Purchasing & Procurement

Getting Textbooks to Every Child in Sub-Saharan Africa: Strategies for Addressing the High Cost and Low Availability Problem

Getting Textbooks to Every Child in Sub-Saharan Africa: Strategies for Addressing the High Cost and Low Availability Problem

World Bank Group 2015

This report focuses on cost and financing barriers to textbook provision in sub-Saharan Africa. It explores, in depth, the cost and financial barriers that restrict textbook availability in schools across much of the region. It also examines policies adopted in India, the Philippines, and Vietnam that have helped these countries make textbooks affordable and available for all children. Finally, the study provides a thorough assessment of the pros and cons of digital teaching and learning materials and cautions against the assumption that they can immediately replace printed textbooks.

Technical Brief: Book Supply Chain - The Process and Cost of Getting Teaching and Learning Materials to Kids

Technical Brief: Book Supply Chain - The Process and Cost of Getting Teaching and Learning Materials to Kids

USAID

This technical brief presents the technical and logistical challenges encountered by the ACCELERE! Project during planning, forecasting, title development, publishing, printing, procuring, and distributing training and learning materials to Congolese students, teachers, directors, and inspectors and provides recommendations for future implementers on keys to a successful teaching and learning materials supply chain in DRC.

What Educational Production Functions Really Show: a Positive Theory of Education Spending

What Educational Production Functions Really Show: a Positive Theory of Education Spending

World Bank 1997

The accumulated results of empirical studies by the World Bank show that the public sector typically chooses spending on inputs such that the productivity of additional spending on books and instructional materials is 10 to 100 times larger than that of additional spending on teacher inputs (for example, higher wages, small class size).