Low-Cost Low-Touch Information Provision, Parental Involvement, and Student Learning Outcomes: Evidence from a Government-Implemented Intervention in Indonesia

Parental involvement in children’s education is often constrained by limited information, low agency, and weak incentives. This study examines whether a government-led education system can address these barriers through a low-cost, low-touch intervention implemented by public schools and teachers in Kebumen, Indonesia, where teacher capacity is moderate but learning outcomes have stagnated. The intervention comprised three components: teachers provided regular updates on students’ learning progress; parents could write responses directly to teachers through a feedback section; and monthly leaflets offered simple, practical ways to support learning at home. The intervention was implemented entirely through existing school structures at a cost less than USD 1 per student over 14 months. Our randomised results show greater parental engagement and communication with teachers, and higher teacher motivation and support for students. Ten months later, mathematics scores improved among lower-grade students, while reading motivation declined among higher-grade students. A follow-up qualitative study indicates that parents’ limited ability to assist with learning and insufficient teacher support during pandemic-induced school closures constrained progress, particularly for older students.

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Author 
Asep Kurniawan
Sandy Maulana
Dyah Pritadrajati
Niken Rarasati
Shintia Revina
Daniel Suryadarma
Florischa Ayu Tresnatri
Author(s)
Sandy Maulana
Dyah Pritadrajati
Niken Rarasati
Daniel Suryadarma
Research Area 
Central Java
Research Topic 
Keywords 
foundational skills
education
parental participation
government-led implementation
Indonesia
Publication Type 
Journal Article