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entitled 'Foreign Assistance: Enhanced Coordination Better Methods to 
Assess the Results of U.S. International Basic Education Efforts Are 
Needed' which was released on March 30, 2007. 

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Report to Congressional Committees: 

March 2007: 

Foreign Assistance: 

Enhanced Coordination and Better Methods to Assess the Results of U.S. 
International Basic Education Efforts Are Needed: 

GAO-07-523: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-07-523, a report to congressional committees 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

Pub. L. No. 109-102, section 567, mandated that GAO analyze U.S. 
international basic education efforts overseas. In this report, GAO (1) 
describes U.S. agencies’ basic education activities and how the 
agencies plan them; (2) examines U.S. coordination of basic education 
efforts among U.S. agencies, and with host governments and 
international donors; and (3) examines how U.S. agencies assess the 
results of their basic education programs. In conducting this work, GAO 
obtained and analyzed relevant agencies’ documents and met with U.S. 
and foreign government officials and nongovernmental organizations, 
traveling to selected recipient countries. 

What GAO Found: 

Several U.S. agencies—the Departments of Agriculture (USDA), Defense 
(DOD), Labor (DOL), and State, as well as the Millennium Challenge 
Corporation (MCC), U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), 
and the Peace Corps—support basic education activities overseas. State 
and USAID have strategic goals specific to promoting improved 
education. Several other U.S. agencies support basic education-related 
activities as part of programs that address their broader mission 
goals. For example, DOL supports alternative school programs as a way 
to remove children from exploitative work, USDA provides school meals 
or take-home rations to students, and DOD constructs dormitories and 
schools to provide better access for children who have to travel long 
distances to attend classes. 

GAO found that agencies did not always coordinate in the planning or 
delivery of basic education-related activities. From 2001 to 2006, 
there was no government-wide mechanism to facilitate interagency 
collaboration and, as a result, GAO identified instances where agencies 
missed opportunities to collaborate and maximize U.S. resources. In 
addition, GAO found that the level of U.S. coordination with host 
governments and other donors in the eight visited countries varied. 
Without effective coordination, donors cannot easily monitor or assess 
the host government’s progress toward achieving international goals, 
such as Education for All by 2015, one of State-USAID’s strategic 
goals. 

While U.S. agencies GAO reviewed conduct basic education-related 
programs to achieve different goals, most collect and use output 
measures, such as the numbers of schools built or children enrolled, to 
assess and report on results. USAID is the only agency with an 
education-specific goal of increasing access to quality basic 
education. However, in many instances, USAID faces challenges in 
collecting valid and reliable data needed to measure improvements in 
education quality. Without this information, agency officials cannot 
fully determine if the programs are achieving their strategic goals. 

Figures: Photos: 

[See PDF for Images] 

Source: mercy Corps for USDA. 

U.S. agencies provided school meals and computers to support basic 
education oversees. 

[End of figure] 

What GAO Recommends: 

GAO recommends that the Secretary of State work with the heads of other 
U.S. executive agencies in (1) improving interagency coordination of 
basic education efforts at headquarters in Washington and in recipient 
countries and (2) developing a plan to better assess the results of 
basic education programs, especially those programs aimed at increasing 
educational quality. We received written comments from State, USAID, 
and USDA indicating that they generally concurred with our 
recommendations. We also received technical comments, which we 
incorporated where appropriate. 

[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-07-523]. 

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
the link above. For more information, contact Jess T. Ford at (202) 512-
4128 or fordj@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Results in Brief: 

Background: 

State and USAID Recently Developed Strategic Planning Goals Relating to 
Basic Education; Other Agencies Support Basic Education-Related 
Activities to Achieve Agency-Specific Mission Goals: 

Agencies Did Not Always Coordinate International Basic Education- 
Related Activities, Which Resulted in Some Missed Opportunities to 
Collaborate and Maximize Resources: 

Assessing Basic Education Programs' Quality Results Is Difficult: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendixes: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Appendix II: Recipient Countries of Activities Related to International 
Basic Education During Fiscal Year 2006: 

Appendix III: Recipient Countries of USAID Basic Education Assistance, 
Funding Levels, and Selected World Bank's Indicators: 

Appendix IV: List of International Basic Education Projects Reviewed: 

Appendix V: Analysis of the Performance Measures in Documentation for 
Selected International Basic Education Programs: 

Appendix VI: Comments from the Department of State: 

GAO Comments: 

Appendix VII: Comments from the U.S. Agency for International 
Development: 

Appendix VIII: Comments from the U.S. Department of Agriculture: 

GAO Comments: 

Appendix IX: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Tables: 

Table 1: Agencies' Funding Allocations for Programs with International 
Basic Education-Related Activities: 

Table 2: Other Agencies' Funding Allocations for Programs with 
International Basic Education-Related Components That Support Broader 
Mission Goals: 

Table 3: Agency-Wide Reporting on Basic Education Activities: 

Table 4: Performance Measures in the Programs Selected: 

Table 5: Characteristics of the Outcome Measures: 

Table 6: Programs' Use of Outcome Measures: 

Figures: 

Figure 1: Recipient Countries of USAID Basic Education Assistance: 

Figure 2: Special Initiatives, Supported by the United States, Related 
to International Basic Education: 

Figure 3: MEPI Supported Dormitory for Moroccan Middle School Girls: 

Figure 4: Honduran Volunteer Teacher Using Prerecorded Interactive 
Compact Disk to Facilitate Seventh Grade Math Lesson: 

Figure 5: USAID-Funded Primary School Teacher Training in South Africa: 

Figure 6: Malian Teacher Demonstrating USAID-Funded Interactive 
Learning Method: 

Figure 7: USAID-Funded Portable Library for Sharing Among Peruvian 
Rural Schools: 

Figure 8: USDA's Global Food for Education Program in the Dominican 
Republic: 

Figure 9: Restroom in Kyrgyzstan Primary School Prior to and After DOD 
Refurbishment: 

Figure 10: DOL-Funded Primary School in Bangladesh: 

Figure 11: Peace Corps Volunteers Using Interactive Radio Instruction 
in Teachers' Workshop in Zambia: 

Abbreviations: 

AR: Annual Report Application: 

DFA: Director of Foreign Assistance: 

DOD: Department of Defense: 

DOL: Department of Labor: 

DSCA: Defense Security Cooperation Agency: 

EGAT: Economic Growth, Agriculture, and Trade Bureau: 

EI: Child Labor Education Initiative: 

FACT: Foreign Assistance Coordination and Tracking: 

FFE: Food for Education: 

GFEI: Global Food for Education Initiative: 

GPRA: Government Performance and Results Act: 

ILAB: Bureau of International Labor Affairs: 

ILO-IPEC: International Labor Organization's International Program on 
the Elimination of Child Labor: 

MCC: Millennium Challenge Corporation: 

MEPI: Middle East Partnership Initiative: 

NGO: nongovernmental organization: 

OCFT: Office of Child Labor, Forced Labor, and Human Trafficking: 

OHDACA: Overseas Humanitarian, Disaster, and Civic Aid: 

PPC: Policy and Program Coordination: 

SPA: Small Project Assistance: 

UN: United Nations: 

UNESCO: United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural 
Organization: 

USDA: United States Department of Agriculture: 

USAID: 

March 30, 2007: 

The Honorable Patrick J. Leahy: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Judd Gregg: 
Ranking Minority Member: 
Subcommittee on State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs: 
Committee on Appropriations: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable Nita M. Lowey: 
Chairwoman: 
The Honorable Frank R. Wolf: 
Ranking Minority Member: 
Subcommittee on State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs: 
Committee on Appropriations: 
House of Representatives: 

Education contributes to the advancement of developmental goals 
worldwide as it impacts individual development, economic growth, 
poverty reduction, and democratic governance. According to the United 
Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), the 
international community has made progress in expanding access to basic 
education in the past 10 years in every region of the world. However, 
in 2004, more than 77 million children worldwide, particularly those 
who live in rural areas and come from poor households, did not attend 
school. In addition, almost 780 million adults--one in five worldwide-
-two-thirds of whom are women, lack minimum literacy skills.[Footnote 
1] In some countries, improved access to basic education has been 
achieved through increasing student to teacher ratios--a factor that 
can negatively impact the quality of education. According to the United 
States Agency for International Development (USAID), poor educational 
quality causes many children to repeat grades and eventually drop out 
of school, often before gaining basic education skills such as numeracy 
and literacy.[Footnote 2] 

Several U.S. agencies, primarily USAID, fund and implement basic 
education-related programs overseas, using nongovernmental 
organizations (NGOs),[Footnote 3] private organizations, and education 
service providers (such as universities) to implement the programs in 
country. These efforts include programs aimed at improving primary 
education, secondary education, literacy training for adults or out-of- 
school adolescents, early childhood development, or training for 
teachers at any of these levels.[Footnote 4] From fiscal years 2001 
through 2006, USAID, the Departments of State (State) and Defense 
(DOD), and the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) 
allocated[Footnote 5] more than $2.2 billion to support U.S. 
international basic education-related efforts. During this same period, 
the Departments of Agriculture (USDA) and Labor (DOL) allocated an 
estimated more than $1 billion to programs that included basic 
education as a component, along with support to other related aspects 
such as providing food to maternal health centers and providing job 
training for older children to combat child labor. 

As mandated in Pub. L. No. 109-102, section 567, this report provides 
an analysis of U.S.-funded international basic education programs. 
Specifically, this report (1) describes U.S. agencies' basic education 
activities and how the agencies plan these activities; (2) examines 
U.S. coordination of basic education efforts among U.S. agencies, and 
with host governments and international donors; and (3) examines how 
U.S. agencies assess the results of their basic education programs. 

In conducting our work, we analyzed strategic, budget, and programmatic 
documents describing U.S. international basic education programs and 
activities provided by State, USAID, USDA, DOD, DOL, the MCC, and the 
Peace Corps that covered fiscal years 2001 through 2006. In addition, 
we conducted audit work in Washington, D.C., as well as the Dominican 
Republic, Egypt, Honduras, Liberia,[Footnote 6] Mali, Morocco, Peru, 
South Africa, and Zambia. We selected a nonprobability sample of 
foreign countries designed to ensure geographic diversity and 
representation of basic education programs from multiple U.S. agencies 
and international donors.[Footnote 7] We met with representatives from 
State, USAID, USDA, DOD, DOL, the MCC, and the Peace Corps; officials 
representing embassies and USAID missions in the countries visited; 
officials administering international basic education programs; and 
officials from foreign governments, NGOs, the United Nations (UN), and 
other international organizations. Furthermore, to assess U.S. 
mechanisms for monitoring U.S. activities, we analyzed key project 
agreement documents, performance reports, and evaluations for 40 
ongoing basic education projects in the eight countries visited. We 
performed our work from December 2005 through March 2007 in accordance 
with generally accepted government auditing standards. Appendix I 
provides a more detailed description of our scope and methodology. 

Results in Brief: 

We identified seven U.S. agencies that support activities--in over 70 
countries from fiscal years 2001 through 2006--that are directly or 
indirectly related to increasing access to or improving the quality of 
basic education overseas. State and USAID have strategic goals specific 
to promoting improved education. The other five agencies conduct basic 
education-related activities in support of programs that address their 
broader mission goals. Basic education-related activities include, 
among other things, teacher training, student feeding, school 
construction, and efforts to raise awareness of the benefits of 
education. The State and USAID joint strategic plan for fiscal years 
2004 to 2009 includes the broad goal of improving education globally, 
with a particular focus on the Muslim world, as well as support for 
programs to achieve the UN's Millennium Declaration Goal of universal 
primary education by 2015. The two agencies have implemented basic 
education activities that align with these plans. State, for example, 
through its Middle East Partnership Initiative (MEPI), supports 
activities that seek to improve access to basic education with a 
specific emphasis on girls and women in several North African and 
Middle Eastern countries and territories, while USAID supports various 
activities to increase access to and improve the quality of basic 
education and build the institutional capacity of host countries' basic 
education systems. The top recipients of USAID's basic education 
funding are predominately Muslim countries and countries of strategic 
interest to U.S. policy goals, including Afghanistan, Egypt, Ethiopia, 
Indonesia, and Pakistan. Several other U.S. agencies support basic 
education-related activities as part of their overall mission goals. 
For example, DOL supports education programs such as alternative school 
programs as a way to remove children from exploitative work, USDA 
provides school meals or take-home rations to students, and DOD 
constructs dormitories and schools to provide better access for 
children who have to travel long distances to attend classes. 

We found that agencies did not always coordinate in the planning or 
delivery of international basic education-related activities. From 2001 
to 2006, there was no government-wide mechanism to facilitate 
interagency collaboration and, as a result, we identified instances 
where agencies missed opportunities to collaborate and maximize U.S. 
resources. For example, USAID officials responsible for planning and 
managing USAID's basic education programs were not present at key DOL 
and USDA meetings at which the planning of overseas education-related 
activities were discussed, or were not aware of some agencies' basic 
education-related activities. In the eight countries we visited, we 
noted several instances where project implementers in the countries did 
not collaborate or take advantage of opportunities to maximize U.S. 
resources in areas in which they had similar objectives of improving 
the quality of education. For example, in several of these countries, 
DOL could have joined USAID's efforts to effect policy reforms directed 
at rural youth by using USAID's delivery mechanisms of radio and 
television programming, as well as printed materials to raise public 
awareness of child labor issues. Although State's Director of Foreign 
Assistance (DFA) has begun to address the issue of better coordinating 
all U.S. foreign assistance by bringing together core teams to discuss 
U.S. development priorities in each recipient country, it is unclear to 
what extent these efforts will be accepted and implemented by agencies 
whose foreign assistance programs are not under DFA's direct authority. 
In addition, we found that the level of U.S. coordination with host 
governments and other donors in the eight countries we visited also 
varied. We observed stronger coordination in countries with strong 
national commitments to education reform and formal donor working 
groups on education, as well as in those countries implementing 
activities in support of the World Bank's Education for All Fast Track 
Initiative.[Footnote 8] We observed weaker coordination in countries 
that lacked a lead donor or host government commitment to convening 
donor meetings. Most donors that we interviewed acknowledged that 
further improvements in coordination could result in more efficient 
delivery of assistance. Without effective coordination, donors cannot 
easily monitor or assess the host government's progress toward 
achieving international goals, such as Education for All by 2015, one 
of State-USAID's strategic goals. 

While U.S. agencies we reviewed conduct basic education-related 
programs to achieve different goals, most collect and use output 
measures to assess and report on the results of their activities. 
Output measures are the direct products and services delivered by a 
program, such as numbers of schools built or children enrolled. USAID 
is the only agency with an education-specific goal of increasing access 
to quality basic education, and while USAID can measure education 
access through outputs such as the numbers of students enrolled in 
primary school programs, it does not, in many instances, measure 
education quality--a key goal of its programs. Outcome measures are the 
results of products and services provided, such as increased literacy 
and numeracy rates, which are indicators of improved education quality. 
Our analysis showed that USAID can report on some quality-related 
outcomes, such as primary school retention rates. However, it faces 
challenges in collecting valid and reliable data on student learning in 
areas such as math and reading. According to USAID and the UNESCO, 
student testing results are a good outcome measure of increased 
educational quality. To better assess its goal of improving access to 
quality education, USAID is developing a standardized test that could 
provide data on primary-level reading ability and would be comparable 
across countries. In addition, State's DFA plans to work toward 
developing methods to assess whether all foreign assistance programs 
are achieving their goals; however, these efforts are only in the early 
discussion phase. Without this information, agency officials cannot 
determine if the programs are achieving their strategic goals. 

This report contains several recommendations to the Secretary of State. 
Specifically, it recommends that the Secretary of State work with the 
heads of other U.S. executive agencies supporting international basic 
education-related activities in (1) improving interagency coordination 
of basic education efforts at headquarters in Washington and in 
recipient countries to facilitate better planning and allocation of 
U.S. resources and (2) developing a plan to identify indicators that 
would help U.S. agencies, to the extent practicable, track improvements 
in access to quality education. 

