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Dive into the research topics where Amanda Beatty is active.

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Featured researches published by Amanda Beatty.


Archive | 2012

The Negative Consequences of Overambitious Curricula in Developing Countries

Lant Pritchett; Amanda Beatty

Learning profiles, that track changes in student skills per year of schooling, often find shockingly low learning gains. Using data from three recent studies in South Asia and Africa, we show that a majority of students spend years of instruction with no progress on basics. We argue shallow learning profiles are in part the result of curricular paces moving much faster than the pace of learning. To demonstrate the consequences of a gap between the curriculum and student mastery, we construct a simple, formal model, which portrays learning as the result of a match between student skill and instructional levels, rather than the standard (if implicit) assumption that all children learn the same from the same instruction. A simulation shows that two countries with exactly the same potential learning could have massively divergent learning outcomes, just because of a gap between curricular and actual pace—and the country which goes faster has much lower cumulative learning. We also show that our simple simulation model of curricular gaps can replicate existing experimental findings, many of which are otherwise puzzling. Paradoxically, learning could go faster if curricula and teachers were to slow down.


Trials | 2013

Evaluating a community-based early childhood education and development program in Indonesia: study protocol for a pragmatic cluster randomized controlled trial with supplementary matched control group

Menno Pradhan; Sally Brinkman; Amanda Beatty; Amelia Maika; Elan Satriawan; Joppe de Ree; Amer Hasan

BackgroundThis paper presents the study protocol for a pragmatic cluster randomized controlled trial (RCT) with a supplementary matched control group. The aim of the trial is to evaluate a community-based early education and development program launched by the Government of Indonesia. The program was developed in collaboration with the World Bank with a total budget of US


American Economic Journal: Applied Economics | 2011

Improving Educational Quality through Enhancing Community Participation: Results from a Randomized Field Experiment in Indonesia

Menno Pradhan; Daniel Suryadarma; Amanda Beatty; Maisy Wong; Arya Gaduh; Armida Alisjahbana; Rima Prama Artha

127.7 million, and targets an estimated 738,000 children aged 0 to 6 years living in approximately 6,000 poor communities. The aim of the program is to increase access to early childhood services with the secondary aim of improving school readiness.Methods/DesignThe study is being conducted across nine districts. The baseline survey contained 310 villages, of which 100 were originally allocated to the intervention arm, 20 originally allocated to a 9-month delay staggered start, 100 originally allocated to an 18-month delay staggered start and 90 allocated to a matched control group (no intervention). The study consists of two cohorts, one comprising children aged 12 to 23 months and the other comprising children aged 48 to 59 months at baseline. The data collection instruments include child observations and task/game-based assessments as well as a questionnaire suite, village head questionnaire, service level questionnaires, household questionnaire, and child caretaker questionnaire. The baseline survey was conducted from March to April 2009, midline was conducted from April to August 2010 and endline conducted early 2013. The resultant participation rates at both the district and village levels were 90%. At the child level, the participation rate was 99.92%. The retention rate at the child level at midline was 99.67%.DiscussionThis protocol paper provides a detailed record of the trial design including a discussion regarding difficulties faced with compliance to the randomization, compliance to the dispersion schedule of community block grants, and procurement delays for baseline and midline data collections. Considering the execution of the program and the resultant threats to the study, we discuss our analytical plan and intentions for endline data collection.Trials registrationCurrent Controlled Trials ISRCTN76061874


International Journal of Educational Development | 2015

Slow Down, You're Going Too Fast: Matching Curricula to Student Skill Levels

Lant Pritchett; Amanda Beatty


Policy Research Working Papaer Series | 2011

Improving educational quality through enhancing community participation: Results from a randomized field experiment in Indonesia

Menno Pradhan; Daniel Suryadarma; Amanda Beatty; Maisy Wong; A. Alishjabana; Arya Gaduh; Rima Prama Artha


Society for Research on Educational Effectiveness | 2016

Learning Profiles: The Learning Crisis Is Not (Mostly) about Enrollment.

Justin Sandefur; Lant Pritchett; Amanda Beatty


Mathematica Policy Research Reports | 2016

MCC Indonesia Nutrition Project Impact Evaluation Baseline Report

Clair Null; Amanda Beatty; Nick Ingwersen; William Leith; Evan Borkum; Jeremy Brecher-Haimson; Anna Gage; Matt Peckarsky; Anu Rangarajan


Mathematica Policy Research Reports | 2014

MCC Indonesia Nutrition Project Impact Evaluation Design

Amanda Beatty; Evan Borkum; Anu Rangarajan; Anna Gage; Clair Null; Sukhmani Sethi


Archive | 2012

How can we make schools work better

Maisy Wong; Armida Alishjabana; Menno Pradhan; Daniel Suryadarma; Arya Gaduh; Rima Prama Artha; Aliza Marcus; Amanda Beatty


Archive | 2011

Como podemos mejorar el funcionamiento de las escuelas

Maisy Wong; Armida Alishjabana; Menno Pradhan; Daniel Suryadarma; Arya Gaduh; Rima Prama Artha; Aliza Marcus; Amanda Beatty

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Daniel Suryadarma

Australian National University

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Arya Gaduh

Centre for Strategic and International Studies

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Maisy Wong

University of Pennsylvania

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Rima Prama Artha

National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies

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Lant Pritchett

Center for Global Development

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Anu Rangarajan

Mathematica Policy Research

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