YL-WP148-Guerero Education Aspirations in Peru
YL-WP148-Guerero Education Aspirations in Peru
YL-WP148-Guerero Education Aspirations in Peru
Working Paper
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Contents
Summary 4
The authors 4
Acknowledgements 4
1. Introduction 5
2. Literature review: The educational aspirations of low-income
young people 6
2.1. Individual and family factors influencing educational aspirations 6
2.2. The influence of the wider context: school and community 7
2.3. What is known about educational aspirations in Peru 7
3. Higher education in Peru 8
4. Methods 9
5. Findings 10
5.1. Young people’s aspirations regarding higher education and their
access to it 10
5.2. “I want to study and be something more”: Understanding
young people’s aspirations regarding higher education 12
5.3. “I wouldn´t make it”: Changes in educational aspirations over time 13
5.4. “It will be difficult”: Barriers to low-income youth’s aspirations to
higher education 14
6. Discussion 17
7. Conclusions and policy recommendations 18
References 20
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EDUCATION ASPIRATIONS AMONG YOUNG PEOPLE IN PERU AND
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Summary
Results from the Young Lives survey show the existence of a gap between young people’s aspirations
for higher education and their actual chances of accessing this level of education. This paper uses
qualitative information from Young Lives in order to gain a deeper understanding of young people’s
aspirations as well as their perceptions of the main barriers preventing them from achieving these
aspirations. More specifically we analyse how aspirations are formed, to what extent they are related to
parents’ educational aspirations for their children, and if they are stable or tend to change over time. We
find high educational aspirations among low-income young people and their caregivers and we
establish that education is highly valued by Peruvian families. The aspirations of young people and their
caregivers are influenced by caregivers’ educational history and experiences. The longitudinal nature of
the data, both quantitative and qualitative, allowed us to identify that young people’s, and particularly
caregivers’, educational aspirations were not static and changed over time, mainly in response to
changes in the socio-economic status of the family.
The study also identified several barriers preventing low-income youth in urban and rural areas from
realising their educational aspirations. Besides economic and psychological barriers (mainly
experienced as lack of family support), the results of this paper point out to the existence of additional
barriers such as a lack of information available to secondary school seniors (and their parents) about
higher education (what and where to study and how to apply) and the fact that schools are not playing
an active role in preparing students for a transition to higher education. Based on these results, the
study discusses policy recommendations aimed at overcoming those barriers.
The authors
Gabriela Guerrero is Associate Researcher at Group for the Analysis of Development (GRADE) and
Research Advisor of the Young Lives Qualitative Component in Peru. Claudia Sugimaru is Adjunct
Researcher at GRADE. Alexandra Cussianovich was the qualitative research assistant for Young
Lives in Peru. Bieke De Fraine is the head of the Centre for Educational Effectiveness and Evaluation,
University of Leuven. Santiago Cueto is Senior Researcher at GRADE and Country Coordinator of
Young Lives in Peru.
Acknowledgements
We would like to thank the young people and caregivers who have participated in this study and have
made this paper possible. We are also grateful to the Young Lives teams in Oxford and Peru because
without their support the completion of this work would not have been possible. Special thanks to Juan
León, Ana Maria Buller, Vanessa Rojas and Michael Bourdillon for their very valuable comments on
previous versions of this paper.
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1. Introduction
In recent years, education has been placed at the centre of the global development agenda,
reflecting its recognition as an essential condition for human development, poverty reduction
and economic growth. The Muscat Agreement, signed in 2014 at the end of the Education
For All (EFA) Meeting, states that the general goal of the post-2015 education agenda is to
ensure equitable and inclusive high-quality education and lifelong learning for all by 2030.
Unlike in the previous Dakar declaration, there is an emphasis on the provision of high-
quality education at all levels, from early childhood to higher education. As a matter of fact,
one of the targets of the post-2015 agenda is to increase young people’s access to technical
and vocational tertiary education and training.
In the case of Peru, the percentage of the population aged between 17 and 24 years old that
attends higher education is currently around 28 per cent, according to the National
Household Survey 2012, which is below the average in the Latin American region, where the
gross enrolment rate in higher education is 41 per cent (CEPAL 2012). Given this situation,
the Government of Peru has recently launched a new scholarship programme (Beca 18) with
the objective of increasing the access to higher education of young people living in poverty
and extreme poverty.