We received written comments on the draft of this report from State, 
USAID, and USDA (see apps. VI, VII, and VIII) indicating that they 
generally concurred with our recommendations. We also received 
technical comments on this draft from State, USAID, DOL, the MCC, and 
the Peace Corps, which we incorporated where appropriate. 

Background: 

Basic education is defined in this report as all program efforts aimed 
at improving early childhood development, primary education, and 
secondary education, as well as training in literacy, numeracy, and 
other basic skills for adults or out-of-school youth. Basic education 
also includes efforts that facilitate and support such learning 
activities, including building host countries' institutional capacity 
to manage basic education systems and measure results, constructing and 
rehabilitating schools, training teachers, increasing parent and 
community involvement in schools, providing learning materials, and 
developing curricula. 

Education for All is a major goal of the international donor community. 
At Jomtien, Thailand, in March 1990, representatives of the global 
education community held the "World Conference on Education for All" 
and declared universal access to education as a fundamental right of 
all people. In April 2000, the "World Education Forum"[Footnote 9] met 
in Dakar, Senegal, where delegates from 181 nations adopted a framework 
for action committing their governments to achieve quality basic 
education for all--including ensuring that by 2015, all children-- 
especially girls, children in difficult circumstances, and those from 
ethnic minorities--have access to completely free primary education of 
good quality. The framework committed these nations to the attainment 
of six specific goals dealing with early childhood education, universal 
primary education, life-skills programs, adult literacy, gender 
disparities, and quality assurance. The United States supports this 
international commitment, as well as the UN's Millennium Development 
Goal--to achieve universal completion of primary school by 2015. 

U.S. Agencies Fund International Basic Education-Related Programs: 

From fiscal years 2001 through 2006, USAID, State, DOD, and MCC 
allocated more than $2.2 billion to support U.S. international basic 
education-related efforts. See table 1 for these agencies' funding 
allocations specifically for basic education-related programs. 

Table 1: Agencies' Funding Allocations for Programs with International 
Basic Education-Related Activities: 

Dollars in millions. 

USAID[A]; 
FY 2001: $161.6; 
FY 2002: $232.0; 
FY 2003: $339.2; 
FY 2004: $520.4; 
FY 2005: $413.0; 
FY 2006: $504.0; 
Total[D]: $2,170.3. 

State[B]; 
FY 2001: 0; 
FY 2002: 0.8; 
FY 2003: 14.7; 
FY 2004: 8.9; 
FY 2005: 2.8; 
FY 2006: 2.0; 
Total[D]: $29.2. 

DOD; 
FY 2001: 2.3; 
FY 2002: 1.6; 
FY 2003: 2.1; 
FY 2004: 6.0; 
FY 2005: 3.9; 
FY 2006: 0.3; 
Total[D]: $16.2. 

MCC; 
FY 2001: N/A[C]; 
FY 2002: N/A; 
FY 2003: N/A; 
FY 2004: 0; 
FY 2005: 12.9; 
FY 2006: 0; 
Total[D]: $12.9. 

Total[D]; 
FY 2001: $163.9; 
FY 2002: $234.5; 
FY 2003: $356.1; 
FY 2004: $535.3; 
FY 2005: $432.6; 
FY 2006: $506.3; 
Total[D]: $2,228.6. 

Source: U.S. agencies' data. 

Note: $0 indicates no allocated amounts. The Peace Corps is not 
included because it does not track funding by program sector. 

[A] Figures shown for USAID funding include funds transferred from 
State for USAID-implemented MEPI programs. 

[B] Figures shown for State's funding include funds for State- 
implemented MEPI programs. 

[C] N/A: not applicable because the MCC was not established until 2004. 

[D] Totals may not add due to rounding. 

[End of table] 

During this same period, USDA and DOL allocated an estimated more than 
$1 billion to programs that included a basic education component that 
supported their broader mission goals. For example, funding for USDA's 
Food for Education program includes basic education activities along 
with other components, such as providing maternal health centers. 
Similarly, DOL's funding for its programs to combat child labor 
combines basic education-related efforts and other activities, such as 
job training for older children and income generation opportunities for 
parents. In addition, the Peace Corps could not identify funding levels 
specific to basic education because it does not track funding by 
individual program sectors, rather by overall country programs. This is 
because volunteers sometimes implement projects in multiple program 
sectors. Furthermore, other than USAID, U.S. agencies do not have a 
standard, government-wide, formal definition of basic education or a 
requirement to report their funding of international basic education 
activities to a central U.S. government source. See table 2 for these 
agencies' funding allocations for programs with international basic 
education-related components. 

Table 2: Other Agencies' Funding Allocations for Programs with 
International Basic Education-Related Components That Support Broader 
Mission Goals: 

Dollars in millions. 

USDA; 
FY 2001: $178.3; 
FY 2002: $89.9; 
FY 2003: $93.1; 
FY 2004: $49.6; 
FY 2005: $89.7; 
FY 2006: $98.7; 
Total[A]: $599.3. 

DOL; 
FY 2001: 81.0; 
FY 2002: 77.5; 
FY 2003: 80.1; 
FY 2004: 75.9; 
FY 2005: 72.3; 
FY 2006: 53.6; 
Total[A]: $440.4. 

Total[A]; 
FY 2001: $259.3; 
FY 2002: $167.4; 
FY 2003: $173.2; 
FY 2004: $125.5; 
FY 2005: $162.0; 
FY 2006: $152.3; 
Total[A]: $1,039.6. 

Source: U.S. agencies' data. 

[A] Totals may not add due to rounding. 

[End of table] 

See appendix II for the countries receiving basic education-related 
assistance by implementing U.S. agency in fiscal year 2006. 

USAID Funded the Vast Majority of International Basic Education 
Programs: 

From fiscal years 2001 through 2006, USAID funded the majority of U.S. 
international basic education programs, allocating more than $2.1 
billion to implement programs in about 60 countries worldwide. USAID 
used appropriated funds designated by Congress for basic education and 
other supplemental appropriations.[Footnote 10] In addition to the 
congressionally designated basic education funds,[Footnote 11] USAID 
used other appropriated funds, including supplemental 
appropriations[Footnote 12] and funding for MEPI activities, to fund 
basic education activities abroad. By region, Asia and the Near East 
received the highest level of USAID's allocated basic education funds 
at approximately $1 billion, followed by Africa at almost $750 million, 
Latin America and the Caribbean at around $272 million, and Europe and 
Eurasia at about $51 million. See figure 1 for a map of the 60 
recipient countries of USAID's basic education funding, ranked by total 
basic education allocations from fiscal years 2001 through 2006. 

Figure 1: Recipient Countries of USAID Basic Education Assistance: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Sources: USAID (data); Map Resources (map). 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

Special Initiatives Related to International Basic Education: 

Since fiscal year 2001, the United States has launched several major 
education initiatives that direct missions to focus on specific types 
of basic education activities in certain regions, such as Africa, Latin 
America and the Caribbean, and the Middle East, to address educational 
challenges in those regions. Figure 2 summarizes these initiatives. 

Figure 2: Special Initiatives, Supported by the United States, Related 
to International Basic Education: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Sources: GAO analysis of USAID and State data. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

State and USAID Recently Developed Strategic Planning Goals Relating to 
Basic Education; Other Agencies Support Basic Education-Related 
Activities to Achieve Agency-Specific Mission Goals: 

The State and USAID joint strategic plan for fiscal years 2004 to 2009 
includes the broad goal of improving education globally, with a 
particular focus on the Muslim world, as well as support for programs 
to achieve the United Nations' Millennium Declaration Goal of universal 
primary education by 2015. State and USAID have implemented basic 
education activities that align with these goals. Several other U.S. 
agencies support activities that directly or indirectly relate to 
increasing access to or improving the quality of international basic 
education. 

State and USAID Strategic Plan Includes Broad Education Goals: 

State and USAID have strategic goals specific to promoting improved 
education. Although State and USAID have supported assistance 
activities relating to education for decades, neither agency had agency-
wide strategies to guide these activities until early 2000. Moreover, 
State's September 2000 strategic plan only included references to 
improving education as part of the broader goal of promoting broad-
based growth in developing and transitioning economies to raise 
standards of living, reduce poverty, and lessen disparities of wealth 
within and among countries. The State and USAID joint Strategic Plan 
for Fiscal Years 2004 to 2009,[Footnote 13] includes, for the first 
time for these agencies, education as a strategic goal. According to 
the strategic plan, State and USAID will promote improved education 
globally, with a particular focus on the Muslim world, as well as 
support the development goals of the UN's Millennium Declaration call 
for universal primary education by 2015. Working toward this UN goal, 
the plan calls for State and USAID to support programs that do the 
following: 

* Promote equal access to quality basic education. The strategy says 
that State and USAID would assist and encourage countries to improve 
their education policies, institutions, and practices in the classroom; 
give families and communities a stronger role in educational decision 
making; and focus their efforts on reducing barriers to education for 
girls. 

* Implement international education commitments. The strategy also 
states that both agencies will work with donor partners to implement 
the commitments made at the 2000 World Educational Forum in Dakar, the 
G-8[Footnote 14] Summits at Genoa and Kananaskis, and at the UN 
Conference on Financing for Development in Monterrey. In addition, the 
agencies are to help developing countries build their capacity to 
achieve the global Education for All initiative. 

State and USAID Have Implemented Basic Education Activities That Align 
with Their Strategic Plans: 

Consistent with the joint strategic plan's education goals, State has 
implemented programs, mainly through MEPI, to target basic education in 
North Africa and the Middle East. As the largest provider of U.S. basic 
education assistance, USAID also supports activities that align with 
the joint strategic plan, as well as its 2005 education strategy that 
focuses on improving: (1) access to education, (2) quality of 
education, and (3) host governments' capacity to manage education 
efforts. In addition, USAID has allocated resources toward 
strategically important countries, as noted in both strategy documents. 

State's Programs Target the Middle East and Muslim Countries: 

State generally supports education programs that align with the 
agency's broader foreign policy objectives such as promoting democracy 
and reform in the Muslim world. Primarily through MEPI, the agency 
supports international basic education activities aimed at increasing 
access to basic education, especially for girls and women, and 
improving the quality of basic education through teacher training, 
curriculum development, and community involvement in North African and 
Middle Eastern countries and territories. For example, through MEPI, 
State's Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs supports a "scholarships for 
success" program in Morocco to increase access to secondary schools for 
girls living in remote rural communities through the creation of girls' 
dormitories (see fig. 3). As an initiative directed by the 
administration, MEPI allocates resources for basic education programs 
in North African and Middle Eastern countries and territories. Under 
MEPI, basic education funds are allocated for country-specific and 
regional programs based on information from U.S. embassies and other 
U.S. agencies with regional programs that can identify areas of need, 
and through conversations with host governments. Between fiscal years 
2001 and 2006, the Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs allocated about $35 
million in MEPI funding for 23 basic education-related projects in 11 
North African and Middle Eastern countries and territories. In addition 
to MEPI, during the same period, State's Bureau of Educational and 
Cultural Affairs funded one basic education project that allocated, in 
Indonesia, a total of $2.4 million in fiscal years 2004 and 2005 to 
fund multiyear scholarships for Indonesian teachers at the secondary 
and university level to study education in the United States. 

Figure 3: MEPI Supported Dormitory for Moroccan Middle School Girls: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: GAO. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

USAID Programs Support Education Strategic Objectives; Resources 
Correspond with U.S. Strategic Priorities: 

In the eight countries we visited, we found that USAID implemented 
programs that targeted the agencies' emphasized population of primary- 
level students and girls and aligned with its three main strategic 
objectives. USAID's resource allocations of top recipients of basic 
education funding from fiscal years 2001 through 2006 show consistency 
with U.S. priorities placed on strategic partner countries. 

USAID Programs Support Education Strategy: 

Prior to 2005, USAID did not have an agency-wide education strategy and 
its education programming was generally guided over time by several 
agency strategies, policies, and operational directives. In April 2005, 
USAID issued an education strategy that prioritizes the broad education 
objective of increasing equitable access to quality education, with the 
more specific focuses on primary education and girls' education. The 
strategy directs that USAID focus on (1) increasing access to basic 
education, (2) improving the quality of basic education, and (3) 
building the institutional capacity of the host countries' basic 
education systems. This strategy also supports the broader State and 
USAID strategic goals of improving education globally with a particular 
emphasis on the Muslim world, as it emphasizes the importance of 
education in strategic countries, as well as implementing international 
education commitments, such as the Education for All by 2015 
initiative. 

In the eight countries we visited, we found that USAID generally 
implemented programs that aligned with its three main strategic 
objectives and targeted the agencies' emphasized population of primary- 
level students and girls. According to USAID, as a matter of policy, 
USAID's efforts focus on increasing children's access to quality 
primary education because the quality and accessibility of primary 
education plays a critical role in determining whether children gain 
core skills, such as literacy and numeracy, and have a chance to gain 
further education.[Footnote 15] In addition, USAID has a special focus 
on girls' education. Missions engaged in basic education are required 
to assess the extent of educational disadvantage faced by girls at the 
primary level in the host country and take further steps where this 
disadvantage is found to be significant. Seven of the eight missions we 
visited implemented projects to increase access and improve the quality 
of basic education for primary-school youth. However, USAID also 
recognizes the need for missions to have flexibility in planning and 
implementing programs, and taking into account both the conditions of 
the particular host countries and the activities of other donors in the 
country. For example, while the mission in Morocco continued to focus 
on girls' education, its basic education assistance shifted more toward 
middle schools, since the mission determined that high dropout rates 
among primary-school students were often due to the lack of access to 
quality secondary schools where those students would have continued 
with their education and because other donors were already investing 
significant resources into primary education in the country. 

Following are details about USAID's programs to support its three 
strategic goals: (1) increasing access to basic education, (2) 
improving the quality of basic education, and (3) building the 
institutional capacity of the host countries' basic education systems. 

* Access: To increase access to basic education, USAID supports a wide 
range of programs, such as distance learning, girls' scholarships, and 
school construction, that increase the number of boys and girls who 
enter and remain in school, particularly underserved populations such 
as girls, the poor, children in rural areas, and out-of-school youth. 
To increase access, the agency often uses distance learning tools, such 
as radio, television, and other information and communication 
technologies, to deliver quality educational content to populations not 
accommodated by the traditional school system. Agency efforts to 
increase access to basic education also include, among other things, 
construction and rehabilitation of school facilities, girls' 
scholarships, and adult literacy programs. In six of the eight 
countries we visited (Egypt, Honduras, South Africa, Mali, Morocco, and 
Zambia), we found that missions implemented programs in support of this 
strategic goal. For example, in Egypt, Honduras, South Africa, and 
Zambia, USAID used distance learning programs, such as prerecorded 
lessons, to deliver educational content to preprimary, primary, and 
secondary school youth--particularly girls, children from rural areas, 
and poor children. In Egypt, Mali, Morocco, South Africa, and Zambia, 
USAID implemented scholarship programs for girls, while the mission in 
Egypt also supported the construction of primary schools to increase 
access and enrollment of girls in underserved communities. See figure 4 
for an example of a USAID program aimed at increasing education access. 

Figure 4: Honduran Volunteer Teacher Using Prerecorded Interactive 
Compact Disk to Facilitate Seventh Grade Math Lesson: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: GAO. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

* Quality: USAID also implements a wide array of programs to improve 
education quality. These programs are generally designed to improve 
teachers' subject matter knowledge and pedagogical skills, ensure the 
curriculum includes specific knowledge and skills relevant to students' 
lives, and provide learners with access to appropriate workbooks and 
other learning materials that complement and reinforce teachers' 
efforts. Typical forms of assistance include training teachers, along 
with technical assistance to strengthen the capacity of local teacher 
training institutions; promoting the adoption of teaching methods that 
involve students in the learning process; promoting improvements in 
curriculum content; helping host countries develop methods of student 
assessment; and providing learning materials, such as textbooks and 
portable libraries. All eight missions we visited implemented programs 
to improve quality, using a variety of the approaches described above. 
See figures 5 to 7 for examples of USAID projects aimed at improving 
education quality. 

