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Abstract title:

The Nicaraguan Literacy Crusade: how lasting were its benefits?

Author: Peter Sandiford, Colin Lankshear, María Martha Montenegro, Germana Sánchez, and Jeffrey Cassel
Issue: Vol. 4, Number 1 1994

In 1981, Nicaragua was awarded UNESCOs Nadezhda K Krupskaya prize in recognition of the success of the 1980 National Literacy Crusade (CNA) through which, it was claimed, three quarters of the countrys illiterate had been taught to read and write. This article reports the follow-up of several hundred female CNA graduates. It finds that, a decade later, a significant proportion of them are no longer able to read or write; and that of those who can, many had previously attended formal schooling as a child for several years. An assessment of national census and survey figures suggests that about 9 percent of the population became literate solely as a consequence of Nicaraguas ambitious adult education interventions in the l980s. Other benefits, such as its impact on child health and survival, have yet to be quantified.

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