The challenges of providing free education in Papua New Guinea

Grant Walton, Tara Davda, Peter Kanaparo

    Research output: Working paper

    Abstract

    Introduced in 2012, the Tuition Fee Free (TFF) policy has become a flagship policy of the Papua New Guinea (PNG) government. Since 2012, further changes to this policy have been introduced; these changes continue to reduce financial barriers to school attendance and attempt to recentralise control of education funding. What have these policy changes meant for schools, administrators, non-governmental service providers (such as the church), and other key stakeholders? This paper draws on qualitative and quantitative research conducted in 2012 and 2016 in East New Britain and Gulf provinces the former performs relatively well in delivering services, the latter relatively poorly. Interviews were conducted with education representatives, community members, government and church officials and other stakeholders to assess the impact of PNGs fourth and most enduring attempt at providing free education. Researchers visited 10 schools, four district administrations and two provincial administrations. The research approach allows for a comparison of progress and regress in these schools between 2012 and 2016. It is argued that while the TFF policy has helped improve access and strengthened school autonomy, recent policy reforms have threatened school-community relations, undermined school quality and weakened conditions for effective service provision. The paper will provide recommendations about how PNG policy makers and others might address some of the challenges.
    Original languageEnglish
    Place of PublicationCanberra, Australia
    PublisherCrawford School of Public Policy
    Pages1-42pp
    Publication statusPublished - 2017

    Publication series

    Name
    No.No. 61
    ISSN (Print)2206-303X

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'The challenges of providing free education in Papua New Guinea'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this