Figure 5: USAID-Funded Primary School Teacher Training in South Africa: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: GAO. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

Figure 6: Malian Teacher Demonstrating USAID-Funded Interactive 
Learning Method: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: GAO. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

Figure 7: USAID-Funded Portable Library for Sharing Among Peruvian 
Rural Schools: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: GAO. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

* Capacity building: USAID implements a wide variety of basic education 
programs to build host countries' institutional capacity to manage 
their basic education systems. Typical forms of assistance include 
training school principals in educational leadership and management; 
promoting the active participation by parents and parent associations 
in supporting school improvement; developing effective policy analysis 
units within education ministries; supporting the adoption and use of 
appropriate data and educational management information systems, as 
well as measures to enhance accountability and transparency in the use 
of public education funds; and the decentralization of educational 
decision making to local levels. All eight missions we visited 
implemented programs that either specifically focused on building the 
host countries' educational capacity or contained a capacity-building 
component. For example, in Zambia, USAID implemented a project to 
decentralize administration of the country's education management 
information systems. In Egypt, USAID implemented a project to support 
the country's decentralization efforts by rewarding schools and 
surrounding communities that are active in assessing their needs and 
successful in planning and implementing measures to improve education 
quality. 

Because many USAID programs simultaneously support multiple objectives, 
USAID could not provide a breakout of funding for its international 
basic education efforts by strategic objective, such as access or 
quality, or by program activity, such as teacher training. According to 
USAID, quality and access are interlinked in important ways, as when 
quality improvements lead to reduced grade repetition, accelerating 
children's progress through school and increasing access for subsequent 
students. Missions decide whether to concentrate their efforts on 
increasing access or improving quality and which program approaches to 
use based on their assessment of how they can achieve the most valuable 
results in light of country conditions. For example, in Mali, a country 
in which only about 50 percent of primary school-aged children are 
enrolled in school, USAID decided to focus its strategy on improving 
the quality of basic education based on the rationale that the greatest 
impediment to achieving universal access is the poor quality of 
education. 

USAID Resources Directed at Strategic Partners of U.S. Foreign 
Priorities: 

USAID's resource allocations for basic education are consistent with 
USAID and State's efforts to more closely align foreign policy and 
development goals. According to USAID's April 2005 education strategy 
and USAID officials, the agency allocates resources based on the host 
country's needs, commitment, and overall development progress, while 
acknowledging the importance of geo-strategic states, such as some 
predominantly Muslim countries. USAID and State's joint strategic plan 
also states that their education programs will be particularly focused 
on Muslim countries following the September 11 attacks. For example, in 
Mali, a predominantly Muslim country, USAID implemented a girls' 
scholarship program in which it focused on girls in traditional, 
religious communities and also tried to engage local religious Muslim 
leaders in discussions on how the scholarship program would be 
structured and invited them to become members of the local management 
committee. We found that USAID has implemented programs to target 
strategic states; specifically, from fiscal years 2001 through 2006, 
many of the top 10 recipient countries of USAID basic education 
assistance were strategic partners in achieving U.S. foreign policy 
objectives, including fighting the war against terrorism and promoting 
regional stability and democracy. Among these top 10 recipients were 
many predominantly Islamic countries, such as Afghanistan, Indonesia, 
Iraq, Jordan, and Pakistan, which did not receive any USAID basic 
education funding in fiscal year 2001, but received significant funding 
beginning in fiscal year 2002. These countries, along with Egypt and 
Ethiopia, all ranked among the top 10 recipients of basic education 
funding from fiscal years 2001 through 2006 and were all considered 
strategically important allies in the global war on terror, according 
to USAID officials and USAID and State operational plans. See appendix 
III for a list of recipient countries of USAID basic education funding 
from fiscal years 2001 through 2006 and selected educational indicators 
from the World Bank.[Footnote 16] 

USAID began basic education programs in the war-affected countries of 
Iraq and Afghanistan to support efforts to facilitate their transition 
to more stable, democratic, and productive states. In 2002, following 
the defeat of the Taliban, USAID started a basic education program in 
Afghanistan, which originally focused on four areas: textbook 
production and distribution, radio-based teacher training, accelerated 
learning for over-age and out-of-school students, and school 
construction and rehabilitation. USAID's current efforts in Afghanistan 
focus on improving the quality of the country's basic education system 
through teacher training. In May 2003, in the immediate aftermath of 
initial combat operations in Iraq, USAID program efforts supported the 
resumption of school through the rehabilitation of classrooms and the 
provision of educational materials. However, according to USAID 
officials, the mission's efforts faced many challenges due to attacks 
on teachers and schools. While the USAID mission in Iraq has 
rehabilitated 2,962 primary and secondary schools since the conflict 
began in 2003, the mission does not know whether these schools are 
currently operating due to the hostile security environment. USAID's 
basic education efforts in Iraq have also focused on improving the 
quality of Iraq's basic education system through training primary and 
secondary school teachers, building the education ministry's capacity 
to manage and reform its education system, and increasing access to 
basic education for out-of-school youth through an accelerated learning 
program. These basic education activities were funded through 
supplemental appropriations specifically for Iraq. USAID ended its 
basic education program in Iraq in 2005 due to a change in mission 
priorities. According to a USAID official, the mission's current 
priorities are focused on community stabilization, local governance, 
economic governance, national capacity development, and private sector 
development. 

Other Agencies Conduct Basic Education-Related Activities in Support of 
Their Missions: 

In addition to State and USAID, several other agencies implement 
activities that directly and indirectly support increasing access to 
and improving the quality of basic education in support of programs 
that address their broader mission goals.[Footnote 17] These agencies 
include USDA, DOD, and DOL, as well as the Peace Corps and MCC. 

Department of Agriculture: 

USDA's Foreign Agricultural Service funds and administers basic 
education-related activities through the provision of food assistance 
as part of the agency's broader mission to create economic opportunity 
for American agriculture by expanding global markets and to support 
food security worldwide. The agency supports basic education by 
providing school meals or take-home rations to students overseas and by 
facilitating the sale of food commodities to support basic education 
programs in communities. USDA's efforts, which target low-income, food- 
deficit countries, particularly focus on girls since they tend to have 
much lower school attendance rates than boys in many of USDA's 
recipient countries. In fiscal year 2001, USDA's Foreign Agricultural 
Service administered the Global Food for Education Initiative (GFEI), a 
pilot program with the overall goal of contributing to universal 
education by using school meals to attract primary-school children to 
school, keep them attending once enrolled, and improve learning. 
Through the program, USDA donated U.S. agricultural commodities and 
associated technical and financial assistance to the World Food 
Program, 13 private voluntary organizations, and one national 
government (the Dominican Republic, see fig. 8). The organizations then 
used the commodities in 48 school feeding projects in 38 developing 
countries. For example, in the Dominican Republic, USDA donated wheat 
and crude soybean oil, which were sold locally, with proceeds used to 
carry out community-based school feeding and educational improvement 
programs managed by local NGOs. In fiscal year 2003, the GFEI was 
continued under USDA's McGovern-Dole International Food for Education 
and Child Nutrition Program (Food for Education). The Food for 
Education (FFE) program also provides nutrition programs for pregnant 
women, nursing mothers, infants, and preschool children to sustain and 
improve the health and learning capacity of children before they enter 
school. USDA allocates basic education resources to low-income, food- 
deficit countries that are committed to universal education. From 
fiscal years 2001 through 2006, USDA allocated $599.3 million to 
implement the GFEI and the FFE program in 42 countries worldwide. 

Figure 8: USDA's Global Food for Education Program in the Dominican 
Republic: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: USDA. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

Department of Defense: 

DOD funds basic education activities through its Overseas Humanitarian, 
Disaster, and Civic Aid (OHDACA) program, as part of the program's 
broader goal to achieve U.S. security objectives, improve DOD's access 
to areas not otherwise available to U.S. forces, build local 
capabilities and cooperative relationships with a host country's civil 
society, and provide basic humanitarian aid and services to populations 
in need. DOD supports increased access to basic education through its 
construction of primary and secondary school buildings and 
refurbishment of existing school facilities (see fig. 9) in all of the 
Combatant Commanders' areas of responsibility. According to one DOD 
command, it often uses the constructed school facilities as centers to 
manage and coordinate the Department's natural disaster response 
activities. Recipient countries of DOD humanitarian assistance are 
identified through DOD guidance and with input from in-country U.S. 
agencies on host countries' need. From fiscal years 2001 through 2006, 
DOD allocated $16.2 million to fund 232 basic education projects in 50 
countries worldwide. 

Figure 9: Restroom in Kyrgyzstan Primary School Prior to and After DOD 
Refurbishment: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: DOD. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

Department of Labor: 

DOL's Bureau of International Labor Affairs (ILAB) funds and 
administers international child labor projects with basic education 
components as part of its broader strategic goal to remove or prevent 
children from exploitative child labor and provide affected children 
with education, training, or both. Through its international child 
labor projects, DOL supports basic education by developing formal and 
transitional education systems that encourage working children and 
those at risk to attend school; raising awareness on the importance of 
education for all children and mobilizing support for improved and 
expanded educational infrastructures; and strengthening national 
institutions and policies on education and child labor (see fig. 10). 
The ILAB uses two mechanisms to implement these projects: (1) the 
International Labor Organization's International Program on the 
Elimination of Child Labor (ILO-IPEC), which removes or prevents 
exploitative child labor and provides affected children with education 
or training or both, strengthens the ability of host countries to 
address child labor, and raises awareness on the hazards of child labor 
and the benefits of education; and (2) Child Labor Education Initiative 
(EI), which funds projects that promote access to quality basic 
education for children at risk or engaging in exploitative child labor. 
The Bureau allocates basic education resources to countries based on 
its assessment of where there are child labor needs going unaddressed, 
and where the agency will have the greatest impact. During fiscal years 
2001 through 2006, the Bureau allocated $440.4 million to implement 
basic education activities in 77 countries worldwide. 

Figure 10: DOL-Funded Primary School in Bangladesh: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: Joel Grimes for DOL. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

The Peace Corps: 

The Peace Corps supports basic education through the activities of its 
volunteers who work at the local level with host country governments, 
NGOs, and communities on projects aimed at promoting sustainable 
development at the grassroots level and enhancing cross-cultural 
understanding. The Peace Corps provides volunteers to work in 
developing countries where they have been invited and determines which 
programs best address a host country's need by consulting with host 
country officials. Education is the Peace Corps' largest 
sector.[Footnote 18] The volunteers' basic education projects include 
training and mentoring teachers in K-12 schools, using radios to 
deliver educational content to HIV/AIDS orphans and vulnerable 
children, and strengthening preschool programs through teacher training 
and mentoring. For example, in Zambia, Peace Corps volunteers assist 
the country's Ministry of Education in implementing a primary school 
interactive curriculum, which is broadcast over the national radio to 
increase access to basic education in rural settings (see fig. 11). 
During fiscal year 2006, 2,674 Peace Corps volunteers provided 
educational assistance in 52 countries worldwide.[Footnote 19] 

Figure 11: Peace Corps Volunteers Using Interactive Radio Instruction 
in Teachers' Workshop in Zambia: 

[See PDF for image] - graphic text: 

Source: Peace Corps. 

[End of figure] - graphic text: 

In addition, the Peace Corps supports basic education activities 
through its Small Project Assistance (SPA) program, which provides 
hundreds of small grants to volunteers' communities to increase the 
capabilities of local communities to conduct low-cost, grassroots, 
sustainable development projects. For example, in Morocco, Peace Corps 
volunteers used SPA funding to construct latrines to increase 
children's attendance, particularly girls. This program operates under 
the terms of an inter-agency agreement between USAID and the Peace 
Corps. In fiscal year 2005, 57 Peace Corps posts approved about 
$766,000 to support 354 different SPA education projects. 

Millennium Challenge Corporation: 

MCC supports international basic education as part of its larger 
mission to reduce poverty through economic growth in developing 
countries that create and maintain sound policy environments. The MCC 
provides developing countries with monetary assistance--through compact 
agreements and threshold agreements[Footnote 20]--to support a variety 
of development projects, including basic education. For a country to be 
selected as eligible for an MCC assistance program, it must demonstrate 
a commitment to policies that promote political and economic freedom, 
investments in education and health, control of corruption, and respect 
for civil liberties and the rule of law by performing well on 16 
different policy indicators. For example, in fiscal year 2005, the MCC 
allocated $12.9 million to Burkina Faso, through a threshold agreement 
to fund a USAID-implemented pilot project with the objective to improve 
access to, and improve the quality of, primary education for girls in 
10 provinces that have historically achieved the lowest levels of 
girls' primary education completion rates. The project entailed the 
construction of "girl-friendly" schools with canteens and community-
managed child care centers; provision of textbooks, supplies, and take-
home rations; teacher training; mentoring; literacy training for women; 
merit awards for teachers; and a societal awareness campaign on the 
benefits of educating girls. MCC also plans to provide funding for the 
implementation of basic education activities in Mali, Ghana, and El 
Salvador. 

Agencies Did Not Always Coordinate International Basic Education- 
Related Activities, Which Resulted in Some Missed Opportunities to 
Collaborate and Maximize Resources: 

We found that agencies did not always coordinate in the planning or 
delivery of international basic education-related activities. From 
fiscal years 2001 to 2006, there was no government-wide mechanism to 
facilitate interagency collaboration and, as a result, at the 
headquarters level we identified instances where agencies missed 
opportunities to collaborate and maximize U.S. resources. Further, in 
the eight countries that we visited, we noted several instances where 
agencies did not collaborate or take advantage of opportunities to 
maximize U.S. resources in areas in which they had similar objectives 
of improving the quality of education. In addition, we found that the 
level of U.S. coordination with host governments and other donors in 
the eight countries we visited also varied. Without effective 
coordination, donors cannot easily monitor or assess the host 
government's progress toward achieving international goals, such as 
Education for All by 2015, one of State-USAID's strategic goals. 

The United States Lacked a Government-Wide Mechanism to Coordinate 
International Basic Education Activities: 

We found that, for international basic education-related activities 
that we reviewed, between 2001 and 2006 there was no government-wide 
coordination mechanism to facilitate interagency planning and delivery 
of U.S. basic education assistance. While some agencies met 
periodically to discuss and plan specific basic education activities-- 
usually those involving joint-or multiagency agreements--these 
activities often did not include all cognizant officials or agencies 
responsible for planning or delivering basic education assistance. As a 
result, at the headquarters level, interagency coordination was mixed 
and resulted in some missed opportunities to collaborate on the 
planning of U.S. basic education assistance. The following are some 
examples: 

* DOD guidance calls for Combatant Commands to coordinate Humanitarian 
Assistance Program projects with other agencies at the country level 
before they are submitted to the Defense Security Cooperation Agency 
(DSCA), which then forwards the program descriptions to State for 
review and concurrence. However, staff we spoke to within USAID's 
Economic Growth, Agriculture, and Trade Bureau (EGAT), which manages 
USAID's basic education activities, were not aware of DOD humanitarian 
assistance projects. 

* USDA calls annual meetings with USAID's Food for Peace Office, State, 
and Office of Management and Budget officials to discuss and coordinate 
upcoming projects for its McGovern-Dole International Food for 
Education Program. However, staff from USAID EGAT do not attend these 
meetings, even though some of USDA's school feeding activities coincide 
with USAID's basic education activities. 

* DOL officials provided several examples of efforts to coordinate 
programs with other agencies, including USAID and State. For example, 
DOL's Office of Child Labor, Forced Labor, and Human Trafficking (OCFT) 
convenes annual meetings with State and USAID to discuss its upcoming 
programs, including those related to DOL's Child Labor Education 
Initiative. Until 2004, USAID had an informal focal point who attended 
these meetings. After this focal point retired in early 2004, DOL sent 
a letter to USAID in April 2004 requesting a formal point of contact. 
According to DOL officials, USAID never replied to this letter. Since 
then, although DOL has regularly requested the attendance of USAID desk 
officers and technical staff to brief them on its upcoming projects, 
those USAID staff did not always attend, and those that attended may 
not have been the most knowledgeable about existing basic education 
programs. Although one member of USAID EGAT attended the February 2007 
coordination meeting, there is still no formal USAID focal point for 
these meetings. In addition, DOL copies State on letters to foreign 
governments regarding DOL programming in their countries. 

