. In addition, social mobilizers identify girls who need additional mentoring by keeping a close watch on each girl’s attendance, actions, and academic performance. In 2014, 23 percent of the girls in the program received additional mentoring in response to demonstrated need. Material Support We provided material support to 38 percent of participants in 2014. Material support addresses some of the common economic barriers that can keep a girl from finishing secondary school. This type of support can include coverage of school-related and non-school-related costs. School- related costs include school and exam fees or the costs of textbooks, school supplies and clean uniforms. Non-school-related costs can take the form of a new bike, bus fares, feminine hygiene products, or a room in a boarding house closer to school. Each girl’s need for material support is assessed annually to ensure that available support is provided to those girls who need it most. As we reported in 2013’s Global Monitoring Report, we have shifted our program toward providing more in-depth life skills education, while de-emphasizing material support. Our increasing focus on life skills acknowledges that girls face a wide range of challenges that go beyond the economic. Life skills education seeks to provide girls with the tools they will need to stand on their own and become proactive, independent adults throughout their lives. In keeping with this re-alignment of priorities, we continued to reduce the number of girls receiving material support in 2014. Academic Support In 2014, 80 percent of Girls’ Education Program participants received support from local tutors engaged by Room to Read. We seek to ensure that girls have the knowledge they need to succeed in class. We provide academic support in the form of remedial instruction, tutoring and exam preparation. A 2014 review of project data from all nine countries where we have implemented the program found that girls who received academic support were less likely to drop out and more likely to advance to the next grade than girls who did not. Beginning in 2015, we are making several changes to the way academic support is provided that are intended to improve cost-effectiveness and sustainability. Large-scale hiring of external tutors is costly, and as the availability of skilled tutors varied significantly across contexts, quality was difficult to guarantee in some areas. GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 27
  • 33. Our new approach integrates academic support elements across the program, rather than treating it as a distinct component. For example, life skills education will include special focus on academic behaviors, persistence, and other skills required to succeed in school. Additional mentoring sessions will be provided to girls who struggle academically. In some cases, exam preparation will still be provided as an element of material support; however, this will be more strictly targeted based on a girl's individual needs. We will report on progress toward this new approach in next year’s Global Monitoring Report. Parent and Guardian Engagement In 2014, 82 percent of Girls’ Education Program participants’ parents and guardians attended parents’ meetings. Parent and guardian engagement in their daughters’ education is essential for program sustainability and larger program transformation. One way our Girls’ Education Program seeks to engage parents is through bimonthly meetings, which allow parents and guardians the opportunity to learn from each other in supporting their daughters. These meetings help us to shift parents’ attitudes toward greater support and engagement. In Tanzania, one participant described the impact of the meetings as follows: “We don’t talk to our girls at home. We don’t know what they are doing at school. But now we come here to talk and now we know that, yes, this is what we are supposed to do. We must help our girls go to school.” This kind of parental engagement is critical in helping girls to stay in school. In an analysis of multiple years of project data worldwide, we found that girls whose parents attended meetings were more than 20 percent less likely to drop out than girls whose parents did not attend. In a separate analysis in Nepal, girls whose parents attended every meeting were more than 90 percent less likely to drop out. In light of this finding, teams are making significant efforts to increase parents’ attendance, such as more engaging content and procedures for follow-up with parents who don’t attend. GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 28
  • 34. Conclusion This report is a synthesis of evidence collected through a range of processes across 10 different countries. By putting the pieces of the puzzle together and combining insights from our research, monitoring, and evaluation, we can see the complete picture: what we are doing well, what can be improved, and how. This year’s report provides further evidence that our programs are working. Children’s reading skills are markedly improved, and they continue to check out more books each year. More than a thousand girls have finished secondary school with help from Room to Read—and those who participate in our life skills education are more likely to stay in school and continue to advance. We are pleased to share this information with external audiences as part of our commitment to remaining transparent about our work and accountable to our beneficiaries, donors and other key stakeholders. We look forward to continuing to share these results in next year’s report and beyond. GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 29