Considering the growing importance of higher education both globally and nationally and the
still low enrolment rates in higher education in Peru, this paper draws on longitudinal
qualitative data from Young Lives to take a closer look at young people’s aspirations
regarding higher education and their perceptions of the barriers that may be preventing them
from realising these aspirations. The main focus of this paper is to describe young people’s
aspirations regarding higher education, analysing how they are formed, to what extent they
are related to parents’ educational aspirations for the young people, and if they are stable or
change over time. This paper also gives an account of the main barriers faced by young
people in the realisation of their educational aspirations.
This paper is divided into seven sections including this introduction. Section 2 presents the
literature review, examining educational aspirations and presenting explanations of the
factors influencing the formation of aspirations. Section 3 provides information about higher
education in Peru, describing the different types of higher education available in the country
as well as the main government scholarship programme aimed at increasing Peruvians’
access to higher education. Section 4 gives information about the methods, including a
description of the sample, the different contexts and the qualitative information analysed for
this paper. Section 5 presents the findings and Section 6 the discussion of those findings.
Finally Section 7 provides a conclusion and policy recommendations.
1 2014 GEM Final Statement, The Muscat Agreement, Global Education For All Meeting, UNESCO, Muscat, Oman, 12–14 May
2014, http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0022/002281/228122E.pdf
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may constitute an example of what Freeman (1997) calls ‘psychological barriers’, referring to
a lack of support or encouragement from parents, friends and significant others, and to a lack
of desire to pursue higher education or an inability to recognise its benefits. These barriers
will also limit low-income young people’s aspirations to higher education (in addition to
economic barriers).
Both the attainment and the social support models concentrate heavily on family
characteristics and to a certain extent ignore the influence of school and school experiences
on the formation of educational aspirations. However the influence of these has to be
addressed, particularly in low-income contexts, given the malleability of school factors from a
policy perspective.
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EDUCATION ASPIRATIONS AMONG YOUNG PEOPLE IN PERU AND
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Higher education is provided both at public and private institutions. Public education is
subsidised by the state while students at private institutions must pay a fee. Most of the
supply of higher education in the country is located in urban areas. Therefore, rural students
are usually required to migrate or at least to commute every day in order to enrol in a higher
education institution.
According to the National Household Survey 2012, 28 per cent of young people between 17
and 24 years are enrolled in higher education, as previously indicated. Most of them are
enrolled in a university (68 per cent) while a smaller percentage is enrolled in technical
tertiary education (32 per cent). Most students attending higher education (either technical or
university) are enrolled in private institutions (62 per cent); nevertheless, there are serious
concerns about the quality of these institutions (Diaz 2008).
Specifically in relation to higher technical education, a study conducted by Valdivia in the late
1990s (1997) with a sample of technical education graduates found that most of these
graduates had studied in poor-quality institutions and although this type of higher education
had a positive effect on their occupational mobility, technical education was a second best for
them, given that they could not access university higher education.
In order to enrol in a higher education institution, a student must pass its entrance
examination. Usually, the number of places available per higher education institution is
smaller than the number of students applying to it. In this competitive scenario, it is a
common practice to rely on pre-university academies for the necessary training to pass the
entrance examination.
Given the relatively low enrolment rates in higher education in the country, Peru’s Ministry of
Education recently launched a scholarship programme named Beca 18 aimed at increasing
low-income young people’s access to higher education. Beca 18 is targeted at young people
between 16 and 22 years of age living in poverty or extreme poverty, who have completed
secondary education with high levels of achievement and have been admitted to a higher
education institution but have not yet started their studies. The scholarship funds higher
education studies both at universities and technological institutes. It covers tuition fees,
educational materials, accommodation, food, transportation, medical insurance and
academic tutoring. Connecting this to the literature review presented above, a programme
such as Beca 18 would help students facing economic barriers to their aspirations, but will
this be enough? Or are students facing other barriers at the end of secondary education?
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EDUCATION ASPIRATIONS AMONG YOUNG PEOPLE IN PERU AND
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4. Methods
This paper uses mainly qualitative data from the Young Lives Older Cohort in Peru, born in
1994–5. Qualitative information was collected from a sub-sample of Young Lives children in
2007, 2008 and 2011 using multiple techniques including in-depth individual interviews, brief
ethnographic observations and a selection of participatory group methods.
