dc.description.abstract | Recent policy initiatives on education have focused on improving
access to education and retaining pupils in schools through equity and
quality enhancing policies such as the Free Primary Education (FPE).
However, despite FPE, some parents are still keeping their children at
home, while others have sought private schooling where they pay fees.
This study applies a multinomial logit model on data obtained from
the Kenya Integrated Household Budget Survey of 2005/06 to
investigate how household characteristics such as the education of the
household head, household expenditure, and school characteristics such
as fees, test scores and pupil-teacher ratio (PTR) influence parents’
choice of primary schooling for their children. The results indicate that
the non-schooling option is highly influenced by household
characteristics, which include child’s age, number of siblings, schooling
of the household head and area of residence, while the private school
option is influenced by almost all household characteristics and schoollevel
factors. Surprisingly, distance, pupil-teacher ratio and
performance in examinations do not seem to affect the probability of
enrolling children in private schools. Urban households are more likely
not to enroll their children in school, but more likely to send them to
private schools after deciding to enroll them. In general, the study finds
that parents consider quality when making schooling decisions for
their children. Therefore, policies addressing school quality are likely
to be more effective in increasing school enrolment. To increase quality
there is need to improve school infrastructure and address teacher
shortages in some schools. | en |