Research for the FCDO partnership for learning for all in Nigeria – A targeted retention study on mainstreamed ABEP learners 7 views0 applications


Project Background

Plan International Nigeria’s Country Strategy (FY2024 – FY2028), titled, “Girls are empowered to take action and drive change”, aims to reach and empower 20 million girls in Nigeria. A key pathway to achieving this is through our Education programmes, particularly those targeting Out-of-School Children (OOSC) through the Accelerated Basic Education Programme (ABEP). The FCDO-funded PLANE II project (2022-2025) successfully demonstrated the effectiveness of ABEP, mainstreaming over 17,000 learners into formal schools and exceeding its targets.

While the success of transition is well-documented, a critical gap remains in our evidence base. There is currently no systematic understanding of what happens to these learners after they are mainstreamed. We do not have comprehensive data on their retention, academic performance, psychosocial adjustment, or the specific barriers they face in the formal school environment. The PLANE II endline evaluation revealed high confidence among learners to continue their education, but also highlighted systemic barriers like poverty, hunger, and insufficient school infrastructure that threaten this very continuation.

To address this evidence-gap and inform future programming, Plan International Nigeria seeks to conduct a targeted Retention Study: “Beyond Transition.” This study will focus on learners who have been mainstreamed from ABEP into formal primary and junior secondary schools in Borno and Yobe states.

Purpose of the Retention Study

The primary purpose of the study is to generate robust evidence on the academic, psychosocial, structural, and household-level factors that influence the retention and sustained participation of mainstreamed ABEP learners in formal schools.

Objectives of the Baseline Survey

  1. Specific objectives:
  2. To assess retention rates of mainstreamed ABEP learners and identify patterns of dropout or irregular attendance.
  3. To evaluate academic adaptation by examining the academic performance of mainstreamed learners compared to their peers and identifying challenges in curriculum alignment and learning progression.
  4. To explore psychosocial adjustment, including learners’ sense of belonging, self-esteem, peer relationships, and experiences with school culture and safety.
  5. To identify structural and systemic barriers within the formal school environment (e.g., classroom dynamics, teacher capacity in inclusive pedagogy, school infrastructure, availability of WASH facilities) that affect learner retention.
  6. To analyze household and community-level factors such as economic pressures (poverty, child labour), family support for education, and community attitudes that influence a child’s ability to stay in school.
  7. To provide actionable recommendations for Plan International Nigeria, government stakeholders (SUBEB, SAME), and donors on strengthening retention strategies, improving transition pathways, and enhancing the capacity of formal schools to support mainstreamed learners.

How to apply

Interested Consultants should submit proposals in soft copies to [email protected] with this reference in the subject PIN/CNSLT/25/007- A TARGETED RETENTION STUDY ON MAINSTREAMED ABEP LEARNERS.

A detailed description of the Request for Proposal can be accessed via this link: https://tinyurl.com/mryaez3f

All Proposals must be received no later than 11.59 pm on Sunday, the 3rd of May 2026 GMT+1. Proposal submitted after the deadline date will NOT be accepted.

More Information

  • Job City Nigeria
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Plan International is an international organisation or development which works in 51 countries across Africa, the Americas, and Asia to promote the safeguarding of children.It is a nonprofit organisation and is one of the world's largest organisations based on children, it works in 58,000 communities with the help of volunteers to improve how 56 million children live. The charity also has 21 national organisations who have been given the responsibility to oversee the raising of funds and awareness in their individual countries.

The organisation puts an emphasis on communities working together in order to address the needs of children around the world. The NGO focuses on child participation, education, economic security, emergencies, health, protection, sexual health (including HIV), and water and sanitation. It provides training in disaster preparedness, response and recovery, and has worked on relief efforts in countries including Haiti, Colombia and Japan.

Plan International also sponsors the Because I Am a Girl campaign, which has published many stories focusing on the struggle of young women in the developing world.

Plan International was founded during the Spanish Civil War by British journalist John Langdon-Davies and aid worker Eric Muggeridge. When they witnessed the conflict change the lives of children, they founded ‘Foster Parents Plan for Children in Spain’, which would later change its name to Plan International. Set up in 1937, the organisation provided food, shelter and clothing to children whose lives had been destroyed by the war.

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0 USD Nigeria CF 3201 Abc road Full Time , 40 hours per week Plan International

Project Background

Plan International Nigeria's Country Strategy (FY2024 – FY2028), titled, "Girls are empowered to take action and drive change", aims to reach and empower 20 million girls in Nigeria. A key pathway to achieving this is through our Education programmes, particularly those targeting Out-of-School Children (OOSC) through the Accelerated Basic Education Programme (ABEP). The FCDO-funded PLANE II project (2022-2025) successfully demonstrated the effectiveness of ABEP, mainstreaming over 17,000 learners into formal schools and exceeding its targets.

While the success of transition is well-documented, a critical gap remains in our evidence base. There is currently no systematic understanding of what happens to these learners after they are mainstreamed. We do not have comprehensive data on their retention, academic performance, psychosocial adjustment, or the specific barriers they face in the formal school environment. The PLANE II endline evaluation revealed high confidence among learners to continue their education, but also highlighted systemic barriers like poverty, hunger, and insufficient school infrastructure that threaten this very continuation.

To address this evidence-gap and inform future programming, Plan International Nigeria seeks to conduct a targeted Retention Study: "Beyond Transition." This study will focus on learners who have been mainstreamed from ABEP into formal primary and junior secondary schools in Borno and Yobe states.

Purpose of the Retention Study

The primary purpose of the study is to generate robust evidence on the academic, psychosocial, structural, and household-level factors that influence the retention and sustained participation of mainstreamed ABEP learners in formal schools.

Objectives of the Baseline Survey

  1. Specific objectives:
  2. To assess retention rates of mainstreamed ABEP learners and identify patterns of dropout or irregular attendance.
  3. To evaluate academic adaptation by examining the academic performance of mainstreamed learners compared to their peers and identifying challenges in curriculum alignment and learning progression.
  4. To explore psychosocial adjustment, including learners' sense of belonging, self-esteem, peer relationships, and experiences with school culture and safety.
  5. To identify structural and systemic barriers within the formal school environment (e.g., classroom dynamics, teacher capacity in inclusive pedagogy, school infrastructure, availability of WASH facilities) that affect learner retention.
  6. To analyze household and community-level factors such as economic pressures (poverty, child labour), family support for education, and community attitudes that influence a child's ability to stay in school.
  7. To provide actionable recommendations for Plan International Nigeria, government stakeholders (SUBEB, SAME), and donors on strengthening retention strategies, improving transition pathways, and enhancing the capacity of formal schools to support mainstreamed learners.

How to apply

Interested Consultants should submit proposals in soft copies to [email protected] with this reference in the subject PIN/CNSLT/25/007- A TARGETED RETENTION STUDY ON MAINSTREAMED ABEP LEARNERS.

A detailed description of the Request for Proposal can be accessed via this link: https://tinyurl.com/mryaez3f

All Proposals must be received no later than 11.59 pm on Sunday, the 3rd of May 2026 GMT+1. Proposal submitted after the deadline date will NOT be accepted.

2026-05-04

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