The qualitative sample comprised 25 young people who were aged between 15 and 17 years
old in 2011; most of them were in Grade 11 (the last grade of high school). The sample was
evenly distributed across the four study sites, which differ according to the area of residence
(rural/urban), geographical location, level of poverty, and degree of impact of political
violence (post-conflict area or not). The two study sites in Rioja and Andahuaylas are rural
localities, located in the northern jungle and in the central Andes, respectively; while Villa
María del Triunfo and Juliaca are urban areas located in the capital of Peru and in the
Andean highlands respectively. One important difference between urban and rural sites is
the availability of educational services, especially post-secondary institutions, since these are
mainly located in urban areas.
We have analysed the data collected from the interviews with young people (2011) and their
caregivers (2008 and 2011). Additionally, we have also analysed data from the Well-being
discussion groups, where young people discussed and developed their own concept and
indicators of well-being; the Transitions out of school discussion groups, where they
discussed their perceptions regarding their transition out of school and identified the sources
of information and support they had for this process; and the Caregiver History Time Line,
which provides information on the extent to which the parents’ own histories influenced their
educational aspirations for their offspring. (Further information about these methods can be
found in Crivello et al. 2013.) Qualitative data were complemented by quantitative data from
the main household and child surveys in order to contextualise the situation of the young
people and caregivers who participated and to understand it better.
2
A fourth round of qualitative data collection took place in 2014 but that information is not included in the analyses because, at
time of writing (October 2015), the data are still being cleaned.
3
All names of research sites and respondents are pseudonyms, in order to preserve respondents’ anonymity.
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5. Findings
5.1. Young people’s aspirations regarding higher education and their
access to it
According to Round 3 of the Young Lives survey in Peru (2009), 90 per cent of the young
people in the Older Cohort (then aged 15) who were still attending secondary school aspired
to have higher education: 9.44 per cent of them wanted to go to a technical institute and the
remaining 80.82 per cent wanted to go to the university, as shown in Table 1. Although
aspirations were high throughout the sample, there were some differences between young
people with different characteristics. Aspirations to university higher education were more
frequent among girls, those living in urban areas, those who had a better socio-economic
situation and those with a more educated mother; and the differences were statistically
significant.
Table 1. Aspirations of young people aged 15 regarding higher education (2009) (%)
Educational level aspired to Secondary Higher education
education
Technical University Total
higher higher
education education
Average (N= 670) 9.75 9.44 80.82 90.25
Gender
Boys 9.88 11.88 78.25 90.12
Girls 9.61 6.90 83.49 90.39
Gap (%) 0.27 4.97 −5.24 −0.27
Baseline area of residence (2002)
Urban 6.55 11.61 81.84 93.45
Rural 13.65 6.77 79.58 86.35
Gap (%) −7.10 4.84 2.26 7.10
Baseline family wealth (household's real per capita expenditure in 2006)
Top quintile 0.00 11.17 88.83 100.00
Bottom quintile 18.67 5.98 75.35 81.33
Gap (%) −18.67 5.19 13.48 18.67
Maternal education
Higher education 0.00 3.13 96.87 100.00
Complete primary or secondary 7.66 13.51 78.83 92.34
Incomplete primary or less 13.58 7.35 79.08 86.42
Gap (%) −13.58 −4.22 17.79 13.58
Mother's first language
Spanish 11.50 11.09 77.41 88.50
Indigenous 7.68 7.49 84.83 92.32
Gap (%) 3.81 3.61 −7.42 −3.81
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Although the percentage of young people aspiring to higher education in 2009 was high, only
a few of them actually managed to enter higher education. According to the Round 4 survey
(2013), by the time they were 19 years of age only 39.4 per cent of young people were
enrolled in a higher education institution: 22.2 per cent in a technical institute and the
remaining 17.2 per cent in a university. Several gaps are observed, particularly in regard to
the access to university higher education. A young person was more likely to attend a
university if they were male, had a higher family income, lived in an urban area and had a
more educated mother who had Spanish as her mother tongue, as shown in Table 2.