* Peace Corps officials stated that the agency does not coordinate 
programming priorities with USAID in Washington because programming is 
determined by host governments, in collaboration with the Peace Corps, 
once the agency is invited to serve in country.[Footnote 21] 

* Beyond USAID's implementation of the single MCC basic education 
program in Burkina Faso, coordination between MCC and USAID was 
characterized by USAID and MCC officials as minimal, namely because MCC 
is not organized around technical sectors. However, MCC officials said 
that they share proposals and lessons learned with other U.S. agencies. 

* State's coordination of basic education activities with USAID at the 
headquarters level occurred primarily through the MEPI program, in 
which USAID serves as an administrative partner and manages over one- 
third of MEPI's basic education programs. This coordination included 
formal and informal meetings to discuss the results of joint State and 
USAID strategic reviews of existing bilateral development assistance in 
the Middle East and North Africa and the identification of reform areas 
that were not being addressed by other U.S. agencies. 

We have previously reported on the importance of collaboration among 
executive agencies in maximizing performance.[Footnote 22] Officials at 
all of the agencies that we reviewed agreed that coordination of basic 
education-related activities could be enhanced. USAID officials believe 
that annual meetings involving all of the U.S. agencies involved in 
international basic education would produce better U.S. policy 
coherence. However, USAID does not have the authority to formally 
convene such a meeting. In June 2004, in response to a fiscal year 2005 
congressional directive,[Footnote 23] USAID informed State it would 
develop an agenda for such a meeting if State, as a cabinet-level 
agency, would convene it, but according to USAID, State has not yet 
convened an interagency meeting on international basic education. 
Although State's DFA has begun to address the issue of better 
coordinating all U.S. foreign assistance by bringing together core 
teams to discuss U.S. development priorities in each recipient country, 
it is unclear to what extent these efforts will be accepted and 
implemented by agencies whose foreign assistance programs are not under 
DFA's direct authority. 

Interagency Coordination in the Eight Countries We Visited Varied: 

During our fieldwork, we found several examples of good coordination 
among U.S. agencies implementing basic education projects. Among these 
examples were the following: 

* In South Africa, the Peace Corps provided USAID with a volunteer to 
support the implementation of a USAID distance learning project. The 
volunteer assisted in improving teacher training models and in 
utilizing program content, in addition to providing ongoing technical 
feedback to the project implementer on the function and efficiency of 
the project's media delivery system. Additionally, DOD and USAID 
cooperated to provide signs bearing the U.S. and South African flags 
for display at project sites, including schools. 

* In Mali, USAID allocated SPA funding for the implementation of 
community-based projects in communities where Peace Corps volunteers 
were working. In addition, the Peace Corps provided USAID with one 
volunteer to assist in USAID's implementation of a girls' scholarship 
program in the northern region of the country. Also, the U.S. embassy 
purchased 750 radios for listening groups in the northern region, and 
200 of the radios were distributed directly to a USAID distance- 
training program for teachers. 

* In Morocco, the Peace Corps has used SPA funding to construct a 
library, school latrines, and residential student housing. 

* In Honduras, a regional DOL program seeking to provide educational 
opportunities to children engaged in, or at risk of, exploitative labor 
incorporated an existing USAID distance-learning program into its set 
of 14 pilot projects. In the municipality of this particular pilot 
project, children, aged 13 to 16, were quitting school after the sixth 
grade in favor of working on the local coffee farms. The objectives of 
the local DOL implementer were to reduce the working hours of these 
children and provide them with an opportunity to complete their primary-
level education. The USAID distance-learning program was particularly 
suited to these objectives, as it was capable of targeting children in 
seventh through ninth grade, was aligned with the national curriculum 
and certified by the Ministry of Education, came with predesigned 
materials, and could be tailored to fit participants' scheduling needs. 

* In the Dominican Republic, USAID and USDA, along with the local host 
government, coordinated to provide school lunches in order to increase 
primary school student enrollment. Originally begun under the GFEI in 
2001, the program continued under USDA's FFE program in 2004. In 
addition to the school lunches, activities under this program included 
repairs to existing schools, renovation of buildings and water systems, 
health and nutrition workshops, deworming, vitamin distribution to 
supplement nutrition, and animal husbandry activities to supplement 
incomes. 

* In Zambia, the Peace Corps supplied over 20 volunteers to work with 
the USAID-funded implementer of a radio-based, primary-level, distance 
learning program. The volunteers focused on mentoring and training 
school committees in leadership and school management, with the hope 
that communities will become better equipped to support and maintain 
their own learning institutions. The volunteers also assisted the 
implementer in piloting new educational initiatives. 

Despite these examples of good coordination, we also observed several 
instances where agencies, particularly USAID and DOL, missed 
opportunities to collaborate and maximize their program efforts. In 
some of the countries we visited, we found that USAID and DOL 
implementers of projects to increase children's access to basic 
education did not take advantage of opportunities to collaborate and 
leverage resources when coordination of activities would have been of 
mutual benefit. In several of these countries, DOL could have joined 
USAID's efforts to affect policy reforms directed at rural youth by 
using USAID's delivery mechanisms of radio and television programming 
as well as printed materials to raise public awareness of child labor 
issues. Likewise, USAID could have utilized the Student Tracking System 
developed by DOL to monitor enrollment and retention rates in its 
sponsored schools. Additional examples of coordination between USAID 
and other agencies follow. 

USAID and DOL Country Coordination: 

Unlike USAID, which had education teams in the countries we visited to 
coordinate and manage implementation of its education-related 
activities, DOL does not have a physical presence in-country and 
attempts to coordinate through other means. Specifically, DOL 
coordinates as follows: 

* After holding their annual coordination meeting with USAID and State 
staff, DOL planners in Washington, D.C., communicate by cable 
activities planned for the fiscal year to State staff at overseas 
embassies. These cables list DOL's planned projects, their prospective 
countries, estimated funding amounts, and a deadline for when the 
project Requests for Proposal will be made public. Although DOL's 
fiscal years 2004 and 2005 cables do not mention coordination with 
USAID in-country, the fiscal year 2006 cable lists one USAID/EGAT staff 
member as an addressee and requests that the information be passed to 
the local USAID mission "where applicable." 

* DOL is represented in country by selected State embassy staff that it 
informs of its upcoming projects through cables. State representatives 
serving in these positions that we interviewed appeared to have general 
knowledge of DOL's basic education activities in-country but did not 
appear to have detailed project knowledge that would be required to 
coordinate effectively with USAID. This means that DOL must rely on 
either these State embassy staff or its project implementers to 
coordinate with the local USAID mission. 

* In its Solicitation for Grant Applications for basic education 
projects, DOL informs potential applicants of ongoing USAID efforts and 
expects applicants to implement programs that complement, and do not 
duplicate, existing efforts. 

Despite these efforts, coordination between local USAID missions and 
DOL project implementers varied across the countries we visited. For 
example, in Honduras, DOL's implementer was collaborating with the 
USAID mission in country to adapt the mission's distance-learning 
program to a child labor project. However, in Peru, the USAID mission 
lost its institutional knowledge of an existing DOL program upon the 
departure of its education team leader. The remaining USAID education 
team remained unaware of this project until the DOL implementer briefed 
the new USAID education contact 3 years into the project's 
implementation. Additionally, in Peru, the USAID mission was not aware 
of a public DOL Request for Proposal to conduct new basic education 
activities in country. In Morocco, USAID and the local DOL implementers 
were aware of each other's programs but did not directly coordinate 
beyond minimal information exchanges. By contrast, in South Africa, a 
DOL implementer was unaware that USAID was also conducting basic 
education activities in-country. Similarly, in Zambia, the local USAID 
mission knew of a DOL EI program in country, but was unaware that the 
ILO-IPEC program also operating in country was DOL-funded. The turnover 
of agency and implementer staff in overseas locations may lead to 
challenges in coordination efforts. 

USAID and Peace Corps: 

In Morocco, the USAID mission's strategy stated that projects to create 
rural dormitories for girls may be implemented in partnership with 
Peace Corps volunteers who would assist with the community's management 
of the dormitories and development of after school programs. However, 
the Peace Corps and USAID senior staff we spoke with in country had not 
considered such an idea during the actual planning and implementation 
of the girls' scholarship program. 

USAID and DOD: 

USAID and DOD almost missed an opportunity to coordinate their 
construction of school dormitories in Morocco. Prior to 1999, the local 
USAID mission did not know that DOD was implementing humanitarian 
assistance projects in Morocco. At the time, USAID's basic education 
program in country had concluded that one reason rural girls were 
dropping out of school before sixth grade was that the middle schools 
were too far away from their homes. According to USAID officials, 
parents had safety concerns about sending their daughters to attend 
school so far away and were reluctant to make the financial sacrifice 
of having their daughter finish primary school if she could not also 
attend secondary school. Subsequently, USAID and DOD coordinated with 
local communities to build school dormitories for middle school girls 
in three towns. According to the USAID officer responsible for 
coordinating this initiative, the coordination between USAID and DOD 
resulted in DOD building five dormitories. 

The Level of U.S. Coordination with Host Governments and Other Donors 
Varied: 

Coordination between the United States, host governments, and donors 
varied in the countries we visited. Coordination was stronger in 
countries, such as Egypt, Mali, Zambia, and Honduras, that possessed a 
combination of strong host government commitment to education reform, 
formal donor-led working groups specifically for education, and systems 
of mutual accountability, such as the World Bank's Education for All- 
Fast Track Initiative. For example, in Egypt, the host government was 
working closely with international donors to develop a new National 
Strategic Plan for Education. Under the leadership of USAID, each donor 
had assumed responsibility for developing a portion of this plan. 
Additionally, the major education donors in Egypt met monthly to 
discuss division of responsibilities and upcoming efforts. We observed 
a similar situation in Mali, where the host government had allocated 30 
percent of its budget toward education--60 percent of which went to 
basic education--and worked with donors to establish a framework 
through which the donors could invest in specific education sectors. 
These education donors in Mali held monthly meetings among themselves, 
as well as separate meetings with the host government, and collaborated 
on strategic planning, action plans, and common progress indicators, 
among other issues. 

At the time of our review, Mali, Zambia, and Honduras had also 
implemented, or were in the process of implementing, systems of mutual 
accountability associated with the World Bank's Education for All-Fast 
Track Initiative. The Initiative provides for mutual accountability, 
where international donors provide coordinated and increased financial 
and technical support in a transparent and predictable manner, while 
host governments commit to primary education reform through the 
development of national education strategies in concert with the 
donors. Donors in Honduras met monthly and pooled their funding to 
provide direct budget support to the education sector to accelerate 
progress. According to donors, the pooled funding gave donors a means 
to ensure that the host government continued to implement the national 
education strategy. They stated that this is very important in 
countries where there is frequent political turnover. Although USAID 
usually does not give funds directly to government institutions, in 
Zambia, the USAID mission provides some funds to the Ministry of 
Education to support policy reform. The USAID mission also participates 
in high-level meetings and contributes to the decision-making process. 

Coordination between the United States, host governments, and donors 
was weaker in countries lacking a lead donor or host government 
committed to coordinating donor assistance. This included the Dominican 
Republic, Morocco, South Africa, and Peru. For example, in recent years 
donors have sought to strengthen local ownership of the education 
reform process by assigning host governments a key role in the donor 
coordination process, according to USAID. However, governments in 
several countries we visited lacked the capacity or will to hold such 
meetings. In Peru, for example, officials from bilateral donors and the 
host government stated that the concentration of donor efforts in rural 
areas working with regional administrators had isolated those projects 
from the national government, which tended to view project schools as 
"donor schools" unconnected to the larger education system. According 
to these officials, the disconnect between the central government and 
the bilateral programs inhibited the expansion of these programs to 
other areas and threatened their long-term sustainability. Similarly, 
in South Africa, the host government Ministry of Education had not 
called a donor meeting in almost a year and was not aware of all 
ongoing donor activities in basic education. In Morocco, one donor was 
unaware of the details of USAID's basic education activities, and both 
agencies had independently developed their own matrices of other 
donors' basic education projects, neither of which were updated or 
complete. By contrast, the host government in the Dominican Republic 
did call high-level donor meetings but discouraged the donors from 
meeting on their own. None of these countries had strong, donor-led 
coordination groups, with the exception of Peru, where donors had 
formed a formal coordination group, as well as an informal group of 
three donors, including the United States, focusing on decentralizing 
the host government's education system. 

According to USAID, host government commitment, the development of 
sound education strategies, and effective donor coordination are 
essential to reforming basic education. Most donors we spoke to 
acknowledged that further improvements in coordination could result in 
more efficient delivery of assistance. Without good coordination, 
donors, including the United States, cannot easily monitor or assess 
host governments' progress toward achieving Education For All by 2015-
-which is a strategic goal shared by State and USAID. 

Assessing Basic Education Programs' Quality Results Is Difficult: 

While U.S. agencies we reviewed conduct basic education-related 
activities to achieve different goals, most assess and report on the 
results of their activities by collecting and using output measures--or 
the direct products and services delivered by a program, such as 
numbers of schools built or children enrolled. While USAID can measure 
education access through outputs such as the numbers of students 
enrolled in primary school programs, it does not, in many instances, 
measure education quality, a key program outcome measure--or result of 
products and services provided, such as increased literacy rates. Our 
analysis showed that USAID can report on some outcomes such as primary 
school retention rates but faces challenges in collecting valid and 
reliable data on student learning in areas such as math and reading, 
which, according to USAID, provides the most direct outcome measure of 
increased educational quality. Furthermore, USAID cannot compare its 
program results between countries. To better assess its goal of 
improving education quality, USAID is developing a standardized test 
that could provide data on primary-level reading ability and would be 
comparable across countries. Other agencies measure progress in 
relation to their respective missions. In addition, State's Office of 
the Director of Foreign Assistance plans to work toward developing 
methods to assess outcomes of all foreign assistance; however, these 
efforts are only in the early discussion phase. Without this 
information, agency officials cannot determine if programs are 
achieving their strategic goals. 

Most Agencies Use Output Measures to Assess Results: 

We have previously reported that both output and outcome measures are 
extremely valuable for determining success of federally funded 
programs. Table 3 shows the measures reported by U.S. agencies in their 
fiscal year 2006 Government Performance and Results Act (GPRA) 
performance and accountability reports. 

Table 3: Agency-Wide Reporting on Basic Education Activities: 

USAID and State[A]: 
* students enrolled in primary school; 
* students completing primary school; 
* adult learners completing basic education; 

DOL: 
* children removed or prevented from exploitive work; 
* countries with increased capacity to combat child labor; 

USDA: 
* number of mothers, infants and schoolchildren receiving daily meals 
and take-home rations through the McGovern-Dole International Food for 
Education Program; 
DOD[B]: 
* number of schools built or renovated in Iraq, Afghanistan, and the 
Horn of Africa; 
MCC: Broad "Rate of Reform for Investing in People" calculated through 
changes in: 
* total public expenditure on health; 
* total public expenditure on primary education; 
* immunization rates; 
* girls' primary education completion rates. 

Source: FY 2006 Annual Performance and Accountability Reports. 

Note: Peace Corps' small-scale, individual volunteer activities in 
basic education do not lend themselves to systematic measurement, and 
are not addressed in the GPRA reporting. 

[A] State and USAID share a joint strategy with the same goal of 
increased access to quality basic education. State assigns 
responsibility for accomplishing this goal to USAID. 

[B] DOD does not have specific goals for, or report on the educational 
effects of its assistance. 

[End of table] 

USAID's Process for Collecting and Using Performance Measures: 

USAID works with its project implementers to establish project 
performance measures before an activity is approved. These measures 
vary according to the objectives of the specific activities. The 
implementers then collect information on the required measures and 
submit quarterly or annual reports detailing progress against those 
measures to technical officers at the local USAID mission. Missions are 
then required to submit annual reports summarizing the progress of 
their activities, which often contain both specific output and outcome 
measures. Some of these measures are input to the Annual Report 
Application (AR) system,[Footnote 24] which currently serves as the 
repository of USAID performance data from all USAID missions. 
Information in the AR system is used in USAID headquarters to support 
strategic planning, budget preparation, and performance reporting 
requirements. To report on its agency-wide progress, USAID reports on 
students enrolled in primary school, students completing primary 
school, and adult learners completing basic education. These output 
measures have also been used to determine which education programs have 
not met, met, or exceeded their output objectives. Some of the programs 
that have exceeded these output objectives have been terminated. For 
example, the joint State-USAID Congressional Budget Justification for 
the 2007 budget request showed that India and South Africa had exceeded 
their program goals for basic education. These countries were 
eliminated from the list of countries proposed to receive basic 
education allocations in the 2008 budget request. 