  • 35. Appendix: Global Indicators Most of the figures presented in this report come from our Global Indicators process. The Global Indicators are a set of key metrics we collect on an ongoing basis across all 10 countries where we work and report publicly each year. Although we revisit and update these indicators periodically, most remain the same from year to year, enabling us to report on trends over time. Results from the past three years for each indicator are presented in the tables below. Literacy Indicator 2012 2013 2014 New school libraries established 1,925 1,457 984* Cumulative school libraries established 15,094 16,550 17,534 Schools with instruction component 599 1,046 1,206 Classes with instruction component 1,173 2,043 2,914 Average number of books checked out per student across school libraries under active support 8.2 8.9 9.7 Average number of books checked out per library 1,670 1,904 2,192 Total books checked out in supported libraries 9,732,468 10,104,899 9,514,469* Children with access to school libraries under active support 1,296,989 1,173,036 1,001,393* Children benefiting from instruction component 37,964 62,597 84,958 Average number of children per school library under active support 222 222 230 Teachers with access to school libraries under active support 41,942 39,861 35,925* Teachers benefiting from instruction component 1,071 1,749 2,316 Literacy instruction workshops delivered 112 174 206 New infrastructure projects completed 246 225 209 New rooms constructed 550 464 405 Rooms repaired renovated (new indicator) — — 197 New Room to Read titles published 167 155 129 Cumulative Room to Read titles 874 1,029 1,158 Local authors and illustrators trained 305 229 269 Local authors and illustrators commissioned to develop content 245 223 194 Room to Read books distributed to Room to Read projects 1,357,610 1,194,362 647,733* *Note: In recent years, we have intentionally shifted from establishing libraries alone to implementing our more intensive, full Literacy Program at each school. As such, the number of libraries established each year has reduced, as are other related indicators. GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 30
  • 36. Literacy (Continued) Indicator 2012 2013 2014 Room to Read books distributed to other organizations 212,299 155,449 119,892 Average number of books provided per student per year to supported libraries 2.66 2.09 2.11 Percentage supported libraries where school personnel received training 99% 93% 97% Percentage of supported libraries with book leveling systems 96% 100% 100% Percentage of supported libraries with functional checkout systems 99% 99% 98% Percentage of new infrastructure projects constructed with community co-investment 100% 100% 100% Percentage of rooms built in previous three most recent years that are still in use 95% 96% 98% Percentage of projects built in previous three project years with major structural damage 0.3% 0.6% 0.9% Percentage of instruction classes receiving two coaching visits per month 88% 80% 84% Percentage of instruction classes receiving required materials 86% 100% 100% GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 31
  • 37. Girls' Education Indicator 2012 2013 2014 New graduates 289 399 441 Cumulative graduates 798 1,195 1,636 School dropout rate 5% 4% 7% Advancement rate 94% 94% 95% Transition rate 85% 84% 88% Number of Girls’ Education Program participants supported this year 17,741 21,792 26,016 Cumulative number of Girls’ Education Program participants supported 20,375 25,830 31,733 Percentage of program participants who received academic support 84% 84% 80% Percentage of program participants who participated in life skills education 86% 88% 87% Percentage of program participants whose parent/guardian(s) participated in program meetings 88% 86% 82% Percentage of program participants who received material support 65% 52% 38% Percentage of program participants who received additional mentoring based on need 43% 38% 23% GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 32
  • 38. About This Report Data Collection This report is based on data collected by our country-based staff. We collected data on each of the more than 4,000 projects we actively supported in 2014. Our country teams upload data collected through ongoing monitoring and support visits into a common web-based database. In the first quarter of the following year, each country’s Research, Monitoring and Evaluation team leads a reflection process, reviewing both programs to examine trends in the data and identify areas for improvement. The team documents these discussions and ensures that they feed into the next programmatic annual planning cycle. Acknowledgments Many individuals contributed to this report. The report was produced by the Global Research, Monitoring and Evaluation team led by Matthew Jukes. Ryan Hebert led worldwide data collection and analysis and managed report development. Editorial feedback and programmatic review were provided by Alisha Berger, Celia Bolam, Bryson Brown, Peter Cooper, Julie Elis, Erin Ganju, Monica Griffith, Rebecca Hankin, Cory Heyman, Emily Leys, Geetha Murali, Kerri Thomsen, and Linda Tran. Emily Witt provided database support, and Steve Cox provided marketing and communications support. Graphic design was completed by Melanie Doherty Design. Our worldwide Research, Monitoring Evaluation team led in-country data collection, entry, analysis, and reflection. The team includes Kala Ahikari, Md. Sarwar Basher, Peter Cooper, Padmanav Dutta, Liana Epstein, Ryan Hebert, Chantou Heng, Mini Joshi, Matthew Jukes, Victor Kabwe, Badruzzaman Khan, Abdullah Mamun, Geetha Mayadunne, Prisca Mdee, Pradeep Mishra, Khanthanouphone Mixaykone, Neha Nagpal, Zukiswa Nee-Whang, Khanyisa Phaweni, Thinh Nguyen Quang, Annika Rigole, Vijay Sastry, Tonin Seoun, Mayank Sharma, Viet Ta, Prashanta Thapa, Dileesh Varghese, and Soulinthone Vilayphanh. Finally, we would like to offer a special thank you to the staff of our Literacy and Girls’ Education Programs around the world for providing us with the opportunity to report on your excellent work. We are grateful to all of you. Feedback? We welcome your feedback on this report. Please e-mail your questions and comments to info@roomtoread.org with “2014 Global Monitoring Report” in the subject line. GLOBAL MONITORING REPORT 2014 | 33
  • 39. World Change Starts with Educated Children.® WWW.ROOMTOREAD.ORG