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Financing universal education

By Steven J. Klees

The 17 United Nations Sustainable Development Goals represent a remarkable commitment by the international community to eliminate poverty and improve health, the environment, education, and much more in all countries by 2030. The SDG for education is straightforward: “Ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all.”

Unfortunately, we are a long way from achieving this goal, particularly in developing countries. More than 250 million of the world’s 1.6 billion children are not in school, and 400 million lack basic literacy.If current trends continue, by 2030 half of all children will not have the basic skills needed for employment.

The main problem is a shortage of resources. While developing countries can finance more than 90% of what they need to ensure universal access to quality primary and secondary education, there is still a large funding gap – approaching $40 billion in 2020, and $90 billion by 2030 – that must be filled by international aid.

Solving this problem has been the goal of the International Commission on Financing Global Education Opportunity (the Education Commission), chaired by Gordon Brown and comprising luminaries in business, government, and academia. But the Education Commission’s two principal recommendations are wrongheaded, and should be replaced by two other solutions. Both will be politically difficult to achieve, but are necessary for financing the SDGs.

The Education Commission’s first proposal is to count on “philanthropists, corporations, and charitable organizations” to increase their annual aid contributions from $2 billion today to $20 billion by 2030. This is unlikely to happen. More to the point, charity is not a responsible way to finance public policy. As one recent study shows, charitable education-reform efforts tend to be short-sighted, uncoordinated, and self-interested, ultimately contributing little to advancing education priorities.

The Education Commission’s second proposal is to form an International Finance Facility for Education, to be overseen by the World Bank and various regional development banks. Under the proposed IFFEd, development banks would borrow from capital markets to increase their annual investments in education to $10 billion by 2020, and to $20 billion by 2030.

The principal problem with this approach is that the World Bank has no business spearheading education reform. In fact, as my own research shows, the World Bank has already been misdirecting education reform in developing countries for three decades, by pushing for increased privatization and narrowly defined educational outcomes and accountability based on excessive testing.

The World Bank’s market-fundamentalist approach to education (and other sectors) resembles that of right-wing think tanks such as the Cato Institute or the Heritage Foundation. But while these are recognized as partisan organizations pursuing an ideological agenda, the World Bank makes a pretense of objectivity and inclusiveness. Moreover, unlike Cato and Heritage, the World Bank is a public, tax-financed entity that wields vast influence around the world through its grants, loans, and policy recommendations.

Future generations will be aghast at how we have allowed banks to determine educational and other priorities. Rather than handing institutions such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund more power, we need a new Bretton Woods conference to make them democratically accountable and less ideological.

As things stand, the World Bank is the 500-pound gorilla of the international-aid establishment, and the proposed IFFEd would put the gorilla on steroids. It would also make coordinating aid to education an administrative nightmare. In addition to the Global Partnership for Education (GPE), which focuses on low-income countries, and the recently established Education Cannot Wait (ECW) fund, which focuses on countries with humanitarian emergencies, we would have a third body focusing on lower- and middle-income countries.

It makes no sense to have three multilateral institutions competing with one another for funding. As Columbia University’s Jeffrey D. Sachs has long argued, we need just one Global Fund for Education to work toward the education SDG, and it can be a revamped GPE. Whereas donors will dominate IFFEd decision-making, the GPE operates more democratically, with equal representation of donor and recipient countries and strong participation from civil-society organizations. While the GPE is still too dependent on the World Bank, which supervises 80% of its grants, that can be changed.

Instead of the proposed IFFEd, we need two things. Wealthy countries need to honor the commitment, made in 1970 and repeated ever since, to allocate 0.7% of GDP toward ODA. While a few countries already do this, most fall far short. Just by keeping past promises, wealthy countries could close the education-funding gap – and cover all of the other SDGs’ financing needs, too. The Education Commission, by contrast, lets wealthy countries off the hook, by asking them to commit just 0.5% of GDP to ODA, and not until 2030.

