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The Madrassa myth


by Asim Khwaja, guest blogger

The post-9/11 emphasis on Pakistan continues to portray madrassas (religious schools) as a focal point – their rising prevalence the subject of great concern. What is surprising is that this “myth” persists despite evidence to the contrary – that madrassas are in fact not the real revolution in the Pakistani educational landscape but rather it is affordable private non-religious “mom-and-pop” schools that now dot the (rural) landscape.

In a series of papers in the past few years using publicly verifiable data sources and established statistical techniques my colleagues and I have documented this private sector revolution and the relative absence of a madrassa revolution.[1]

Yet reputable outlets like the New York Times continue to emphasize the supposed centrality of Pakistani Madrassas. In a compelling but factually misleading piece on May 3rd entitled “Pakistan’s Islamic Schools Fill Void, but Fuel Militancy” a veteran reporter rehearses a well-known narrative in which government schools are failing and the madrassas are proliferating, providing the only viable source of education for the poor. Private schools, while mentioned, are discounted as “out of reach of most middle-class Pakistanis”. While government schools, much like the public sector in most developing countries, face substantial challenges, the last two claims are simply not correct – they were not in the years around 2001 (as documented by our previous work), and are still not correct.

Using the latest publicly available educational census data, Madrassas in 2005-06 still only accounted for 1.3 percent of enrolled children (In Pakistan’s four provinces), versus 34 percent in non-religious private schools and the remainder in public schools. The graph below shows that while there is indeed some increase in madrassas over time, the far more striking growth is for non-religious private schools.

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Moreover these non-religious private schools are increasingly catering to the middle and poor class. With monthly fees less than a days' unskilled wage rate, they are affordable and attract students from even the poorest households. Madrassas are therefore simply not the schools of last resort. For the average Pakistani child, even among the poor living in rural areas and in urban slums, the most likely alternative to a decrepit public school is not a madrassa but a private school, or no schooling at all. Moreover, despite the low fees and low wages (a fifth of public sector teacher wages) and less qualified (local women) teachers, they offer substantially higher quality education than public schools (likely by better incentivizing and selecting their teachers).

In the particular district - Khanewal - highlighted in the New York Times column as a region of particular concern, the school numbers reflect a similar breakdown - 9% madrassa, 24% private schools, and 66% government schools. Moreover, 95% of private schools in this district are coeducational. Interestingly, this trend is true even in the Pashtun-dominated Northwest Frontier Province. In fact, in the Swat valley, which has occupied much media coverage recently due to the Taliban prevalence there, there were 360 such private schools in 2005 compared to 165 madrassas (National Education Census, 2005).

In yet another attempt to clarify the Madrassa myth, my coauthors and I recently wrote a piece on Foreign Policy (http://www.foreignpolicy.com/story/cms.php?story_id=4958) that also highlights the policy concerns that stem from not getting the facts straight. The NYT article was widely recounted by members of the U.S. House of Representatives with suitable outrage during the House Foreign Affair’s Committee hearing on legislation providing a new aid package for Pakistan. Not surprisingly, the proposed  legislation focuses U.S. government attention on reforming madrassas, eliminating those with ties to terrorism and working with the Pakistani government to reform its sprawling pubic school system riven with teacher absenteeism, ghost schools, out of date pedagogy and a deeply problematic curriculum. Yet there is no mention of the mushrooming private sector and the lessons to be learnt from it.

While one may conjecture that the madrassa myth persists since it is politically expedient and offers a simple explanation of recent events in Pakistan, the fact is that the the reality of the Pakistani educational landscape is quite different. Educational reforms that remain focused on madrassas are unlikely to affect the vast majority of Pakistanis and form the basis of “winning the hearts and minds” or of improving the lot of Pakistanis. With Pakistan’s population becoming ever-more dominated by youths, and the need to produce human capital capable of driving a future Pakistani economy, the stakes on getting such basic facts understood and accepted in policy and popular circles could not be higher.


[1] Religious School Enrollment in Pakistan: A Look at the Data (with T. Andrabi, Pomona, J.Das, DECRG World Bank and T. Zajonc, Harvard). Comparative Education Review, Vol, 50, No. 3, August 2006 and A Dime a Day: The Possibilities and Limits of Private Schooling in Pakistan (with T. Andrabi, Pomona, J.Das, DECRG World Bank).  Comparative Education Review, vol. 52, no. 3, August 2008. Also see the LEAPS project website that details more of our research on the Pakistani educational sector at www.leapsproject.org.