USAID Faces Challenges Assessing Quality-Related Outcomes: 

USAID, the primary provider of U.S. basic education assistance, is the 
only agency to track progress toward an agency-wide, education-specific 
goal--promoting increased access to quality basic education. However, 
USAID faces challenges collecting data on student learning, such as 
levels of reading comprehension, and cannot compare the results between 
countries. As a consequence, USAID is unable to report on the overall 
results of its basic education activities on the quality of education, 
which can deny planners valuable information needed to prioritize and 
fund future programs. Prior GAO work on assessing performance measures 
for federally funded programs shows that both output and outcome 
measures are extremely valuable for determining program success. USAID 
has begun to address this issue by developing systematic methods to 
compare education quality across countries and working with donors to 
identify common indicators for assessing student learning. In addition, 
USAID is considering the development and administration of new tests to 
assess learning outcomes in a select number of countries. 

Collecting Country-Level Data on Quality Remains a Challenge for USAID: 

According to USAID and UNESCO, testing of student achievement is a good 
measure of educational quality--particularly tests that assess learning 
in core subjects such as reading and basic mathematics. However, 
obtaining this type of data remains a challenge for various reasons. 
According to USAID, designing tools to assess student learning and, 
particularly, deciding on which methodology or standards to apply, can 
be time-consuming and expensive when done independently by USAID 
implementers and may also not be cost-effective given the objectives of 
a program. For example, a USAID official at one mission stated that a 
change in teacher practices resulting from a teacher training program 
would be significant in itself and that not all basic education 
interventions should be expected to result in improved student 
achievement. Poor host-country infrastructure, unfriendly geography, or 
both can also make systematic nationwide testing expensive and 
difficult. In countries where the USAID mission has the benefit of 
working with an existing national student examination, those exams may 
not test to existing international standards, and any changes to the 
national examination and its underlying curriculum can be politically 
sensitive. However, in some countries such as the Dominican Republic, 
teachers' unions can be resistant to the use of tests to evaluate 
student learning for fear that they will be held accountable for the 
results. Even if a national exam is successfully administered, the host 
government may not have the methodological expertise necessary to 
reliably compile and analyze the resulting statistics. 

We examined 40 basic education programs in the eight countries we 
visited--including both USAID basic education programs and DOL programs 
to combat child labor through the provision of quality primary 
education--and found that about half of the 40 programs utilized 
outcome performance measures, or the results of products and services. 
These included, among other things, increased student performance, 
improved instructional methods, and increased community participation. 
Not all of these outcome measures were related to education quality. 
For example, DOL projects contained outcome measures specific to child 
labor, such as media coverage and local awareness of child labor 
issues. Most of the programs that utilized outcome measures set 
baselines and targets for these measures. All 12 of the Department of 
Labor programs we examined reported outcome measures compared with 
approximately one-third of the 28 USAID programs that did so. The 
remaining 19 USAID programs did not use outcome measures. See appendix 
V for more details on our analysis. 

According to USAID and UNESCO, testing of student achievement is a good 
measure of educational quality. USAID programs aimed at improving 
educational quality varied in their measurement of student 
achievement.[Footnote 25] Several lacked means to fully gauge student 
performance. For example, 

* In South Africa, one teacher training program could not monitor 
student achievement in its preservice training component due to 
insufficient funds, although the program's in-service component did 
contain student testing. In addition, a distance-learning program in 
one country province contained no means to assess teacher performance 
or student achievement, yet was planned to be expanded to a second 
province. 

* In Zambia, a teacher training program contained output indicators 
mandated by the Africa Education Initiative and the President's 
Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, such as the number of teachers trained, 
but these initiatives did not require an evaluation of teacher or 
student performance. The program independently added an additional 
measure to evaluate teachers on their implementation of the program 
materials and used student pass rates on the host-country's seventh 
grade graduation test as a substitute, or proxy, measure of student 
achievement. Such graduation tests are designed to identify students 
who will advance to the next phase of schooling but are not necessarily 
designed to provide data on trends in student learning. 

* In Peru, Honduras, and the Dominican Republic, a regional Latin 
American teacher training program begun in 2002 did not require 
implementers to begin measuring impact on student performance until 
2005. 

Other programs we examined, however, did have or were developing 
student assessment components, as follows: 

* In Egypt, we observed perhaps the most extensive evaluation component 
for a program that was working closely with the host-government's 
Ministry of Education to develop tools for assessing student learning, 
teacher performance, and school management capacity nationwide. The 
student learning assessment tool specifically measured critical 
thinking capacity, problem solving skills, and subject matter knowledge 
in Arabic, science, and math. 

* In Honduras, one program was developing primary school learning 
standards to strengthen the host government's national student testing 
process. Additionally, according to USAID, one distance learning 
program is developing standardized testing to monitor variations in 
student achievement. 

* In the Dominican Republic, a similar program was developing test 
instruments and analytical techniques to build the evaluation capacity 
of the host government's educational system. 

* In Peru, one pilot program conducted student testing solely in its 
sponsored schools specifically to demonstrate the effectiveness of the 
program to the host government's Ministry of Education. 

USAID Is Developing Methods to Better Measure Improved Educational 
Quality: 

In the absence of an indicator to illustrate improved quality across 
countries, USAID uses primary school completion rates as a proxy 
measure in its agency-wide reporting. However, USAID acknowledges that 
completion rates do not directly correlate to educational quality. As 
described earlier, according to USAID and UNESCO, testing of student 
achievement is a good measure of educational quality. However, while 
national examinations may exist in certain countries, the curricula 
these tests are based on vary widely in their subject matter and 
academic standards. Additionally, very few developing countries 
incorporate existing international standards for student learning in 
their testing. These factors prevent meaningful comparisons of 
educational quality between countries, which could inform funding and 
programmatic decisions at the headquarters level. 

For fiscal year 2005, USAID's Bureau for Policy and Program 
Coordination (PPC) began collecting data to better allow USAID to find 
an appropriate indicator to measure quality outcomes of its basic 
education programs. The information that USAID began collecting in its 
annual reporting system database included, to the extent available, 
results of host country national-level testing systems and USAID 
attempts to measure learning achievement. However, this information was 
never fully analyzed, and USAID's database for the information will be 
terminated in fiscal year 2007, and replaced by a new joint State-USAID 
performance measures database called the Foreign Assistance 
Coordination and Tracking (FACT) system, which will be managed by the 
DFA. According to DFA officials, the FACT system is meant to primarily 
contain numerical output indicators common across State and USAID 
missions and not include the mission-specific outcome indicators 
contained in USAID's former annual reporting system. These indicators 
contained in the FACT system will be used to develop policy priorities, 
assess performance, and inform resource decisions. 

USAID, independent of the DFA process, began a new initiative in 
September 2006 to develop a better measure of educational quality 
across countries through the development of new testing instruments. 
These instruments are designed to provide data on primary-level reading 
comprehension comparable across countries. This project grew out of a 
World Bank Initiative in Peru that developed a Spanish-language reading 
comprehension test. USAID is attempting to build on the World Bank's 
success by developing a simple screening instrument, which can provide 
general information on literacy within a given community, and an in- 
depth assessment instrument intended to provide cross-country 
comparisons of the degree of reading skill acquisition, determination 
of the grade at which a country's education system is able to impart 
the capacity to read, and identification of the specific areas of 
weakness. According to the contract for the instruments, performance 
data provided by the new tests should permit comparison across 
countries and the tracking of changes in performance over time and 
should also be adaptable across languages and cultures to the degree 
possible. USAID plans to field test the instruments in English, 
Spanish, or French and is in negotiations with two host governments to 
begin pilot testing. USAID plans for the contract implementer to submit 
a report on the pilot tests' results and their implications by 
September 30, 2007. According to one USAID official, it is expected 
that these new instruments, if successful, will allow USAID to better 
measure and compare educational quality across countries where it 
conducts basic education activities. USAID has also initiated 
discussion with other Education for All-Fast Track Initiative donors on 
how donors can assess the collective impact of their basic education 
assistance on learning outcomes. 

Additionally, in an effort to collect better data on education quality, 
USAID's Education Office is considering the development and 
administration of new tests to assess learning outcomes in 10 countries 
over 12 months. The goal is to produce an assessment that will better 
demonstrate the impact of projects to improve educational quality, but 
that can be adapted by different missions facing different educational 
circumstances. The proposal recommends identifying two or three 
countries from each of the new foreign assistance categories,[Footnote 
26] with representatives from Africa, Asia, and Latin America. The 
tests would cover literacy and mathematics and target fourth and eighth 
grade students, but would be adjustable for different grades and ages. 
The 12-month activity would cover initial development, and country 
applications would occur through mission buy-in into the activity. 
Although the primary purpose of this assessment would not be to 
directly compare different programs or countries with respect to what 
students know, the proposal estimates that, for cost-effectiveness, 
likely two-thirds of the test materials would be portable across 
countries, with the remaining items unique to local circumstances. 

Other Agencies Measure Progress Related to Their Respective Missions: 

While USAID, as noted earlier, is the only agency to track progress 
toward an education-specific goal, other agencies track progress 
related to their agency-specific missions or do not address their basic 
education activities in their agency-wide performance reporting because 
these activities are not directly related to their overall agency 
objectives.[Footnote 27] For example, agencies track progress as 
follows: 

* DOL and USDA report performance measures related to their particular 
agency objectives. For example, DOL primarily uses education activities 
as a mechanism for alleviating child labor and reports on children 
removed or prevented from exploitive work. USDA reports on the number 
of beneficiaries of its school lunch program. Both of these measures 
are tied to enrollment and attendance rates collected at the project- 
level and are, therefore, related to educational access. DOL programs 
include project-level quality indicators, such as primary school 
completion rates. 

* The MCC initially reported a single "rate of reform" measure based on 
multiple outcome-based health and education-related indicators, 
including total public expenditure on primary education and girls' 
primary education completion rates. MCC now breaks these individual 
indicators to compare performance among countries with threshold 
programs and compacts, as well as to determine the eligibility of 
countries for MCC assistance. 

* DOD provides basic humanitarian aid and services to avert political 
and humanitarian crises, as well as promote democratic development and 
regional stability. It collects information on how many projects it has 
funded and their costs, but does not address the educational impact of 
these projects. A DOD official stated that he would like to see the 
Humanitarian Assistance Program begin to measure its impact on 
countering terrorism, promoting goodwill, stabilizing the country, and 
increasing economic growth. 

* Although the Peace Corps tracks the number and location of its 
volunteers, it does not assess the impact of its basic education 
activities because, according to Peace Corps officials, these 
activities are too small in scale to be suitable for such monitoring. 

State's Office of the DFA Is Planning to Address Improving Interagency 
Coordination and Performance Measures for All Foreign Assistance: 

In January 2006, the Secretary of State appointed a DFA and charged him 
with directing the transformation of the U.S. government's approach to 
foreign assistance and ensuring that foreign assistance is used as 
effectively as possible to meet broad foreign policy 
objectives.[Footnote 28] Specifically, the DFA: 

* has authority over all State and USAID foreign assistance funding and 
programs, with continued participation in program planning, 
implementation, and oversight from the various bureaus and offices 
within State and USAID, as part of the integrated interagency planning, 
coordination, and implementation mechanisms; 

* has created and directed, through a foreign assistance framework, 
consolidated policy, planning, budget, and implementation mechanisms 
and staff functions required to provide umbrella leadership to foreign 
assistance; 

* plans to develop a coordinated U.S. government foreign assistance 
strategy, including multiyear, country-specific assistance strategies 
and annual country-specific assistance operational plans; and: 

* plans to provide guidance to foreign assistance delivered through 
other agencies and entities of the U.S. government, including MCC and 
the Office of the Global AIDS Coordinator. 

According to a DFA official, the DFA's office spent its first year 
developing the foreign assistance framework, preparing the proposed 
2008 consolidated State and USAID budget, and providing guidance for 
country teams to develop operational plans. The foreign assistance 
framework includes five objectives: (1) peace and security, (2) 
governing justly and democratically, (3) investing in people, (4) 
economic growth, and (5) humanitarian assistance. Basic education falls 
under the objective of investing in people. According to a State 
official, the new budget and planning process is intended to give the 
Secretary of State the ability to evaluate the effectiveness of foreign 
assistance to improve effectiveness, impact, and efficiency through 
better coordination, at every level. Looking forward, the DFA is 
examining ways to improve (1) coordination of foreign assistance, 
including basic education and (2) measurement of program outcomes. 

DFA Plans to Improve Coordination of Foreign Assistance, Including 
Basic Education: 

While the DFA has begun to address the issue of better coordinating all 
U.S. foreign assistance by bringing together core teams to discuss U.S. 
development priorities in each recipient country, it is unclear to what 
extent these efforts will be accepted and implemented by agencies whose 
foreign assistance programs are not under DFA's direct authority. 
According to DFA officials, during the first phase of coordination 
efforts, USAID, State, and DOD (as an implementing partner of certain 
USAID and State programs) have been meeting to discuss coordination of 
assistance. The DFA plans to engage other agencies such as USDA and DOL 
in the coordination discussions. However, DFA officials stated that 
there is no requirement for other agencies to participate in these 
dialogues. 

DFA Is Considering Methods for Measuring Program Outcomes: 

DFA acknowledges the need for outcome measures to better describe the 
impact of basic education, as well as other foreign assistance areas. 
According to a DFA official, developing outcome indicators for all 
assistance programs is difficult because of the differing program 
objectives those programs may possess. For example, some programs may 
meet the political objectives of the United States, while others may 
meet purely development objectives. DFA plans to use as many outcome 
measures as possible generated by third parties, such as World Bank 
statistics and UNESCO literacy rates. Also, DFA plans for missions to 
submit "Foreign Assistance Reports" back to Washington, which would 
combine their FACT data with locally generated outcome measures to 
demonstrate the cumulative effects of their programs. However, this 
process and the outcome measures it might contain have not been 
developed, and DFA does not currently have a timetable for implementing 
these initiatives. Although an agency can use outputs, outcomes, or 
some combination of the two to reflect the agency's intended 
performance, the GPRA is clearly outcome-oriented and thus an agency's 
performance plan should include outcome goals whenever 
possible.[Footnote 29] DFA officials acknowledged that the new 
performance reporting system as it currently stands will not report the 
outcome results of basic education programs to managers in 
headquarters. 

