HKS Faculty Research Working Paper Series
HKS Working Paper No. RWP12-035
August 2012
Abstract
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.
Citation
Pritchett, Lant, and Amanda Beatty. "The Negative Consequences of Overambitious Curricula in Developing Countries." HKS Faculty Research Working Paper Series RWP12-035, August 2012.