Read more at Dani Rodrik's Weblog


7 Comments

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Your post totally ignores the problems alleged, myth or not. It might have helped if you'd defined the alleged myth clearly at the beginning.

The US security concern about schools isn't that some large fraction of kids are being led towards fanatical Islamism, it's that even a handful per year could be a problem. Public and non-religious private schools don't offer a good venue for extremist religious notions to be indoctrinated into kids. So that leaves the isolated 1.3% or so. That's still a lot of kids.

Your study might be valid, but so what? That doesn't make it sound or on point for myth-busting beyond some alleged ivory tower issues.

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The study would be more persuasive did it count students in addition to schools and post-puberty students (numbers and gender) in addition to total number of students.

Our House of Representatives is worried about 14-16 year old boys in the Tribal Areas and the NWF being turned into radical Islamists.

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Forget about the madrassas for a moment. What the graph shows is two decades of declining investment in public education, with the private sector struggling to fill in the gaps.
In a country with a high birthrate, that failure is a recipe for disaster, regardless of what the religious schools teach or do not teach.
Uneducated people are extremely susceptible to extremist teachings or propaganda; they don't need a formal education in those things.
Let's lean on the Pakistani education ministry, not just on the military. That's where wars are really won.

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I saw some close-up television coverage of madrassa schooling and it is one of the strangest and most troubling things on the planet. Young children were awakened, and I believe from 6 to 8 am they sat in rows, rocking back and forth, reading, murmuring the words and memorizing by rote the Koran. Then breakfast, then more reading, and rocking till lunch.

After lunch, a nap, then more reading and rocking for several hours. Then dinner, then reading and rocking till about 9 pm. Next morning, back at it.

You are doing a disservice by de-emphasizing the wickedness being done here. It is not education, it may or may not be a school for terrorism, but it is insanity and it its child abuse. It is creating a cadre of utterly uneducated people who know nothing of working value. If even a few of these shameful institutions exist, it is a cause for great concern. If "schools" like this existed in the West, say for day-in and day-out Bible memorization, they would be rightly closed and the organizers arrested.

You seem like an intelligent person; why not devote yourself to something worthwhile rather than imagining phony myths to spread disinformation about.

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You are doing a disservice by de-emphasizing the wickedness being done here.

accusing the author of de-emphasizing wickedness is a despicable mischaracterization.

the point of the author's post is to establish the quantitative facts about students and schools in pakistan. to rebut the factual distortions in the discourse (eg, the new york times inflating the number of students in madrassas some 700% ).

your point is qualitative and therefor not excluded by the points made by the author. rather, the qualitative discussion you would prefer to have ought to be accurately informed by the quantitative facts being discussed by the author.

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Despicable is a pretty heavy rock to throw at a guy, especially when lined up for backing only by watery, been-to-college jargon like "quantitative" and "qualitative."

Despicable, huh?

You sure?

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Two issues are central to The New York Times piece. The first, whether "Islamic Schools" in Pakistan are "filling" an educational "void" there, is deftly rebutted by Asim Khwaja here, and shown to be a myth. (If the NYT article is indicative, probably a consciously fostered myth). The second issue, greatly reinforced by this negative finding on the first, is touched upon only at the end of Mr. Khwaja's observations: there IS a serious void in education.

These remarks from the NYT article deserve more attention and analysis in the future:

"Even for the majority who attend public school, learning has an Islamic bent...today, only about half of Pakistanis can read and write, far below the proportion in countries with similar per-capita income, like Vietnam. One in three school-age Pakistani children does not attend school, and of those who do, a third drop out by fifth grade, according to Unesco. Girls’ enrollment is among the lowest in the world, lagging behind Ethiopia and Yemen...Nonreligious private schools have also sprouted since the 1990s. They have better student-teacher ratios, but only the most exclusive — out of reach of most middle-class Pakistanis — offer a rigorous, modern education."

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Dani Rodrik

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I am the Rafiq Hariri Professor of International Political Economy at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. I was born and grew up in Istanbul, Turkey. My book One Economics, Many Recipes: Globalization, Institutions, and Economic Growth was published by the Princeton University Press in 2007. My blog can be found here.

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