Conclusions: 

Without a government-wide mechanism to systematically coordinate all 
agency efforts in basic education at the headquarters level, agencies' 
programs may not maximize the effectiveness of U.S. assistance. The new 
State DFA efforts to implement a country-wide program planning and 
budgeting process, which is designed to better manage the delivery of 
foreign assistance, may improve coordination of basic education 
programs at the country level, but this process is still evolving, and 
it is yet to be determined what impact these efforts will have on 
future strategic planning of education-related assistance. Moreover, 
having reliable and systematic methods to determine if basic education 
programs are meeting their goals could help better inform U.S. 
agencies' decisions regarding the planning and execution of basic 
education-related assistance. Although the DFA plans to work toward 
developing methods to assess outcomes of all foreign assistance, these 
efforts are only in the early discussion phase. 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

To enhance efforts to coordinate and better assess the results of U.S. 
international basic education-related activities, we are making three 
recommendations: 

* to improve interagency coordination of basic education efforts at 
headquarters in Washington, we recommend that the Secretary of State 
work with the heads of executive branch agencies responsible for 
international basic education-related assistance to convene formal, 
periodic meetings at the headquarters level amongst cognizant 
officials; 

* to improve interagency coordination in recipient countries, we 
recommend that the Secretary of State direct the relevant countries' 
Ambassadors to establish a mechanism to formally coordinate U.S. 
agencies' implementation of international basic education-related 
activities in the relevant country; and: 

* to better assess the results of U.S. basic education assistance, we 
recommend that the Secretary of State, through the DFA, work with USAID 
and to the extent practicable, with other U.S. agencies providing basic 
education related-assistance to develop a plan to identify indicators 
that would help agencies track improvements in access to quality 
education. Indicators could include: 

- output measures, such as the numbers of U.S. programs designed to 
improve curriculum and teacher training, and to develop and validate 
student tests; and: 

- outcome measures, such as literacy and numeracy assessments of 
student achievement. 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

We provided a draft of this report to State, USAID, USDA, DOD, DOL, 
MCC, and the Peace Corps. We obtained written comments on the draft of 
this report from State, USAID, and USDA (see apps. VI, VII, and VIII). 
State generally concurred with our recommendations and noted that its 
Office of the Director of U.S. Foreign Assistance is in the process of 
developing mechanisms to ensure coordination of U.S. assistance 
programs with other federal agencies, implementers, and stakeholders. 
In addition, State's Office of the Director of U.S. Foreign Assistance 
is working with USAID, State, and others in the international community 
to develop appropriate measures for learning outcomes. We agree that 
these are positive steps toward improving the coordination of U.S. 
supported basic education programs and the ability to measure whether 
basic education programs abroad are achieving their goals, and we 
encourage State to continue to work with the heads of executive 
agencies to this end. USAID concurred with our recommendations and 
agreed with the need for greater U.S. government coordination and that 
more needs to be done in the areas to improve education outcomes in 
country and to better understand the impact of U.S. support to basic 
education. USDA concurred with our recommendations and indicated that 
it will work with the Department of State in the manner which the 
report recommends. We also received technical comments on this draft 
from State, USAID, DOL, MCC, and the Peace Corps, which we incorporated 
where appropriate. 

We are sending copies of this report to appropriate Members of 
Congress, the Secretaries of the Departments of Agriculture, Defense, 
Labor, and State, as well as the Administrator of the U.S. Agency for 
International Development, the Director of the Peace Corps, and the 
Chief Executive Officer of the Millennium Challenge Corporation. We 
also will make copies available to others upon request. In addition, 
this report will be available at no charge on the GAO Web site at  
[Hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you or your staff has any questions concerning this report, please 
contact me at (202) 512-4128 or fordj@gao.gov. Contact points for our 
Offices of Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on 
the last page of this report. GAO staff who made major contributions to 
this report are listed in appendix IX. 

Signed by: 

Jess T. Ford: 
Director, International Affairs and Trade: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

To describe U.S. agencies' basic education activities and how the 
activities are planned, we obtained and analyzed strategic, budget, and 
programmatic documents for fiscal years 2001 through 2006 from the 
Departments of Agriculture (USDA), Defense (DOD), Labor (DOL), and 
State (State), as well as the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC), 
the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), and the 
Peace Corps. The documentation included, when available, strategic 
plans at the mission, country, regional, and global levels. We also 
interviewed program officials and requested data from these agencies in 
Washington, D.C., to identify the types of basic education-related 
activities, the recipient countries of these activities, and the 
estimated funding levels of the programs. These included educational 
activities that corresponded to USAID's definition of basic education, 
such as primary education, secondary education, early childhood 
development, and adult literacy. These activities also included those 
implemented under special or administration-directed initiatives 
related to basic education. We assessed the reliability of the funding 
data by reviewing existing information about the data and the system 
that produced them and interviewing agency officials knowledgeable 
about the data. USDA and DOL did not disaggregate funds specifically 
allocated to the basic education components of their larger programs. 
We found all agencies' data sufficiently reliable for representing the 
nature and extent of their program funding and activities. We did not 
assess the reliability of the World Bank's selected indicator data 
because they were used for background purposes only. 

To learn about the implementation of international basic education 
assistance overseas, we observed ongoing program activity in the 
following eight countries: Dominican Republic, Egypt, Honduras, Mali, 
Morocco, Peru, South Africa, and Zambia.[Footnote 30] We selected a 
nonprobability sample of foreign countries designed to ensure 
geographic diversity and representation of basic education programs 
from multiple U.S. agencies and international donors. In addition to 
geographic diversity and representation of multiple agencies and 
international donors, our sample was designed to include countries that 
implement special or administration-directed initiatives related to 
basic education. In the countries, we met with representatives from 
State, USAID, USDA, DOD, DOL, the MCC, and the Peace Corps; officials 
representing embassies and USAID missions in the countries visited; 
officials administering international basic education programs; and 
officials from foreign governments, nongovernmental organizations 
(NGOs), the United Nations (UN), and other international organizations. 
Within each country, we examined all U.S. agency basic education 
activities ongoing at the time of our visit and discussed these 
activities with relevant agency officials. 

To determine the mechanisms the United States uses to coordinate 
national and international basic education assistance, we analyzed 
agency coordination documents and interviewed relevant U.S. agency, 
host government, and international donor officials in our eight sample 
countries. Documentation we examined included e-mails, meeting minutes, 
memoranda of understanding, policy agendas, host government education 
sector strategies, and other supplemental documentation. We met with 
officials from State, USAID, USDA, DOL, DOD, the Peace Corps, and the 
MCC in Washington, D.C., to discuss interagency coordination at the 
headquarters level. In each of our eight sample countries, we discussed 
coordination of international basic education assistance with relevant 
officials from U.S. agencies, U.S. program implementers, host 
countries' Ministries of Education, and international donors with basic 
education programs in-country. 

To evaluate how U.S. agencies monitor and assess the results of their 
international basic education programs, we obtained and examined 
contractual and monitoring and evaluation documents for each of the 
basic education projects we visited. For each ongoing project, we 
interviewed officials from the implementing organizations, as well as 
any U.S. agency official(s) monitoring the implementer's progress. In 
our interviews, we discussed project monitoring, data baselines, and 
progress indicators. We supplemented these interviews with a review of 
reporting documentation associated with 40 of the basic education 
projects we discussed with program implementers. This sample included 
all ongoing projects that we visited in our eight sample countries. The 
documentation that we reviewed included the contracts, cooperative 
agreements, statements of work (program descriptions), performance 
monitoring plans, and monitoring reports for the 40 projects. 
Furthermore, to describe USAID's process for collecting and using 
performance measures, we interviewed USAID officials and analyzed 
agency documents. To describe the new planning process for foreign 
assistance and its impact on collecting indicator data, we interviewed 
State and USAID officials and analyzed relevant documentation. 

To determine the extent to which the projects had outcome measures, 
used baselines, and set targets, we identified and analyzed the 
performance measures in the programs' documentation. We coded 
performance measures as outcomes if they were linked to program 
objectives and had clearly reported results. We also assessed whether 
the outcome measures we identified established clear baselines and set 
targets. To ensure accuracy in our coding, two coders independently 
reviewed the program documentation and met to reconcile any initial 
differences in their coding. In addition, another staff member 
independently reviewed the coding decisions. 

Although the findings from our site visits in each country and our 
review of ongoing basic education projects are not generalizable to the 
population of basic education programs, we determined that the 
selection of the countries and programs reviewed was appropriate for 
our design and objectives. 

We conducted our fieldwork in Washington, D.C., and in the Dominican 
Republic, Egypt, Honduras, Liberia, Mali, Morocco, Peru, South Africa, 
and Zambia from December 2005 to March 2007 in accordance with 
generally accepted government auditing standards. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: Recipient Countries of Activities Related to International 
Basic Education During Fiscal Year 2006: 

Africa. 

Angola; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Benin; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Botswana; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Burkina Faso[A]; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: x; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Burundi; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Cameroon[A]; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Cape Verde; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: [Empty]; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Chad; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: [Empty]; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/ A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Cote d'Ivoire; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: x; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Democratic Republic Of Congo; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Djibouti[A]; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: [Empty]; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Eritrea; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: [Empty]; 
USDA: x; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Ethiopia[A]; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: x. 

Gabon; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

The Gambia[A]; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: [Empty]; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Ghana[A]; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: x. 

Guinea[A]; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Guinea-Bissau; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: [Empty]; 
USDA: x; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Kenya[A]; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: x; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Lesotho[A]; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Liberia; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Madagascar[A]; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Malawi; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Mali[A]; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: x. 

Mauritania[A]; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: [Empty]; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Mozambique[A]; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Namibia; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Niger[A]; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Nigeria; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Republic of Congo; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Rwanda[A]; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Senegal[A]; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Sierra Leone; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Somalia; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: [Empty]; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

South Africa; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Sudan; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: [Empty]; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Swaziland; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Tanzania; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Togo; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: N/ A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Uganda; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: x; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Zambia; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Asia and the Near East. 

Afghanistan; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: x; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Algeria; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: [Empty]; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: x; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Bahrain; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: [Empty]; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: x; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Bangladesh; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Cambodia[A]; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

China; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: [Empty]; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

East Timor[A]; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: [Empty]; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Egypt; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: x; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

India; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Indonesia; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Jordan; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: x; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Kiribati; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: [Empty]; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Lebanon; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: x; 
State: x; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Libya; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: [Empty]; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: x; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Mongolia[A]; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Morocco; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: x; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Nepal; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: x; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Oman; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: [Empty]; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: x; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/ A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Pakistan; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: x; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Philippines; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Samoa; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: [Empty]; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Sri Lanka; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Thailand; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Tonga; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: [Empty]; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Vanuatu; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: [Empty]; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Vietnam[A]; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: x; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Yemen[A]; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: x; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Europe and Eurasia. 

Albania[A]; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Armenia; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: [Empty]; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Azerbaijan; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: [Empty]; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Bulgaria; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: x. 

Georgia; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: [Empty]; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Kosovo; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: x. 

Kazakhstan; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Kyrgyz Republic[A]; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: x; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Macedonia; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: [Empty]; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: x. 

Moldova[A]; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: x; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: x. 

Romania; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Tajikistan[A]; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Turkey; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Turkmenistan; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: [Empty]; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Ukraine; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Uzbekistan; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Latin America and the Caribbean. 

Belize; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Bolivia; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Brazil; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Chile; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Colombia; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Costa Rica; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Dominican Republic; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Ecuador; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

El Salvador; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Guatemala; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: x; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Guyana[A]; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Haiti; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: [Empty]; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Honduras[A]; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: x; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Jamaica; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: [Empty]; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Mexico; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Nicaragua[A]; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: x; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Panama; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Paraguay; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Peru; 
USAID: x; 
USDOL: x; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: [Empty]; 
MCC: [Empty]; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Suriname; 
USAID: [Empty]; 
USDOL: [Empty]; 
USDA: [Empty]; 
State: [Empty]; 
Peace Corps: x; 
MCC: N/A; 
DOD: [Empty]. 

Legend: 

N/A = Countries that are not eligible for MCC funding: 

Source: U.S. agencies' data. 

Note: Some of USAID's regional activities are not included. 

[A] Fast Track Initiative countries. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: Recipient Countries of USAID Basic Education Assistance, 
Funding Levels, and Selected World Bank's Indicators: 

Afghanistan; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $170,904,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: $0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: $89,205,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: $35,762,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 28%; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: N/A; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: N/A. 

Angola; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $500,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 0; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 67; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: N/A; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: N/A. 

Armenia; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $678,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 328,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 350,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 99; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 107%; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 94%. 

Bangladesh; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $17,810,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 1,500,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 4,000,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 3,960,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: N/ A; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 76; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 94. 

Benin; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $37,470,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 5,720,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 7,163,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 3,978,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 35; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 49; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 83. 

Bolivia; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $2,773,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 1,000,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 882,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 87; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 100; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 95. 

Burundi; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $500,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 500,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 59; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 33; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 57. 

Cambodia; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $14,480,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 2,000,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 1,980,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 74; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 82; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 98. 

China; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $1,980,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 1,980,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 91; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: N/A; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: N/A. 

Congo, Dem. Rep; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $18,245,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 3,243,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 3,672,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 67; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: N/A; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: N/A. 

Djibouti; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $14,400,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 3,500,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: N/A; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 29; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 33. 

Dominican Republic; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $8,641,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 2,300,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 1,568,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 87; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 91; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 86. 

Egypt, Arab Rep; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $186,715,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 54,981,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 10,489,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 54,408,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 71; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 95; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 95. 

El Salvador; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $23,416,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 7,788,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 1,543,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 4,257,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: N/ A; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 86; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 92. 

Eritrea; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $1,207,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 600,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 0; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: N/A; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 44; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 48. 

Ethiopia; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $66,135,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 11,622,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 10,445,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 10,416,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: N/ A; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 51; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 46. 

Georgia; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $857,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 320,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: N/A; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 86; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 93. 

Ghana; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $59,494,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 5,857,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 9,420,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 18,689,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 58; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 65; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 58. 

Guatemala; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $18,918,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 3,399,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 4,259,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 69; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 70; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 93. 

Guinea; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $34,815,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 4,994,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 6,189,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 4,878,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 29; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 48; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 64. 

Haiti; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $39,860,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 4,057,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 14,500,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 7,973,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: N/ A; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: N/A; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: N/A. 

Honduras; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $37,909,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 3,294,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 5,800,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 11,880,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 80; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 79; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 91. 

India; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $27,526,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 858,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 8,412,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 4,428,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 61; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 89; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 90. 

Indonesia; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $84,743,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 23,000,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 31,916,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 90; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 101; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 94. 

Iraq; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $176,213,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 110,754,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 0; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 74; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 74; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 88. 

Jamaica; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $22,412,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 2,969,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 4,677,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 3,430,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 80; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 84; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 91. 

Jordan; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $58,895,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 5,000,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 14,000,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 90; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 97; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 91. 

Kenya; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $11,747,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 2,914,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 4,019,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 74; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 92; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 76. 

Kosovo; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $111,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 0; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: N/A; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: N/A; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: N/A. 

Kyrgyz Republic; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $5,657,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 155,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 120,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 99; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 93; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 90. 

Lebanon; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $1,900,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 650,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 600,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: N/ A; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 94; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 93. 

Liberia; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $10,724,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 7,724,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: N/A; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: N/A; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: N/A. 

Macedonia, FYR; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $19,719,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 126,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 5,300,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 6,539,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 96; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 96; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 92. 

Madagascar; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $3,183,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 500,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 983,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 71; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 45; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 89. 

Malawi; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $30,532,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 4,011,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 3,632,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 4,738,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 64; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 58; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 95. 

Mali; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $36,937,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 5,266,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 6,505,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 4,738,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 19; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 44; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 46. 

Mexico; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $5,245,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 1,500,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 2,062,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 91; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 99; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 98. 

Morocco; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $19,196,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 1,488,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 2,000,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 4,752,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 52; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 75; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 86. 

Myanmar/Burma; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $4,570,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 993,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 2,257,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 0; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 90; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 75; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 87. 

Namibia; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $16,332,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 2,898,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 2,713,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 2,467,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 85; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: N/A; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: N/A. 

Nepal; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $3,750,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 3,358,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 49; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 71; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: N/A. 

Nicaragua; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $28,829,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 1,990,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 5,295,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 5,940,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 77; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 73; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 88. 

Nigeria; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $26,759,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 3,163,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 4,896,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 6,277,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: N/ A; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 75; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 60. 

Pakistan; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $165,642,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 22,000,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 63,380,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 50; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: N/A; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 66. 

Peru; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $15,090,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 1,507,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 2,624,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 2,700,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 88; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 100; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 97. 

Philippines; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $21,240,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 3,300,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 7,860,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 93; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 97; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 94. 

Russian Federation; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $610,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 310,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 0; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 99; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: N/A; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 91. 

Rwanda; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $3,614,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 420,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 983,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 65; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 37; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 73. 

Senegal; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $31,068,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 4,070,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 16,485,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 39; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 45; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 66. 

Somalia; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $3,678,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 529,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 500,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: N/A; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: N/A; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: N/A. 

South Africa; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $31,803,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 3,000,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 6,983,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 7,909,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 82; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: N/A; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: N/A. 

Sudan; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $31,022,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 6,922,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 8,700,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 61; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 49; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: N/A. 

Tajikistan; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $6,740,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 300,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 210,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 99; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 92; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 97. 

Tanzania; 
[Empty]; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $8,499,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 2,264,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 2,021,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 69; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 57; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 86. 

Turkey; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $7,020,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 7,020,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 0; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 87; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 88; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 89. 