However, none of these gaps was observed in the access to technical institutes. As Sanchez
and Melendez (2015) point out, this may be due to the fact that technical institutes are more
geographically dispersed throughout the country.
Note: The data include young people interviewed in all four rounds. The percentages have been adjusted considering the sample
design. Gaps in bold are statistically significant using the t-test at 5%. The gaps are shown in percentage points and are
calculated using as baseline: indigenous, incomplete primary or less, and the bottom quintile.
As has been shown in this section, using information from the quantitative survey, there is a
gap between young people’s aspirations regarding higher education and their actual chances
of accessing this level of education. We will now use qualitative evidence in order to gain a
deeper understanding of both young people’s aspirations and their perceptions of the main
barriers preventing them from achieving these aspirations. In doing this we analyse not only
the information provided by the young people during the qualitative data collection but also
the information provided by their caregivers. This is because young people’s aspirations are
influenced by their family background, as has been previously indicated in the literature
review presented at the beginning of this document.
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Interviewer: So, working on what you're working now would never let you be something
more ... as you say. And for example what is to ‘be something more’?
Isaura: Mmm ... to practise a profession.
(Interview with Isaura, age 16, Villa María del Triunfo, 2011)
Even though educational aspirations among the young people were high in both urban and
rural sites, one difference was that rural youth discourses gave greater emphasis to the
importance of pursuing higher education as a way to improve well-being or get out of peasant
life. On the other hand, in the case of urban young people the emphasis was not on the hope
of escaping poverty but on the recognition that nowadays completing high school was not
enough to get a good job. The following quotations illustrate this contrast.
The facilitator reads the last card: ‘He dreams of completing higher education’. One
participant notes that the boy in the story dreams of having a profession and returning
the favour to his parents, making them feel proud. The facilitator asks if the boys that do
not dream of completing post-secondary studies can do well in life, and one participant
says ‘No’.
(Observer’s notes, Well-being group discussion, Rioja, 2011)
Peter: Before you could [find a good job only with high school education] but not any
more. Before you could knock and say: ‘I will practise and I will learn’. Not any more …
More than anything [they ask] for experience and knowledge in the field you will be in.
(Interview with Peter, age 16, Juliaca, 2011)
It is clear that young people value education highly and this is probably related to the fact that
their parents also have a very positive view of education, which they have transmitted to their
children during their socialisation process. Parents’ discourses demonstrated that education
(in general) was highly valued and considered the best legacy they could give to their
offspring. Their educational aspirations for their children were high; they wanted them to be
professionals and to understand the importance of continuing education beyond high school.
Maria’s mother: I always say that education is the best heritage you can give, better than
giving them a piece of land. Nobody is going to get their studies out of their minds but a
piece of land – you sell it and that’s it.
(Interview with rural caregiver, Rioja, 2011)
Parents’ own educational experiences influence to a certain extent their aspirations for their
offspring. In the case of rural areas, most parents (mothers especially) did not complete
primary education or had no formal education at all; a situation they regretted greatly since
they attributed the suffering they endured to this experience. For them education held the
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possibility of breaking the poverty cycle; their educational aspirations for their children were
high since they recognised education as the channel that could release young people from
the suffering and hardship they themselves had undergone.
Esmeralda’s mother: I ask God, crying, I ask for my children to be professionals so they
don’t suffer as I do. I have suffered a lot, even to get food. I ask God for my children to
finish studying … so I tell them too that they have to study.
(Interview with rural caregiver, Andahuaylas, 2011)
High educational aspirations for their children were also found among parents from urban
areas – especially in Juliaca – in keeping with young people’s aspirations to go to university.
In this case, there were several parents who had attained post-secondary education and who
might have acted as both role models and motivators for their children to pursue post-
secondary studies. Both urban parents and children also recognised that post-secondary
education had great value; recognising that nowadays completing high school was not
enough to get a good job, as the above quotation from Peter suggests.
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EDUCATION ASPIRATIONS AMONG YOUNG PEOPLE IN PERU AND
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university ended up saying she wanted her to complete secondary education. In all these
seven households, the economic situation of the family worsened, mainly because one of the
adult earners in the household became ill.
