Understanding Educational Inequality and its Policy Implications: A Ghanaian School District Case
Abstract
This study investigates structural inequalities in Ghanian basic school education to inform relevant strategies to uplift the education outcomes for rural and low-income communities. The study was designed as a case study of a Ghanaian rural local government district’s basic education. Using a mixed-method approach, the study blends both qualitative data from community and households’ meetings, discussions, interviews, and field notes with statistical data from the district’s documents. A total of 148 people across a local government, local community, and local school level participated in this study. The findings revealed that inequality in the Ghanaian rural district researched is a problem of metro-centric education and development policies, as well as colonial legacies, layered on geographic, socio-economic, and cultural marginalisation. Therefore, the study concludes that education inequality in Ghana has more to do with the marginalisation of females., rural and low-income families’ voices and cultural assets in the education process. The study recommends that local-level policy practitioners and educators approach education and development from a justice lens by re-thinking new possibilities of reaching out to, and including the most socially marginalized groups, especially females and rural and low-income families in the education process. Ghanaian policy stakeholders need to be socio-culturally sensitive and place conscious to confront the structural marginalisation when enacting education and development strategies.
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