Turkmenistan; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $500,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 0; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 99; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: N/A; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: N/A. 

Uganda; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $45,006,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 8,799,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 7,483,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 5,925,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 67; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 57; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: N/A. 

Uzbekistan; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $6,960,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 0; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 250,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 250,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: N/A; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 97; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: N/A. 

Yemen, Rep; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $21,198,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: 2,994,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: 3,270,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: 2,445,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: N/ A; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 62; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 75. 

Zambia; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Total 
funding levels FY 2001 through 2006: $46,419,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2001: $4,965,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2004: $5,722,000; 
Funding to recipient countries based on USAID's allocations: Funding 
levels for FY 2006: $17,393,000; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Adult literacy rate 
(percentage of people aged 15 and above), 2004: 68%; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary completion rate 
(percentage of relevant age group), 2004: 66%; 
Selected World Bank's 2004 indicator data: Primary school enrollment 
(percentage net, using definition of primary school age for all 
countries), 2004: 80%. 

Legend: 

N/A=Data not available: 

Source: USAID data from the Annual Report System and World Bank's World 
Development Indicators data from[Hyperlink, 
http://devdata.worldbank.org/dataonline/]. 

Note: Funding figures include those allocated directly to USAID 
missions in country. Funding does not include regional funding, which 
may distribute basic education funds to countries through headquarters. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix IV: List of International Basic Education Projects Reviewed: 

Country: Dominican Republic. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: USAID; 
Project: Invest in Education for Competitiveness Program; 
Implementer: American Chamber of Commerce; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: $250,000; 
Period of performance: 2006. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: USAID; 
Project: Monitoring and Evaluation of Educational Opportunities and 
Learning in USAID Sponsored Projects in the Dominican Republic; 
Implementer: University at Albany-State University of New York; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 1,781,459; 
Period of performance: 2003-2007. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: DOL; 
Project: Combating the Worst Forms of Child Labor in the Dominican 
Republic-Supporting the Time-bound Program for the Elimination of the 
Worst Forms of Child Labor in the Dominican Republic; 
Implementer: International Labor Organization's International Program 
on the Elimination of Child Labor (ILO/IPEC); 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 4,400,000; 
Period of performance: 2002-2006. 

Country: Egypt. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: USAID; 
Project: Alam Simsim; 
Implementer: Sesame Workshop; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 8,000,000; 
Period of performance: 2004-2007. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: USAID; 
Project: Educational Reform Program; 
Implementer: American Institutes for Research and Academy for 
Educational Development; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 114,833,279; 
Period of performance: 2004-2009. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: USAID; 
Project: National Book Program for Schools; 
Implementer: Academy for Educational Development; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 98,900,000; 
Period of performance: 2005-2009. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: USAID; 
Project: New Schools Program; 
Implementer: CARE; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 39,000,000; 
Period of performance: 2000-2008. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: USAID; 
Project: School Team Excellence Awards Program; 
Implementer: Development Associates; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 11,268,477; 
Period of performance: 2005-2007. 

Country: Honduras. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: USAID; 
Project: Central American and Dominican Republic Centers of Excellence 
for Teacher Training; 
Implementer: Universidad Pedagogica Nacional Francisco Morazan; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 8,497,683[A]; 
Period of performance: 2002-2007. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: USAID; 
Project: EDUCATODOS Alternative Basic Education Project; 
Implementer: Honduran Ministry of Education; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 22,085,529; 
Period of performance: 1995-2009. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: USAID; 
Project: Measuring Student Achievement Project; 
Implementer: Academy for Educational Development, American Institutes 
for Research, and the National Association of Former Peace Scholarship 
Recipients; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 9,173,851; 
Period of performance: 2004-2007. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: DOL; 
Project: Combating Child Labor Through Education in Central America and 
the Dominican Republic, "Primero Aprendo"; 
Implementer: CARE; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 5,500,000[A]; 
Period of performance: 2004-2008. 

Country: Mali. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: USAID; 
Project: Africa Education Initiative- Ambassadors' Girls' Scholarship 
Program; 
Implementer: World Education; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 3,799,000[B]; 
Period of performance: 2004-2008. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: USAID; 
Project: Improved Quality of Education Activity; 
Implementer: World Education; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 12,475,021; 
Period of performance: 2003-2007. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: USAID; 
Project: Regional Action Planning-Decision- Making; 
Implementer: Academy for Educational Development & the Education 
Development Center; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 4,028,843; 
Period of performance: 2004-2007. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: USAID; 
Project: Shared Governance Program; 
Implementer: Management Systems International; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 962,000[C]; 
Period of performance: 2003-2007. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: USAID; 
Project: Teacher Training via Radio; 
Implementer: Educational Development Center; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 3,580,555; 
Period of performance: 2004-2007. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: DOL; 
Project: A Better Future for Mali's Children: Combating Child 
Trafficking through Education; 
Implementer: CARE; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 3,000,000; 
Period of performance: 2003-2007. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: DOL; 
Project: Combating the Trafficking of Children for Labour Exploitation 
in West and Central Africa; 
Implementer: ILO/ IPEC; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 5,000,000; 
Period of performance: 2001-2007. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: DOL; 
Project: Community-based Innovations to Reduce Child Labor through 
Education; 
Implementer: Winrock International; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 5,000,000[A]; 
Period of performance: 2002-2006. 

Country: Morocco.  

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: State Dept; 
Project: Scholarships for Success; 
Implementer: USAID; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 40,000; 
Period of performance: 2004-2007. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: USAID; 
Project: Advancing Learning and Employability for a Better Future; 
Implementer: Academy for Educational Development; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 9,872,697; 
Period of performance: 2004-2008. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: DOL; 
Project: ADROS: Combating Child Labor Through Education in Morocco; 
Implementer: Management Systems International; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 3,000,000; 
Period of performance: 2003-2007. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: DOL; 
Project: Combating Child Labour in Morocco by Creating an Enabling 
National Environment and Developing Direct Action against Worst Forms 
of Child Labour in Rural Areas; 
Implementer: ILO/ IPEC; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 2,081,069; 
Period of performance: 2003-2006. 

Country: Peru. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: USAID; 
Project: Andean Centers of Excellence for Teacher Training; 
Implementer: Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 5,050,567; 
Period of performance: 2002-2009. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: USAID; 
Project: Innovations in Decentralization and Active Schools (AprenDes); 
Implementer: Academy for Educational Development; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 10,642,097; 
Period of performance: 2003-2007. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: DOL; 
Project: EduFuturo: Educating Artisanal Mining Children in Peru for a 
Dignified Future; 
Implementer: World Learning; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 1,500,000; 
Period of performance: 2002-2006. 

Country: South Africa. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: USAID; 
Project: Africa Education Initiative- Ambassadors' Girls' Scholarship 
Program; 
Implementer: Winrock International; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 1,668,000[B]; 
Period of performance: 2004- 2008. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: USAID; 
Project: Africa Education Initiative- Textbooks and Learning Materials 
Program; 
Implementer: University of Texas at San Antonio; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 3,000,000; 
Period of performance: 2005-2008. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: USAID; 
Project: Integrated Education Program; 
Implementer: Research Triangle Institute; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 22,906,334; 
Period of performance: 2004-2008. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: USAID; 
Project: Mindset Primary Schools Channel; 
Implementer: Mindset Network; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 3,550,000; 
Period of performance: 2004-2007. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: DOL; 
Project: Reducing Exploitative Child Labor in South Africa through 
Education; 
Implementer: American Institutes for Research; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 9,000,000; 
Period of performance: 2004-2008. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: DOL; 
Project: Supporting the Time-Bound Programme to Eliminate the Worst 
Forms of Child Labour in South Africa's Child Labour Action Programme 
and Laying the Basis for Concerted Action against Worst Forms of Child 
Labour in Botswana, Lesotho, Namibia and Swaziland; 
Implementer: ILO/IPEC; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 5,000,000; 
Period of performance: 2003-2006. 

Country: Zambia. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: USAID; 
Project: Africa Education Initiative- Ambassadors' Girls' Scholarship 
Program; 
Implementer: Winrock International; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 1,432,000[B]; 
Period of performance: 2004- 2008. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: USAID; 
Project: Africa Education Initiative- Textbooks and Learning Materials 
Program; 
Implementer: Mississippi Consortium for International Development; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 2,999,614; 
Period of performance: 2005-2008. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: USAID; 
Project: Communities Supporting Health, HIV/ AIDS, Nutrition, Gender 
and Equity Education in Schools 2; 
Implementer: American Institutes for Research; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 21,220,000; 
Period of performance: 2005-2009. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: USAID; 
Project: Educational Quality Improvement Program; 
Implementer: Academy for Educational Development; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 16,473,991; 
Period of performance: 2004-2010. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: USAID; 
Project: Quality Education Services Through Technology; 
Implementer: Educational Development Center; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 12,729,816; 
Period of performance: 2004-2009. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: DOL; 
Project: Combating and Preventing HIV/AIDS- induced Child Labour in Sub-
Saharan Africa: Pilot Action in Uganda and Zambia; 
Implementer: ILO/IPEC; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 3,000,000; 
Period of performance: 2004-2007. 

Country: [Empty]; 
Agency: DOL; 
Project: Combating Child Labour Through Education - An Education 
Initiative (Child and Community Participatory Approach for Impact and 
Sustainability); 
Implementer: Jesus Cares Ministries; 
Amount of funding planned to support basic education for the life of 
the project: 750,000; Period of performance: 2005-2008.

Source: U.S. agencies' data. 

[A] Funding covers global or regional projects. 

[B] Funding amounts represent the approximate distribution of 
scholarship funds across countries. 

[C] Funding amounts only cover the basic education component of the 
project. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix V: Analysis of the Performance Measures in Documentation for 
Selected International Basic Education Programs: 

We studied 40 programs from the eight countries visited during 
fieldwork. The programs had multiple performance measures and often 
included a mix of outcome and output measures. We identified measures 
using criteria that required them to be clearly identified as 
performance measures, have clearly reported results, and be clearly 
linked to program objectives. See appendix I for more details about how 
the programs were selected for study and about the methodology we used 
to analyze their measures. Table 4 below shows the type of measures 
contained in the programs we examined. Table 5 shows the 
characteristics of the outcome measures being used by the programs, and 
Table 6 shows how these outcome measures were used. 

Table 4: Performance Measures in the Programs Selected: 

Disposition: Programs with outcome measures; 
Number: 21. 

Disposition: Programs without outcome measures but with output 
measures; 
Number: 10. 

Disposition: Programs with no clear performance measures reporteda; 
Number: 6. 

Disposition: Programs early in implementation with no clearly reported 
performance measures; 
Number: 3. 

Disposition: Total number of programs reviewed; 
Number: 40. 

Source: GAO analysis of USAID and DOL project documentation. 

[A] Some of these programs did list activities or provide descriptions 
of their progress; however, these activities did not meet our criteria 
for clearly identified performance measures that linked to objectives. 

[End of table] 

Table 5: Characteristics of the Outcome Measures: 

Disposition: Programs that used quantitative measures; 
Number: 21. 

Disposition: Programs that set baselines; 
Number: 14. 

Disposition: Programs that set targets; 
Number: 18. 

Source: GAO analysis of USAID and DOL project documentation. 

Note: We analyzed the 21 programs that we identified as having clear 
outcome measures. Many programs had multiple outcome measures. For this 
analysis, we determined that the program had outcome measures that were 
quantitative, or set baselines or targets, if any one of their outcome 
measures had that characteristic. See appendix I for more details about 
how we selected the programs and the methodology we used to analyze the 
measures. 

[End of table] 

Table 6: Programs' Use of Outcome Measures: 

Disposition: Programs with measures that addressed access issues; 
Number: 16. 

Disposition: Programs with measures that addressed capacity issues; 
Number: 15. 

Disposition: Programs with measures that addressed quality issues; 
Number: 12. 

Disposition: Programs with measures that addressed access, capacity, 
and quality issues; 
Number: 8. 

Source: GAO analysis of USAID and DOL project documentation. 

Note: This analysis was conducted of the 21 programs that we identified 
as having clear outcome measures. We analyzed the measures according to 
whether they followed USAID's criteria for access, quality, and 
capacity. Many programs had multiple outcome measures. For this 
analysis, we determined that the program had outcome measures that 
addressed access, capacity, or quality if any one of their outcome 
measures had that characteristic. As a result, programs can have 
measures that address more than one dimension; for example, as stated 
above, eight programs had measures that addressed access, capacity and 
quality issues. See appendix I for more details about how the programs 
were selected for study and about the methodology we used to analyze 
their measures. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix VI: Comments from the Department of State: 

United States Department of State: 
Assistant Secretary for Resource Management and Chief Financial 
Officer: 
Washington, D.C. 20520: 

Ms. Jacquelyn Williams-Bridgers: 
Managing Director: 
International Affairs and Trade: 
Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street, N.W. 
Washington, D.C. 20548-0001: 

Mar 2 6 2007: 

Dear Ms. Williams-Bridgers: 

We appreciate the opportunity to review your draft report, "Foreign 
Assistance: Enhanced Coordination and Better Methods to Assess the 
Results of U.S. International Basic Education Efforts Are Needed," GAO 
Job Code 320399. 

The enclosed Department of State comments are provided for 
incorporation with this letter as an appendix to the final report. 

If you have any questions concerning this response, please contact 
Parrie Henderson-O'Keefe, Program Analyst, Office of the Director of 
Foreign Assistance at (202) 647-2646. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

Sid L. Kaplan (Acting): 

cc: GAO - Zina Merritt: 
F - Amb. Randall Tobias: 
State/OIG - Mark Duda: 

U.S. Department of State's Comments on GAO Draft Report Foreign 
Assistance: Enhanced Coordination and Better Methods to Assess the 
Results of U.S. International Basic Education Efforts Are Needed (GAO- 
07-523, GAO Code 320399): 

Thank you for the opportunity to comment on the draft report Foreign 
Assistance: Enhanced Coordination and Better Methods to Assess the 
Results of U.S. International Basic Education Efforts Are Needed. The 
Department of State would like to offer the following comments on the 
main conclusions and recommendations of the draft audit report 
referenced above. 

Recommendation related to coordination: The report found "that agencies 
did not always coordinate in the planning or delivery of international 
basic education-related activities. For the period 2001 and 2006, there 
was no government-wide mechanism to facilitate interagency 
collaboration and as a result, we identified instances where agencies 
missed opportunities to collaborate and maximize U.S. resources." The 
report also says "Although State's Director of Foreign Assistance has 
begun to address the issue of better coordinating all U.S. foreign 
assistance by bringing together core teams to discuss U.S. development 
priorities in each recipient country, it is unclear to what extent 
these efforts will be accepted and implemented by agencies whose 
foreign assistance programs are not under DFA's direct authority." The 
report "recommends that the Secretary of State work with the heads of 
other U.S. executive agencies supporting international basic education- 
related activities in improving interagency coordination of basic 
education efforts at headquarters in Washington and in recipient 
countries to facilitate better planning and allocation of U.S. 
resources." 

Comment: The Secretary of State is charged by statute with the overall 
supervision and general direction of U.S. foreign assistance. This 
responsibility includes foreign assistance implemented by agencies 
other than the Department of State and the U.S. Agency for 
International Development. In fulfilling that responsibility, the 
Secretary established a single umbrella authority, the Office of the 
Director of U.S. Foreign Assistance, in January 2006 to develop the 
processes and mechanisms necessary to ensure the kind of coordination 
necessary for coherent USG assistance programs in all areas, including 
basic education. The Office of the U.S. Director of Foreign Assistance 
has undertaken such processes over the past year, and our experience to 
date has demonstrated willingness by other federal agencies such as the 
Department of Defense, USTR and the Millennium Challenge Corporation to 
work with us within the Foreign Assistance framework. The FY 2008 
operational planning process is expected to be the first year wherein 
there is full participation by other agency implementers and 
stakeholders. We believe that other agencies involved in foreign 
assistance are likewise committed to coherence and performance and 
welcome the opportunity to fully, engage with their interagency 
colleagues toward maximizing the resources under their purview. 