Particularly dramatic was the case of Isaura from Villa María del Triunfo (Lima). In 2006, her
mother reported she wanted Isaura to complete university and become an accountant and
she thought this was achievable. Three years later, her aspirations changed dramatically,
and she expected her daughter, at the most, to complete secondary education. During 2006
and 2011 the family income was reduced because the father and son were sick and unable
to work, and the family had to pay for the medical treatment they required. In this
deteriorating economic context, the mother said in 2011 that she wanted her daughter to start
providing for herself in the short term.
We also explored whether there were other changes reported within these households that
may have affected caregivers’ aspirations. More specifically, we checked if the young people
whose parents had changed their aspirations for them, had experienced any major academic
problems between 2008 and 2011. We found that the young people were in Grade 10 or 11
(almost at the end of high school) and had not repeated a grade (at least) in the last years.
By contrast, we found three parents who had not changed their aspirations between the two
rounds, despite the fact that their children had repeated a grade during that time. In
consequence, we believe that in those cases described above, the main reason behind the
change in parents’ educational aspirations was the deterioration of the economic situation of
the household.
María’s mother: Higher education is expensive … her father has said that if she [is
admitted to the university] … he would do everything possible to pay for her studies. It
will be difficult, I believe. There’s not enough money for that … I told her to work this year
[and save money] so she could study next year. Because you can study higher
education at any time, can’t you?
(Interview with rural caregiver, Rioja, 2011)
Faced with this economic barrier, work is seen as both a strategy and a risk for achieving
further studies. Working gives young people the opportunity to save money in order to
finance their studies. However, at the same time, work is also seen as a risk, given that
young people might “start working, take the money to buy clothes and afterwards ... will not
want to study” (Interview with rural caregiver, Andahuaylas, 2011).
Young people across sites also recognised the existence of psychological barriers since they
mentioned the lack of moral support from their families as one of the barriers that might
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prevent them from realising their educational aspirations. They defined moral support as the
possibility of being able to talk about future educational plans and receiving advice about
ideas such as pursuing post-secondary education. It refers to feeling backed up. As one of
the girls mentioned in Villa María del Triunfo: “If a girl doesn’t feel supported [by her parents],
she has no reason to improve” (Transitions out of school - Group Method, 2011).
However, most parents (especially from rural areas) think of support as mainly economic,
since pursuing post-secondary studies relies more on the willingness and abilities of young
people, who are now perceived more as adults and autonomous individuals. Therefore,
many of the parents said things such as “it´s her/his decision” or “I can´t do anything if she/he
doesn´t want to go”. In general, parents showed more determination and confidence that
their children would finish high school, even if they had to force them, than that they would
pursue post-secondary studies.
Rodrigo’s mother: He was thinking of dropping out of school and I told him, “You’ll finish
high school this year, no matter what.”
(Interview with rural caregiver, Rioja, 2011)
Hank’s father: I have told [Hank], “You play on Saturday and play guitar on Sunday. But
the other five days are sacred for school and homework.”
(Interview with urban caregiver, Juliaca, 2011)
Another barrier to the realisation of their aspirations faced by low-income young people is the
lack of information about post-secondary studies. The majority of caregivers and young
people expressed their desire (for the young people) to have higher education. However,
when we started digging deeper into what going to the university really meant for the young
people, we found that their ideas about higher education were rather vague and in some
cases inaccurate, as illustrated by the following quotations.
Interviewer: And how do you think it will be when you finish school?
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Young people did not seem to have a detailed plan of what to do after finishing high school,
where to study or how to apply to higher education, despite the fact that most of them were in
the final grade of high school at the time they were interviewed in 2011. The lack of a solid
plan for their future was a source of concern for the young people, as the following quotation
illustrates:
Carmen: At that moment [after finishing high school] you think about several things.
When you are about to sleep you're thinking: “What am I going to do? I’m no longer at
school; I'm on the street now. I can’t do anything ... I don’t know what career I’d like, I do
not know if I can pass the exam”. All this I thought.
(Interview with Carmen, age 16, Juliaca, 2011)
In this scenario and in the opinion of the young people interviewed by Young Lives, schools
were not providing students with any information or guidance on how to choose a career,
what careers or professions were available, what they consisted of, what type of skills were
needed or where these skills could be developed. Schools seemed to ignore the fact that
many young people finishing school had “many fears about the future and the next steps to
take”. As one young person put it, “that’s why it is important to have someone that can
provide real information about life and this new phase that [school leavers] have to live”
(Transitions out of school group discussion, Juliaca, 2011).