Second, we need a global approach to taxation. As my colleague and I point out in a report for the Education Commission, corporate-tax reforms could eliminate tax avoidance and evasion, which are costing the global economy more than $600 billion every year. To achieve the needed reforms, we need to increase the UN’s capacity instead of relying on the OECD, which has proposed only minor changes.

We also need to institute a global wealth tax, as economist Thomas Piketty has proposed. It is obscene that the world’s eight richest people hold as much wealth as the poorest 50%. Like corporate-tax reform and fulfilling past promises to fund ODA, a 1% global wealth tax could finance all of the SDGs combined.

The SDGs, even more so than the Millennium Development Goals that preceded them, represent an extraordinary global commitment. But if the international community is serious about meeting them, it must do something even more unprecedented: put its money where its mouth is.

Copyright: Project Syndicate: Financing Universal Education

Source:

https://www.azernews.az/analysis/117234.html

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UNICEF: Global Coalition Fights Education Under Attack In Conflict Zones

UNICEF/August 8, 2017/By Riley Bunch/ Source: http://reliefweb.int

According to UNICEF, conflict zones around the world are preventing 25 million young students from getting access to education. Schools being targets for attacks, military use and occupation by armed forces has caused global concern surrounding protection of education under attack in conflict zones.

In 2010, The United Nations alongside multiple non-governmental organizations recognized the need for immediate action. As a solution to this problem, they created the Global Coalition to Protect Education from Attack (GCPEA). The agencies coming together acknowledged the need for implementation of policies and programs to protect students and teachers from deliberate attacks.

The multidisciplinary coalition, in hand with humanitarian law agencies, education in emergency groups, and child protection agencies, now focuses on advocacy among ministries and government bodies in conflict affected countries on how to reduce war crimes on schools and increase safety for future generations.

Diya Nijhowne, director of the GCPEA, addresses the phenomenon as a major global crisis—one that is only growing.

“Sadly, the problems of schools and universities being bombed and burned and students being raped, killed, executed, abducted from their schools is continuing,” Nijhowne said. “Generally, we have not seen it go down. And in some places, such as the middle east it is getting worse.”

Within a report titled Education Under Attack (based on data gathering for the period 2009-2013), over the past five years armed nonstate groups, state military, security forces and criminal groups have attacked thousands of primary students, university students, teachers, academic instituions and education establishments in at least 70 countries worldwide.

In coordination with the United Nations, the GCPEA has developed the Safe Schools Declaration. Within it are outlined steps, and procedures nations must implement to combat the issue of education under attack in conflict zones. Countries who have already endorsed the document get given training and programs to abide by the terms of the declaration.

These terms include monitoring education under attack in conflict zones and collecting accurate data to respond to the issue, creating contingency planning for emergency situations and creating “conflict sensitive” learning environments that can continue education under warring times.

Currently, 76 or one-third of the members of The United Nations states have signed onto the Safe Schools Declaration and agree that this issue is of high importance. Endangerment to education within conflict zones is not only physically impacting communities, but taking a severe psychological toll on students and staff.

“If you are worried your school is going to be bombed or this phenomenon of military use of schools as well,” Nijhowne said. “Forces might be in the classroom next to the kids or on the play field, just having that sort of militarized atmosphere is very stressful.”

One commitment countries must make when signing the Safe School Declaration is to assist victims. Support can range from making sure perpetrators are punished all the way to psycho-social support for the people impacted.

“Schools are traditionally there to provide routine, they provide safety, they have a protection function, not only within society but within a war zone,” Nijhowne said. “If that place that is supposed to be a sanctuary becomes somewhere that might be attacked that diminishes what would have been a protective function that the school is offering.”

Anecdotal evidence taken from reports done by the GCPEA shows that women and girls are disproportionately affected by education under attack in conflict zones. If military forces are present on school grounds, parents are more likely to be protective of their daughters and refrain from sending them to school. Also, if there is limited opportunity for children to attend school, parents often choose their sons to go to school rather than their daughters.

