Barbara Bruns
Center for Global Development
Blog
What other countries can learn from Peru’s sweeping reforms of teacher policy
It is now ten years since Jaime Saavedra became the education minister of Peru and seven years since he left that position, after serving as minister for two different presidents. That is enough time for the policies and programmes his administration launched or implemented to have borne fruit, achieved objectives, or—as is too often the case in education—been reversed.
It is also enough time to reflect on what Peru has achieved in education over the past 15 years, what else might have been done, and how politics affected both. I was lucky to have the chance to write a new paper with ex-Minister Saavedra that captures these reflections.
Peru’s education gains have been substantial. Peru has achieved high levels of enrolment and completion in basic education and, for over a decade, has been able to focus on a learning agenda.
There, also, the achievements have been significant: Peru was the only country in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) to raise PISA scores for 15-year-olds from 2015 to 2018. Peru’s learning gains on PISA between 2009 and 2018 represent one additional year of content mastery in language and math. Peru improved more than any other country (among 16 countries) from 2013 to 2019 on the Latin America regional assessment ERCE—with large gains in all domains (reading, math, and science) at both the 3rd-grade and 6th-grade levels. It is impressive that progress was driven by lowering the share of students at the lowest performance levels and that Peru’s overall performance is now above the regional average.
These learning gains and the concomitant development of a high-calibre technical team in the Ministry of Education over the period to 2020 make the disruption to education policy and progress since then distressing.
The pandemic, coupled with political instability driving the rapid succession of four education ministers from 2020 to 2023, made Peru’s education management during the pandemic one of the most ineffective in the LAC region. Public schools were closed for a full two years, one of the longest periods in the region. Efforts to support distance learning were piecemeal and failed almost entirely to address the needs of rural students. While there are no data yet on Peru’s learning losses due to the pandemic, they are doubtless substantial.
But the exceptional circumstances of the pandemic do not negate the value of reflecting on Minister Saavedra’s time in office and what he has learned about education policy and education politics by watching the country’s progress after his tenure.
Saavedra’s agenda as minister combined systemwide reforms and targeted, well-implemented complementary programmes. These took place against a backdrop of sustained economic growth and strong support from three successive Presidents (Garcia, Humala, and Kuczynski) that provided the fiscal space for higher spending and ambitious reforms.
His administration innovated and implemented many programmes, from a school bonus programme to scholarships for top high school students to become teachers, to a teacher mentoring programme, to a special bonus for rural teachers.
He also established an innovative partnership with MIT’s Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab to conduct rigorous, third-party evaluations of programmes’ impact, in what the Ministry team called MINEDLAB. Many of these programmes are described in detail in the chapter by Saavedra and Gutierrez in the book Audacious Education Purposes, edited by Fernando Reimers. Evaluations that have emerged more recently confirm the positive impacts of many initiatives, notably the rural teacher bonus programme and the teacher mentoring programme.
The focus of our paper is Peru’s experience with major, systemwide reforms to raise teacher quality. Very few developing countries have adopted reforms as sweeping as Peru’s, and Saavedra’s administration was central to their design and implementation.
He had three overriding priorities as minister. The first was to implement the comprehensive 2012 law aimed at transforming the teaching profession from a low-prestige, relatively underpaid career that did not attract the country’s most academically talented students into a meritocracy with a more attractive career path, higher salaries, hiring based on academic talent, and promotions based on performance. For an excellent, detailed, insider’s analysis of the careful design and complex implementation of the teacher screening process at the heart of the reform, see a recent paper by Giuliana Espinosa and Liliana Miranda. A recent IDB analysis confirms better subsequent teaching performance by those who passed the new screening process.
Saavedra’s second priority was developing a coherent new curriculum to build the academic competencies and values that students need for a 21st-century economy and a more equitable society. Saavedra and colleagues in the Ministry are rightly proud of not only the new curriculum but also its development process, which involved the extensive consultations with teachers, school leaders, academic experts that are considered international best practice. The Ministry also developed high-quality teaching and learning materials to support the curriculum.
The third priority, reforming higher education, including teacher training institutions, turned out to be the most politically contentious—in part because of the large, profitable private higher education sector that was launched during the Fujimori administration and became increasingly difficult to regulate. With the benefit of hindsight, one of the most important lessons of the past decade is that efforts to raise teacher quality depend crucially on progress in raising the selectivity and quality of post-secondary teacher preparation.
Over the past two decades, other Latin American countries have also sought to raise teacher quality with systemwide reforms, and some of Peru’s lessons stem in part from the comparative experience of those countries. Ecuador and Chile, like Peru, have raised teacher salaries significantly to make the career more attractive, raised the standards for teacher hiring, and made promotions contingent on performance. But, unlike Peru, they have complemented these reforms with actions to increase the selectivity of entry into teacher education institutions and to regulate and raise the quality of pre-service education. Against that backdrop, we try to distill Minister Saavedra’s experience and Peru’s education trajectory since then into seven lessons. All of these are discussed in more detail in our paper, available on the RISE website.
Minister Saavedra’s tenure involved bold attempts to raise the quality of both university and non-university higher education institutions. A 2014 Higher Education Law took on the challenge of reining in private sector institutions that by 2014 had grown to cover 77 percent of overall higher education enrolments, meeting the demand for higher education from Peru’s burgeoning pool of secondary school graduates but through schools characterised by low admissions requirements and low costs for students but high profitability for owners. Core elements of the 2014 law included the requirement of transparent data on student enrolments and faculty numbers and qualifications, as well as costs, profit, and loss data. These created a political uproar in a sector that had been unregulated for decades, and where some of the largest institutions (or networks of schools) were owned by political figures.
Conflicts over the 2014 law were exacerbated by Keiko Fujimori’s political alliance with key private university owners after her loss to Pedro Pablo Kuczynski in a close 2016 presidential election. This led to a congressional action against Minister Saavedra, and subsequently against his successor, Minister Martens.
This period not only sapped the time and attention of the Ministry; it also derailed strong actions to implement a corresponding law aimed at improving the quality of public, non-university higher education institutions where most teachers are prepared. The 2016 Ley de Institutos set out criteria for evaluating the quality of these institutions and reducing their overall numbers by weeding out lower-quality ones. This law aimed at the same actions taken to raise the quality of teacher preparation in Ecuador and Chile, but without strong support from a series of short-lived presidents or a ministerial team empowered to concentrate on its implementation and, subsequently, delays due to the pandemic.
Some caveats are in order about Minister Saavedra’s “lessons”. There are many countries where they are not applicable. First, Peru and Latin America more broadly have achieved high enrolment and graduation rates and no longer suffer from the acute shortage of teachers seen in other regions, notably Sub-Saharan Africa. Second, part of Peru’s political history is unique: an autocratic presidency in the 1990s that left some very entrenched policies—such as a virtually unregulated private education sector—and entrenched politics, with a strong repudiation of the Fujimori name and era.
Reflecting on his own tenure as Minister and Peru’s reform trajectory Saavedra has drawn the following lessons:
Clearly, the story of education reform in Peru has unique political elements, but it also points out verities that can benefit other countries. It is reasonable to expect that the political situation in Peru will return to the country’s long-term trajectory of stable, growth-oriented economic policy and technocratic government—and that this will empower future ministers to continue implementing the policies of 2007–2020 and reap their long-term benefits.
It is perhaps most heartening to absorb the message of Lesson 7. On the eve of Minister Saavedra’s “censure” by Congress in December 2016, a large, spontaneous march of students and parents through the streets of Lima broke out in his support. Even reforms that cannot be implemented to achieve their goals fully can be recognised by beneficiaries as important moves in the direction of education quality.
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