cover image The Beautiful Tree: A Personal Journey into How the World’s Poorest People Are Educating Themselves

The Beautiful Tree: A Personal Journey into How the World’s Poorest People Are Educating Themselves

James Tooley, . . Cato Institute, $19.95 (302pp) ISBN 978-1-933995-92-2

Tooley (Reclaiming Education ) documents his surprising finding that private schools are providing quality education to millions of poor children in the developing world. Whereas development experts insist that the path out of poverty lies in investment in public schools, the author draws on his fieldwork in India, China and Africa to argue that small entrepreneurs are educating the poor. In one region of India, 80% of urban children and 30% of rural children attend private schools; in China’s Gansu province 586 private schools are located in small villages, even though the state prides itself on its public system. Contrary to accepted wisdom, the modest fees of private schools are within reach of most, and parents find them superior to public schools that are often riddled with corruption and incompetence. Tooley argues that development funds be invested to support these institutions, through vouchers to parents and microfinance loans to the schools. The author’s engaging style transforms what could have been a dry if startling research report into a moving account of how poor parents struggle against great odds to provide a rich educational experience to their children. (Apr.)