Niger - IMAGINE

This impact evaluation uses random assignment at the village level to estimate impacts of the IMAGINE program on enrollment, attendance, learning and other education outcomes for primary school-age children in Niger. IMAGINE follow-up data were collected in 2011. NECS Wave 1 data (which were also used to estimate longer term impacts of IMAGINE) were collected in 2013.

After one year (using the data collected in 2011) the Impact Evaluation of Niger's IMAGINE program found that IMAGINE had a 4.3 percentage point positive impact on primary school enrollment, no impact on attendance, and no impact on math and French test scores. The program impacts were generally larger for girls than for boys. For girls, the program had an 8 percentage point positive impact on enrollment and a 5.4 percentage point impact on attendance. The program had no impact on girls’ math scores, though there is suggestive evidence it may have had a positive impact of 0.09 standard deviations on girls’ French test scores. No significant impacts were detected for boys’ enrollment, attendance, or test scores. Finally, impacts were larger for younger children (ages 7-10), than for those between the ages of 10 and 12.

After four years (using data collected in 2013 during the NECS Wave 1 data collection), the Niger IMAGINE Long-Term Evaluation found that IMAGINE had a 8.3 percentage point positive impact on enrollment and a 7.9 percentage point negative impact on absenteeism. On average, children in treatment villages scored 0.13 standard deviations higher on the math assessment than children in control villages (significant at the 5 percent level). Test scores in French for children in treatment villages were higher than in control villages, but were not statistically significant. The evaluation found large and significant impacts of the program on enrollment, attendance, and math scores for females, compared to more modest and less significant impacts for males.

Data and Resources

Field Value
accessLevel public
bureauCode {184:03}
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catalog_describedBy https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema/catalog.json
identifier DDI-MCC-NER-IE-EDU-2011-v01
landingPage https://data.mcc.gov/evaluations/index.php/catalog/96
license https://data.mcc.gov/terms-and-conditions.php
modified 2018-03-08
programCode {184:000}
publisher Millennium Challenge Corporation
resource-type Dataset
source_datajson_identifier true
source_hash eb20b2c509f80f607f0cde46d69ad1c32433fb9d
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Groups
  • AmeriGEOSS
  • National Provider
  • North America
Tags
  • amerigeo
  • amerigeoss
  • ckan
  • early-education-assessments
  • geo
  • geoss
  • girls-education
  • imagine
  • national
  • niger
  • niger-threshold-program
  • north-america
  • school-construction
  • united-states
isopen False
license_id other-license-specified
license_title other-license-specified
maintainer Monitoring & Evaluation Division of the Millennium Challenge Corporation
maintainer_email impact-eval@mcc.gov
metadata_created 2025-11-21T10:41:17.596680
metadata_modified 2025-11-21T10:41:17.596684
notes This impact evaluation uses random assignment at the village level to estimate impacts of the IMAGINE program on enrollment, attendance, learning and other education outcomes for primary school-age children in Niger. IMAGINE follow-up data were collected in 2011. NECS Wave 1 data (which were also used to estimate longer term impacts of IMAGINE) were collected in 2013. After one year (using the data collected in 2011) the Impact Evaluation of Niger's IMAGINE program found that IMAGINE had a 4.3 percentage point positive impact on primary school enrollment, no impact on attendance, and no impact on math and French test scores. The program impacts were generally larger for girls than for boys. For girls, the program had an 8 percentage point positive impact on enrollment and a 5.4 percentage point impact on attendance. The program had no impact on girls’ math scores, though there is suggestive evidence it may have had a positive impact of 0.09 standard deviations on girls’ French test scores. No significant impacts were detected for boys’ enrollment, attendance, or test scores. Finally, impacts were larger for younger children (ages 7-10), than for those between the ages of 10 and 12. After four years (using data collected in 2013 during the NECS Wave 1 data collection), the Niger IMAGINE Long-Term Evaluation found that IMAGINE had a 8.3 percentage point positive impact on enrollment and a 7.9 percentage point negative impact on absenteeism. On average, children in treatment villages scored 0.13 standard deviations higher on the math assessment than children in control villages (significant at the 5 percent level). Test scores in French for children in treatment villages were higher than in control villages, but were not statistically significant. The evaluation found large and significant impacts of the program on enrollment, attendance, and math scores for females, compared to more modest and less significant impacts for males.
num_resources 6
num_tags 14
title Niger - IMAGINE