Le Laboratoire d'Action contre la Pauvreté, J-PAL, est un centre de recherche mondial qui œuvre à la réduction de la pauvreté en veillant à ce que les politiques sociales s'appuient sur des preuves scientifiques. S'appuyant sur un réseau de plus de 1,000 chercheurs affiliés dans des universités du monde entier, J-PAL mène des évaluations d'impact randomisées afin de répondre aux questions essentielles dans la lutte contre la pauvreté.
Le Laboratoire d'Action contre la Pauvreté, J-PAL, est un centre de recherche mondial qui œuvre à la réduction de la pauvreté en veillant à ce que les politiques sociales s'appuient sur des preuves scientifiques. S'appuyant sur un réseau de plus de 1,000 chercheurs affiliés dans des universités du monde entier, J-PAL mène des évaluations d'impact randomisées afin de répondre aux questions essentielles dans la lutte contre la pauvreté.
Nos chercheurs affiliés sont basés dans plus de 120 universités et effectuent des évaluations aléatoires dans le monde entier pour concevoir, évaluer et améliorer les programmes et les politiques qui visent à réduire la pauvreté. Ils définissent leurs propres agendas de recherche, collectent des fonds pour mener leurs évaluations et travaillent avec les équipes de J-PAL sur la recherche, la diffusion des résultats et la formation.
Our research, policy, and training work is fundamentally better when it is informed by a broad range of perspectives.
When I first started a literature search for a new policy insight about improving learning through school-based health interventions, the world looked very different than it does today.
Research shows that in order for students to learn, they need to be healthy enough to think, read, reason, and, even more fundamentally, to see what’s happening in the classroom. Without a healthy foundation on which to build, children may not develop the skills they need to succeed in the classroom.
Through my literature search, I quickly learned that not only was health an important factor in improving learning outcomes, but also that schools could be particularly convenient and cost-effective places to address these health concerns.
First, schools are often busy, crowded spaces where it is especially important to limit disease spread.
Second, treating some children in a school may positively affect other students who are not treated, in the case of conditions that are spread through close contact.
Third, delivering a health program at school can solve the “last-mile problem” faced by many social programs: If children are already gathered at school, one can conveniently administer treatment to many people at once.
But when the current pandemic hit I wondered how the policy insight I’d been working on for more than six months could be relevant for this new reality. At first, I worried about the usefulness of pointing out that schools are good venues to deliver health programs during a time when many schools worldwide are closed. For as long as COVID-19 remains a threat, health experts rightly warn against gathering together in one location—the very thing that makes schools such an ideal place to deliver health programs in the first place.
But as communities and governments find new and resilient ways to support families during the pandemic, schools have stood out as useful nodes within communities. For example, schools or Ministries of Education in many countries worldwide are providing much-needed nutritional support to families struggling to feed their children.
The lessons from rigorous research included in this policy insight acknowledge the reality that schools have ties to many children at once and have an already established interest in their wellbeing.
School closures due to the pandemic have highlighted a fact that was already front of mind for many families: students often rely on their school for nutrition, mental health resources, and more. Schools are therefore already accepted sources of health support, and there is potential for this support to be expanded.
Below are the takeaway messages from J-PAL’s new policy insight on improving learning outcomes through school-based health interventions. Read the full insight here.
Once it’s safe to re-open, schools may be particularly important venues for re-establishing many kinds of support that children have been lacking while stuck at home during the pandemic. Doing so holds the promise of improving not only health but also learning outcomes.