Recommendation related to performance measurement: The audit found that 
"To better assess its goal of improving access to quality education; 
USAID is developing a standardized test that could provide data on 
primary-level reading ability and would be comparable across countries. 
In addition, State's office of the Director of Foreign Assistance plans 
to work toward developing methods to assess whether all foreign 
assistance are (sic) achieving their goals; however these efforts are 
only in the early discussion phase. Without this information, agency 
officials cannot determine if they are achieving their strategic goals 
or make more fully informed choices about which programs to fund." The 
audit "recommends that the Secretary of State work with the heads of 
other U.S. executive agencies supporting international basic education- 
related activities in "developing a plan to identify indicators that 
would help U.S. agencies, to the extent practicable, track improvements 
in access to quality education." 

Comment: U.S. agencies supporting international education programs 
acknowledge the critical importance of ensuring that children not only 
have access to education but are provided a quality education. 
Assessing progress toward this goal is challenging for the many less 
developed countries where foreign assistance is provided, and there is 
no internationally-accepted standard of measurement. We should not 
forget that here in the United States - a highly developed nation - it 
was only within the last ten years that nationwide processes and 
standards for educational quality were introduced into the education 
system. USAID, State Department and others in the international 
community are working together to try to develop appropriate measures 
for learning outcomes that would address the question of whether a 
quality education is being provided. However, the lack of such a 
measure does not mean that we have no sense of whether progress is 
being made. We and the international community have developed and are 
using proxy indicators to help inform us as to whether or not we are 
making progress, including primary school retention rates as cited in 
the report. Together with such other indicators as enrollment rates by 
gender, curriculum development and teacher training, they provide 
insight as to the impact of U.S. assistance. 

Although the Office of the Director of U.S. Foreign Assistance is 
indeed in the process of bringing together the key actors from inside 
and outside the government to refine its selection of indicators to 
measure overall progress toward U.S. foreign assistance objectives, the 
office is building on the long history and best practices that USAID 
and other agencies have accumulated from many years of performance 
management and thorough evaluation. This enables us to make informed 
choices about which programs to fund. While our choices are fully 
informed by these methods, they are also informed by inputs and 
guidance from other parts of the Administration and Congress. 

We look forward to further continued contributions from the GAO to 
further cross-government coordination. 

The following are our comments on the Department of State's letter 
dated March 26, 2007. 

GAO Comments: 

1. State said that its Office of the Director of U.S. Foreign 
Assistance over the past year has undertaken a process to ensure the 
kind of coordination necessary for coherent U.S. government assistance 
programs in all areas, including basic education. Also, State said that 
its experience to date has demonstrated willingness by other federal 
agencies such as the Department of Defense, U.S. Trade Representatives, 
and the Millennium Challenge Corporation to work with us within the 
Foreign Assistance framework. In addition, the fiscal year 2008 
operational planning process is expected to be the first year wherein 
there is full participation by other agency implementers and 
stakeholders. At the time of our review, some of the other agency 
officials that we met with in Washington said that their respective 
agencies have not yet been invited to participate in such coordination 
efforts. Therefore, we believe that State should continue towards this 
end to improve coordination, both at the headquarters and in recipient 
countries, among all agencies involved in international basic education-
related activities. 

2. State said that USAID, State, and others in the international 
community are working together to try to develop appropriate measures 
for learning outcomes that would address the question of whether a 
quality education is being provided. Also, State noted that its Office 
of the Director of U.S. Foreign Assistance is building on the long 
history and best practices that USAID and other agencies have 
accumulated from many years of performance management and thorough 
evaluation. Our report notes the efforts of State, USAID, and the 
international community in this regard and that these efforts have just 
begun. However, we maintain that a plan should be developed to better 
guide these efforts to help agencies track improvements in the access 
to quality education. 

[End of section] 

Appendix VII: Comments from the U.S. Agency for International 
Development: 

USAID: 
From The American People: 

Mr. Jess T. Ford: 
Director, International Affairs and Trade: 
U.S. Government Accountability Office: 
441 G. Street, 
Washington, DC 20548: 

Dear Mr. Ford: 

I am pleased to provide the U.S. Agency for International Development's 
(USAID) formal response on the draft GAO report entitled "Foreign 
Assistance: Enhanced Coordination and Better Methods to Assess the 
Results of U.S. International Basic Education Efforts are Needed" (GAO- 
07-523). USAID supports the recommendations and would like to thank the 
GAO team for their efforts. 

We appreciate the GAO's recognition of the need for greater cross-USG 
coordination and the Agency's efforts to tackle critical issues in 
basic education, such as an increased focus on improving Quality and 
closing gaps in data. We agree that more needs to be done in these 
areas to improve education outcomes in-country and to better understand 
the impact of the USG support to basic education. More detailed 
technical comments on the report were provided under separate cover. 

Thank you for the opportunity to respond to the GAO draft report and 
for the courtesies extended by your staff in the conduct of this 
review. 

Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

Mosina H. Jordan: 
Counselor to the Agency: 

[End of section] 

Appendix VIII: Comments from the U.S. Department of Agriculture: 

United States Department of Agriculture: 
Farm and Foreign Agricultural Services: 
Foreign Agricultural Service: 
1400 Independence Ave, SW: 
Stop 1060: 
Washington, DC 20250-1060: 

Mar 22 2007: 

Ms. Zina Merritt: 
Assistant Director, International Affairs and Trade: 
United States Government Accountability Office: 
441 G Street, N.W. 
Washington, D.C. 20548: 

Dear Ms. Merritt: 

Thank you for providing USDA with this opportunity to review and 
comment on the Government Accountability Office (GAO) draft report 
entitled "Foreign Assistance: Enhanced Coordination and Better Methods 
to Assess the Results of U.S. International Basic Education Efforts Are 
Needed" (GAO-07-523). USDA will work with the Department of State in 
the manner which the report recommends in order to address the specific 
issues it identifies. 

The draft report makes the statement that "USDA . can not disaggregate 
the amount of funds allocated specifically for basic education related 
activities." The Department considers this conclusion to be the result 
of alternate points of view arising from differences in missions, 
rather than an actual inability of USDA to disaggregate the amount of 
funds allocated specifically for basic education related activities. In 
fact, USDA did provide GAO with a breakout of the amount of USDA 
funding allocated to education activities by fiscal year, by country, 
and by program. This breakout included USDA resources expended for 
education items such as school supplies, school infrastructure repairs, 
and school equipment purchases. 

As noted during both the entrance and exit conferences, improving child 
nutrition is the foundation of the Food for Education program. Since -
-from the USDA perspective --school meals enable children to better 
concentrate on learning, food and education are not considered by the 
Department to be separate components of the program which might be 
disaggregated from one another. 

The draft report also notes that ".agencies did not always coordinate 
in the planning or delivery of international basic education-related 
activities." USDA does annually coordinate requests for the programs 
with the Department of State, the U.S. Agency for International 
Development, and the Office of Management and Budget. However, USDA 
welcomes wider participation with other U.S. government agencies. 

Again, USDA appreciates this opportunity to share its views regarding 
this report. Sincerely, 

Signed by: 

Michael W. Yost: 
Administrator: 

The following are our comments on the Department of Agriculture's 
letter dated March 22, 2007. 

GAO Comments: 

1. We deleted the statement that "USDA.. . can not disaggregate the 
amount of funds allocated specifically for basic education related 
activities." from the report. Also, in the report we explain that USDA 
funding allocations include basic education components that support its 
broader mission goals and provide examples accordingly. 

2. We acknowledge USDA's coordination efforts with State, USAID, and 
the Office of Management and Budget as a good example of interagency 
coordination. 

[End of section] 

Appendix IX: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Jess Ford, (202) 512-4128, f [Hyperlink, fordj@gao.gov] ordj@gao.gov: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the individual named above, Zina Merritt, Assistant 
Director; Virginia Chanley; Martin de Alteriis; Harriet Ganson; Emily 
Gupta; David Hancock; Victoria Lin; Grace Lui; Grant Mallie; Patricia 
Martin; Deborah Owolabi; and Anne Welch made key contributions to this 
report. The team benefited from the expert advice and assistance of 
Joseph Carney, Elizabeth Curda, Joyce Evans, Etana Finkler, Bruce 
Kutnick, Jena Sinkfield, and Cynthia Taylor. 

(320399): 

FOOTNOTES 

[1] "Education for All Global Monitoring Report," UNESCO, 2007. 

[2] "USAID Education Strategy, Improving Lives Through Learning," 
USAID, April 2005. 

[3] A nongovernmental organization (NGO) is any nonprofit, voluntary 
citizens group, which is organized on a local, national, or 
international level. 

[4] For the purpose of this report, we use USAID's definition of basic 
education activities. 

[5] For the purpose of this report, we use the term "allocations," as 
defined by State and USAID, to refer to a component of approved 
appropriations set aside by agencies for specific purposes. 

[6] The USAID mission in Liberia was in the initial phase of developing 
a country strategy and had not implemented any basic education 
activities at the time of our visit. 

[7] Results from nonprobability samples cannot be used to make 
inferences about a population because, in a nonprobability sample, some 
elements of the population being studied have no chance or an unknown 
chance of being selected as part of the sample. 

[8] Education for All is an international commitment to bring the 
benefits of education to every citizen in every society. In 2000 in 
Dakar, Senegal, 189 countries adopted the Education for All goals of 
(1) universal primary education by 2015 and (2) gender equity in 
education by 2015 among the eight Millennium Development Goals. 

[9] The forum is an interagency body established in 1990 by the UN 
Development Program; UNESCO; the UN Population Fund; the UN Children's 
Fund; and the World Bank. 

[10] Funds appropriated for "basic education" and utilized by USAID 
include the: Foreign Operations, Export Financing, and Related Programs 
Appropriations Act, 2006, Pub. L. No. 109-102, § 567, 119 Stat. 2172, 
2227 (2005); Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2005, Pub. L. No. 108- 
447, § 567, 118 Stat. 2809, 3024 (2004); Consolidated Appropriations 
Act, 2004, Pub. L. No. 108-199, Division D, Title II, 118 Stat. 3, 147; 
Consolidated Appropriations Resolution, 2003, Pub. L. No. 108-7, 
Division E, Title II, 117 Stat. 11, 164; Foreign Operations, Export 
Financing, and Related Programs Appropriations Act, 2002, Pub. L. No. 
107-115, Title II, 115 Stat. 2118, 2122; and Foreign Operations, Export 
Financing, and Related Programs Appropriations Act, 2001, Pub. L. No. 
106-429, Title II, 114 Stat. 1900, 1900A-5 (2000); see also H.R. Conf. 
Rep. No. 109-72 at 132 (2005). 

[11] For purposes of this report, congressionally designated 
appropriations covers appropriation specifically set aside by 
appropriating language for "basic education." For example, the fiscal 
year 2006 appropriation specified a general provision of $465 million 
for basic education, of which $365 million of the Development 
Assistance (DA) account should be allocated for basic education (Pub. 
L. No. 109-102, 119 Stat. at 2177). Other accounts from which USAID 
allocated basic education funding from fiscal years 2001 through 2006 
include the Andean Counterdrug Initiative (ACI), Assistance for Eastern 
Europe and the Baltic States (AEEB), Child Survival and Health (CSH), 
Economic Support Funds (ESF), and Freedom Support Act (FSA). 

[12] Supplemental appropriations include funding provided by Congress 
after the beginning of a fiscal year, such as the Emergency 
Supplemental Appropriations Act for Defense and for the Reconstruction 
of Iraq and Afghanistan (Pub. L. No. 109-234, Title I, sec. 1302, 120 
Stat. 418, 435 [2006]), and the Emergency Supplemental Appropriations 
Act for Defense, the Global War on Terror, and Hurricane Recovery (Pub. 
L. No. 108-106, Title II, Ch. 2, 117 Stat. 1209, 1225 [2003]). 

[13] The State and USAID Strategic Plan for Fiscal Years 2004 to 2009 
sets forth the Secretary of State's direction and priorities for both 
organizations, including how State and USAID will implement U.S. 
foreign policy and development assistance. The plan defines the primary 
aims of U.S. foreign policy and development assistance, as well as the 
agencies' strategic objectives and associated goals. 

[14] The G-8 countries are Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, 
Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United States. 

[15] This policy may be superseded in a host country that has already 
resolved serious deficiencies in access and educational quality at the 
primary level. Likewise, it may be set aside if the mission concludes 
that agency resources would produce more valuable results in some other 
area of basic education. 

[16] We use 2004 data found in World Bank's World Development 
Indicators: http://devdata.worldbank.org/dataonline. 

[17] While the U.S. Department of Education does not fund or implement 
international basic education activities, it does conduct some related 
activities. For example, the Department's international activities 
typically focus on sharing information on education policies and 
practices, exchanging educational experts, cooperation between U.S. and 
foreign educational institutions, and joint research activities, 
including participation in comparative international assessments of 
student performance. The Department also works in cooperation with 
international organizations that are active in the field of education, 
including UNESCO, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and 
Development, Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation, and the Organization of 
American States. 

[18] Peace Corps volunteers commit to 2-year assignments in host 
communities where they work on projects, which fall into six general 
sectors: agriculture, business development, education, environment, 
health and HIV/AIDS, and youth. 

[19] Peace Corps' education sector activities may include some 
activities in which volunteers teach English as a second language, 
which does not fall under USAID's definition of basic education. In 
addition, the Peace Corps indirectly supports basic education goals 
through its other sectors, particularly youth development. The Peace 
Corps sometimes includes, in its number of education volunteers, 
volunteers who have worked in its youth development sector. 

[20] A compact is a multiyear agreement between the MCC and an eligible 
country to fund specific programs targeted at reducing poverty and 
stimulating economic growth. A threshold program is designed to assist 
countries that have not yet qualified for MCC compact funding, but are 
on the "threshold" of doing so, having demonstrated a significant 
commitment to improve their performance on the eligibility criteria for 
compact funding. 

[21] USAID has a worldwide agreement with the Peace Corps to provide it 
with Small Project Assistance (SPA) funding to support small, community-
based, self-help development activities. Although specific SPA funding 
is small in comparison to other program activities (for example, 
$80,000 total fiscal year 2006 SPA funding for Morocco), volunteers had 
used SPA funding to implement school-related activities in several 
countries we visited. 

[22] GAO, Results-Oriented Government: Practices That Can Help Enhance 
and Sustain Collaboration among Federal Agencies, GAO-06-15 
(Washington, D.C.: Oct. 21, 2005). 

[23] H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 108-599 at 18 (2004). 

[24] The AR system contains a variety of country-level performance 
indicators such as enrollment rates, number of teachers trained, host- 
country policy reforms, and qualitative narratives on such things as 
the impact of USAID capacity building efforts. 

[25] Although the DOL projects focused on withdrawing children from 
exploitative work and promoting host-country capacity to address child 
labor, several programs tracked quality-related indicators, such as 
graduation rates, retention rates, and implementation of teaching 
methodology. 

[26] As part of the ongoing reorganization of foreign assistance, the 
DFA has created new foreign assistance categories that group countries 
based on characteristics and goals similar to those the United States 
seeks to achieve. These include Rebuilding, Developing, Transforming, 
Sustaining Partner, and Reforming countries. 

[27] GAO previously noted some deficiencies in USDA assessing the 
effectiveness of its basic education-related programs. See GAO, Foreign 
Assistance: Global Food for Education Initiative Faces Challenges for 
Successful Implementation, GAO-02-328 (Washington, D.C.: Feb. 28, 
2002). GAO also reported that project monitoring of State's MEPI 
programs needs improvement. See GAO, Foreign Assistance: Middle East 
Partnership Initiative Offers Tools for Supporting Reform, but Project 
Monitoring Needs Improvement, GAO-05-711 (Washington, D.C.: Aug. 8, 
2005). 

[28] The DFA holds a rank equivalent to Deputy Secretary and serves 
concurrently as USAID Administrator. 

[29] See GAO, The Results Act: An Evaluator's Guide to Assessing Agency 
Annual Performance Plans, GAO/GGD-10.1.20 (Washington, D.C.: April 
1998). 

[30] In addition, we visited Liberia. However, the USAID mission in 
Liberia was in the initial phase of developing a country strategy and 
had not implemented any basic education activities at the time of our 
visit. 

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