Education In Gambia
MTA
A Comprehensive Overview from Early Childhood to Higher Education
The Gambian education system has evolved from indigenous Islamic Quranic schools (Daras) and colonial missionary institutions to a structured national framework encompassing Early Childhood Care and Development (ECCD), nine years of Basic Education (Lower and Upper Basic), Senior Secondary Education, Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET), and Higher Education led by the University of The Gambia (established 1999). This progression reflects the nation's journey from fragmented, unequal systems toward a unified approach aimed at national development, with post-independence efforts focusing on expanding access, decolonizing curricula, and building local capacity.
Despite notable achievements in enrollment growth, the system faces persistent challenges including inadequate funding and resource shortages, dilapidated infrastructure, uneven teacher distribution and shortages (particularly in rural areas and critical subjects like STEM), low teacher morale, quality concerns, high repetition and dropout rates, gender disparities that worsen at higher education levels, a significant rural-urban divide in access to resources and technology, and difficulties in implementing inclusive education for students with special needs. These challenges are compounded by curriculum relevance issues, governance constraints, and over-reliance on external donor funding. However, strategic interventions have emerged, including policy reforms like the Language in Education Policy prioritizing mother-tongue instruction, expanded teacher training programs, community participation models, school feeding initiatives, girls' empowerment scholarships, and technology integration efforts such as solar-powered schools and radio-based learning.
Looking forward, The Gambia's education strategy emphasizes foundational literacy and numeracy, digital transformation with "offline-first" solutions, higher education expansion (including the University of Education transformation), TVET growth aligned with market needs, strengthened inclusive education practices, continued gender equity initiatives, deeper integration of Education for Sustainable Development, increased domestic financing, and data-driven decision-making. Innovative community-led practices—such as School Banks, peer mentorship, school gardens, and locally relevant learning materials—demonstrate adaptive resilience. Through sustained commitment to equity, quality, and relevance, the system aims to transform learning outcomes and empower all citizens to contribute to a prosperous, sustainable future, as illustrated by successful case studies in literacy, TVET, inclusion, infrastructure, and adult education across diverse regions.
This book is essential for educators, policymakers, and researchers engaged in education policy and development in The Gambia and other West African nations. It offers valuable insights for international development practitioners and NGOs working on educational reform, particularly in developing contexts. Readers interested in understanding the intersection of education, governance, and socio-economic development in The Gambia will find comprehensive analysis and evidence-based strategies. It also serves as a critical resource for stakeholders involved in teacher training, curriculum design, and inclusive education initiatives.
June 26, 2026
42,174 words
2 hours 57 minutes
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