Under international law, there is no prohibition against using schools for military purposes. However, with the growing number of schools and universities getting targeted by the military, ministries and other government agencies around the world have become increasingly willing to work on alternative approaches to avoid using schools as bases.

GCPEA continues to work on addressing war crimes against education under attack in conflict zones and furthering their advocacy in countries who have yet to sign the Safe Schools Declaration.

Source:

http://reliefweb.int/report/world/global-coalition-fights-education-under-attack-conflict-zones

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EEUU: Texas Governor Mark White, Houstonian and Public Education Reformer, Dies at 77

EEUU/ August 8, 2017/

Mark White, who fought to reform the public education system in Texas as the state’s 43rd governor, died of a heart attack Saturday at his Houston home. He was 77.

White, a Democrat who served a single term from 1983 to 1987, was the most recent Texas governor from Houston. His brief tenure is remembered for the strides made to improve the educations of Texas public schoolchildren. Among other successes, White pushed the Legislature to adopt a 22-to-1 student-teacher ratio, to prevent overcrowded classrooms. Under his watch, Texas also introduced its first standardized testing standards.

More controversially, White pushed for a «no-pass, no-play» policy for student-athletes — meaning in football-crazed Texas, football players who were flunking a course had to ride the bench. The Houston Chronicle noted that White said in a 2009 interview that the policy was bad politics, but good for the kids who learned how an education is a more applicable life skill than throwing a spiral or catching a pass.

White continued to care about education long after he left office. In 2010, he was the subject of a Houston Press column on his fight to keep the Legislature from undoing many of his education reforms — including his hard-fought student-teacher ratio cap. In 2014, Houston ISD named an elementary school after White.

Born in Henderson, White was educated in Houston public schools before earning a bachelor’s degree and later a law degree from Baylor University. He worked in private practice in Houston, and served as the attorney general and secretary of state before he was elected governor.

Curiously, White is survived by just two former governors — George W. Bush, who served two terms as president of the United States; and Rick Perry, the current Secretary of Energy.

Governor Greg Abbott on Sunday ordered flags to be flown at half-staff, and in a statement praised his predecessor for his devotion to educating children.

“Mark’s impact on Texas will not soon be forgotten, and his legacy will live on through all that he achieved as Governor,» Abbott said. «Cecilia and I extend our deepest condolences to Linda Gale White and family during this difficult time, and I ask that all Texans join us in praying for the White family as they mourn the passing of a devoted husband, father and public servant.»

Source:

http://www.houstonpress.com/news/former-texas-governor-mark-white-dead-at-77-9676440

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México: Multarán a padres de niños que hagan Bullying

México/07 agosto 2017/Fuente: Veraz Baja California

A partir del próximo ciclo escolar, que comenzará a mediados de agosto, entrará en vigor una nueva medida que permitirá multar a los padres de niños que hagan “bullying” en escuelas municipales.

Esta disposición fue aprobada por unanimidad en Cabildo y tiene como fin proteger a los estudiantes que son víctima de maltrato por parte de sus compañeros.

 De esta manera, un juez municipal determinará si los progenitores serán acreedores a un regaño o sanción económica de cinco hasta 20 días, equivalente a mil 500 pesos.

Serán catorce escuelas municipales las que se someterán a esta medida, pues el 70% de las instituciones educativas las que presentan el problema.

La Comisión de Educación señala que la principal razón de burla entre estudiantes es el sobrepeso.

La regidora Karina del Real expresó que es verdad que en las escuelas municipales se presentan diferentes problemáticas, pero la principal es el bullying.

“En algunas escuelas se da el cutting, pero el bullying sobresalía en casi todas”.

Serán diversas las medidas que se aplicarán en las escuelas para prevenir los casos de acoso.

