Abstract

Global investments in girls’ education have been motivated, in part, by an expectation that more-educated women will have smaller and healthier families. However, in many low- and middle-income countries, the timing of school dropout and first birth coincide, resulting in a rapid transition from the role of student to the role of mother for adolescent girls. Despite growing interest in the effects of pregnancy on levels of school dropout, researchers have largely overlooked the potential effect of adolescent childbearing on literacy and numeracy. We hypothesize that becoming a mother soon after leaving school may cause the deterioration of skills gained in school. Using longitudinal data from Bangladesh, Malawi, and Zambia, we test our hypothesis by estimating fixed-effects linear regression models to address the endogeneity in the relationship between childbearing and academic skills. To our knowledge, this is the first study to examine the effects of adolescent childbearing on academic skills in low- and middle-income countries. Our results indicate that among those with low levels of grade attainment, first birth has a negative effect on English literacy and numeracy. Among those with higher levels of grade attainment, we find little evidence of effects of childbearing on academic skills. Childbearing also has little effect on local language literacy. Beyond the immediate loss of English literacy and numeracy, if these skills lead to better health and more economic productivity, then adolescent childbearing may have longer-term repercussions than previously understood. In addition to ongoing efforts to increase educational attainment and school quality in low- and middle-income countries, investments are needed to strengthen the academic skills of adolescent mothers to secure the demographic and economic promise of expanded education for girls and women.

Highlights

  • Investments in girls’ education globally have been motivated in part by an expectation that more-educated women will have smaller and healthier families (Behrman 2015; Grant 2015; Psaki et al 2019; Weitzman 2017)

  • We examine the effects of childbearing on several academic skills: basic oral reading skills in English and a local language and basic numeracy skills

  • In all three rural samples (BALIKA, Malawi Schooling and Adolescent Study (MSAS), and the rural Adolescent Girls Empowerment Program (AGEP) sample), we find evidence of significant negative effects of time since school leaving on literacy scores; Table 2 Baseline characteristics of full samples, and final analytical samples, by study

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Summary

Introduction

Investments in girls’ education globally have been motivated in part by an expectation that more-educated women will have smaller and healthier families (Behrman 2015; Grant 2015; Psaki et al 2019; Weitzman 2017). Much research has documented the association between grade attainment and reproductive behavior among women in low-income countries (Bledsoe et al 1999; Cochrane 1979): those with more years of schooling are likely to marry and give birth later and to have fewer and healthier children (Basu 2002; Cleland 2010; Gakidou et al 2010; Glewwe 1999) This relationship may operate in either direction: for example, more schooling may contribute to delayed childbearing (Breierova and Duflo 2003; Osili and Long 2008; Smith-Greenaway 2013), and adolescent childbearing may disrupt schooling (Geronimus and Korenman 1992; Kane et al 2013; Stange 2011). The research that has been conducted on the effects of childbearing on education—both in low-income and highincome settings—has focused narrowly on grade attainment and has overlooked the potential effects of childbearing on academic skills.

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