In the absence of good information about higher education, the presence of role models,
such as parents, older siblings or significant family members who had made the transition to
higher education, became crucial in the decision about which career to pursue, as the case
of Carmen suggests. At the end of high school, she did not know what to study and sought
advice from her older brother, aunt and cousins, who were professionals.
Interviewer: How did you decide you wanted to go to the university and study social
work?
Carmen: That´s because my aunt told me to do so.
Interviewer: Besides what your aunt told you, did you ask somewhere else what was that
about?
Carmen: No, not really … I couldn’t think of another career. “I´ll study this [social work],” I
said.
(Interview with Carmen, age 16, Juliaca, 2011)
Finally, one last barrier to the realisation of their aspirations to higher education faced by
respondents was the fact that the knowledge acquired at school was not enough to pass the
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entrance exam set by most higher education institutions. Young people from Andahuaylas,
Juliaca and Villa María del Triunfo agreed on the need to get prepared in an academy before
taking the entrance exam. In Villa María del Triunfo, girls mentioned that they knew that
school was not enough because they had taken mock entrance exams and they said: “The
questions are difficult and even now we can’t answer them. [The majority] first gets prepared
for a year, so you don’t spend money in vain since sometimes there are questions they
haven’t taught you at school” (Transitions out of school group discussion, 2011).
6. Discussion
The results of this paper support the findings of previous studies regarding the existence of
high educational aspirations among low-income young people and their caregivers in Peru
and the fact that education is highly valued by Peruvian families (Ansion et al. 1998;
Benavides et al. 2006; Boyden 2013; Crivello 2011; Cueto et al. 2010; Mena 2012). Post-
secondary education holds the promise of achieving greater well-being, as it allows one to
obtain jobs requiring qualifications and offering higher remuneration than the jobs available to
those with only secondary education.
The aspirations of young people and their caregivers are influenced by caregivers’
educational history and experiences. According to the literature, higher parental SES and
education is associated with higher parental aspirations and expectations for offspring
(Bohon et al. 2006; Goyette and Xie 1999; Khattab 2003), as suggested by status attainment
models. Nevertheless, the results here suggest that aspirations are high even in the case of
caregivers with low levels of education and living in poverty, precisely because they regard
education as the main tool to overcome poverty and avoid the suffering they have
experienced.
Although aspirations are equally high in rural and urban areas, there are clear differences
between the views of respondents living in these areas. While rural low-income young
people’s and parents’ discourses put more emphasis on the importance of pursuing higher
education as a way to improve well-being and escape from poverty; urban young people
based their high educational aspirations on the recognition that nowadays completing high
school was not enough to get a good job.
The longitudinal nature of the data allowed us to identify that young people’s, and particularly
caregivers’, educational aspirations were not static, and changed over time, mainly in
response to changes in the socio-economic status of the family. This change was usually
described as moving from aspiring to university higher education to aspiring to technical
higher education. In the context of a country such as Peru, this change is understood as
lowering someone’s aspirations since technical education is generally regarded as second
best to university education, a view probably explained by the poor quality of some technical
institutions, as some studies suggest (Valdivia 1997). In this context, young people and
parents think that in the face of economic constraints, doing a relatively short training course
for a technical career would allow the young people to support themselves in the short term.
It should be noted, however, that even in the face of changes in young people’s and their
parents’ educational aspirations, most of them continue to aspire to higher education.
Nevertheless, quantitative data from the last two rounds (2009 and 2013) clearly show the
existence of a gap between young people’s aspirations to higher education and their actual
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chances of accessing this level of education. The qualitative analyses presented in this paper
allow us to identify the existence of several barriers preventing low-income young people in
urban and rural areas from realising their educational aspirations.
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find information about the higher education available in their contexts. The provision of
vocational information in schools can easily be implemented in the short term and its
implications in terms of improving students’ transition to higher education can be major.
