From Global Advocacy to Local Resistance: Benin’s Experience of Competency-based School Curriculum
Abstract
In the vein of the “Education for All” campaign to promote access to education, a wave of curriculum revision along the
competency-based approach has swept francophone countries
in sub-Sahara Africa, thus Benin. The current study documents
local actors’ various interactions with the curricular reform in
the course of its implementation. Secondary data supplemented
with qualitative research techniques such as semi-structured
interviews with teachers, and focus group discussions with parents
enable to relate the patterns of change, the challenges and
resistance to change. The actors spectrum generated illustrates
advocacy on one hand and resistance on the other. Advocacy
of local actors reflects the global optimistic discourse on education
and resistance is favoured by disappointing policy outcomes as well as contextual constraints.