However, relevant information to make informed choices about what and where to study
should not only come from within schools. It is necessary to develop information systems
open to the general public that can provide students and their parents with information on
careers, higher education institutions where preparation for those careers is available, and
information on the characteristics of graduates by career and higher education institution –
particularly in terms of their earnings and the time required to get a job after graduation – all
of them elements that should be taken into account by young people during their decision-
making process.
Finally, the results of this study also suggest that educational policies aiming to increase
access to higher education should address the different types of barriers to the realisation of
their educational aspirations faced by low-income young people and not only the economic
barriers, as is usually the case in developing countries. For instance, in the case of Peru, the
recently launched scholarship programme, Beca 18, will mainly address the economic
barriers faced by young people wanting to pursue higher education, since the young people
are expected to have in advance a clear picture of what and where to study (young people
have to be admitted to a higher education institution before applying for the scholarship).
Based on the results of this paper, I believe it is key to the success of this programme to also
have a component aimed at providing potential scholars with vocational guidance and better
information about higher education, in order also to address the barriers created by a lack of
adequate information. Additionally, it will be relevant to involve secondary schools in the
implementation of the scholarship programme since this may help reduce the existing gap
(as perceived by students) between secondary and higher education.
4
By the time this paper was in press, the Ministry of Education launched a webpage (Ponte en carrera) with relevant information
about higher education institutions, courses available in those institutions and the wages of the students recently graduated
from each course/institution. In the future, it will be important to assess the extent to which this source of information is helping
students and their parents in their decision-making process.
19
EDUCATION ASPIRATIONS AMONG YOUNG PEOPLE IN PERU AND
THEIR PERCEPTIONS OF BARRIERS TO HIGHER EDUCATION
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22
Education Aspirations among Young
People in Peru and their Perceptions of
Barriers to Higher Education
Data from the Young Lives survey in Peru show there is a gap between
young people’s aspirations for higher education and their actual About Young Lives
chances of accessing university or college. This paper uses qualitative Young Lives is an international study
information from Young Lives in order to gain a deeper understanding of childhood poverty, involving 12,000
children in 4 countries over 15 years.
of young people’s aspirations as well as their views of the main
It is led by a team in the Department
barriers they face. We analyse how aspirations are formed, to what of International Development at the
extent they are related to parents’ educational aspirations for their University of Oxford in association
children, and if they are stable or tend to change over time. with research and policy partners in
the 4 study countries: Ethiopia, India,
Peru and Vietnam.
We find high aspirations among low-income young people and their
caregivers and establish that education is highly valued by Peruvian Through researching different aspects
families. Young people’s aspirations are influenced by their caregivers’ of children’s lives, we seek to improve
policies and programmes for children.
educational history and experiences. The longitudinal nature of the
data, both quantitative and qualitative, allowed us to identify that
young people’s, and particularly caregivers’, educational aspirations Young Lives Partners
changed over time, mainly in response to changes in the family’s socio- Young Lives is coordinated by a small team
economic circumstances. based at the University of Oxford, led by
Professor Jo Boyden.
The study also identified several barriers preventing low-income youth • Ethiopian Development Research Institute,
Ethiopia
in urban and rural areas from realising their educational aspirations.
• Pankhurst Development Research and
Besides economic and psychological barriers (mainly experienced as Consulting plc, Ethiopia
lack of family support), the papers points to the existence of additional • Centre for Economic and Social Studies,
barriers such as a lack of information available to secondary school Hyderabad, India
students, and their parents, about higher education (what and where to • Save the Children India
study and how to apply) and the fact that schools do not play an active • Sri Padmavathi Mahila Visvavidyalayam
(Women’s University), Andhra Pradesh, India
role in preparing students for a transition to higher education. Based
on their findings, the authors discuss some policy recommendations • Grupo de Análisis para el Desarollo
(GRADE), Peru
aimed at overcoming those barriers.
• Instituto de Investigación Nutricional, Peru
• Centre for Analysis and Forecasting,
Vietnamese Academy of Social Sciences,
Vietnam
• General Statistics Office, Vietnam
• Oxford Department of International
Development, University of Oxford, UK
Contact:
Young Lives
Oxford Department of
International Development,
University of Oxford,
3 Mansfield Road,
Oxford OX1 3TB, UK
Tel: +44 (0)1865 281751
Email: [email protected]
Website: www.younglives.org.uk
www.younglives.org.uk