Los maestros recibirán capacitación para vigilar y detectar el bullying, además de que se enviará a los estudiantes involucrados a un área donde recibirán ayuda de asociaciones civiles enfocadas en el tema.

Por otra parte, los padres y alumnos formarán parte de actividades educativas como conferencias y pláticas coordinadas por la Secretaría de Educación Pública Municipal.

Se espera que al aplicar estas medidas se reduzca en un 60% los casos registrados en las escuelas municipales y así evitar suicidios como los que han sucedido en otros estados del país.

Fuente: http://verazinforma.com/estatal/multaran-a-padres-de-ninos-que-hagan-bullying/

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La función social de la educación superior en México: la que es y la que queremos que sea

México/07 agosto 2017/Autor: Guillermo Villaseñor García/Fuente: Biblioteca Clacso

En este libro, referido a la Función Social de la Educación Superior en México, Guillermo Villaseñor profundiza y actualiza las reflexiones que inició hace varios años, al publicar su obra La Universidad pública alternativa (1994). Su nuevo libro es extremadamente oportuno, ya que las circunstancias en que se encuentra el país y, sobre todo, los efectos que éstas han tenido en las Instituciones de Educación Superior (IES) lo estaban exigiendo con urgencia.

Para leer, descargue aquí: http://biblioteca.clacso.edu.ar/Mexico/dcsh-uam-x/20170524030753/pdf_676.pdf

Fuente noticia: http://biblioteca.clacso.edu.ar/colecciones/saladelectura/index.php?novedad=si&c=mx-024&d=12809

Fuente imagen: http://www.ororadio.com.mx/noticias/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/educación-superior-presupuesto.jpg

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Vietnam y Estados Unidos intercambian sobre educación

07 agosto 2017/Fuente: Vietnam Plus

La conferencia “Educación liberal – el modelo estadounidense” fue celebrada hoy en Ciudad Ho Chi Minh por la Federación de Asociaciones de Amistad municipal (FAA).

El evento presentó las ideas fundamentales de la educación liberal del modelo estadounidense  y su interactividad con el sistema de enseñanza vietnamita.

Al inaugurar la cita, el presidente de la FAA, Huynh Minh Thien, destacó que la conferencia trata de la relación binacional desde una perspectiva educativa a diferencia de otras ocasiones en las que normalmente se dialogaba sobre asuntos económicos.

A su vez, la consulesa general de Estados Unidos en Ciudad Ho Chi Minh, Mary Tarnowa, afirmó que impulsar la cooperación bilateral en educación es una de las tareas priorizadas de la misión diplomática estadounidense en Vietnam.

La educación liberal es un sistema de educación superior diseñado para impulsar el pensamiento independiente de los estudiantes mediante programas de enseñanza dinámicos e interdisciplinarios.

Fuente: http://es.vietnamplus.vn/vietnam-y-estados-unidos-intercambian-sobre-educacion/76479.vnp

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Estados Unidos: ¿Por qué me siento discriminado? Estudio sorprende sobre a quiénes golpea más la desigualdad

Estados Unidos/07 agosto 2017/Fuente: El Nuevo Herald

“Pienso, luego existo”, dijo el filósofo francés René Descartes en el siglo XVII. Si se es latino o descendiente de latino en Estados Unidos, se percibe discriminación, la reporta y luego existe como experiencia de vida. Un estudio sobre esta percepción realizado en el condado de Los Angeles, arrojaría quiénes son los sectores más y menos afectados por el fenómeno.

De esta premisa, parte una investigación llevada a cabo por las universidades estatales de Pensilvania y Arizona, llamada Experimentar discriminación en Los Ángeles: latinos en la intersección del estatus legal y socioeconómico. El estudio encontró una variación entre los ciudadanos ya nacidos en Estados Unidos y los que no cuentan con documentos legales.

“Los residentes indocumentados mexicanos y centroamericanos de Los Angeles que tienen baja educación y pocos recursos financieros no reportan niveles elevados de discriminación”, señaló Nancy Landale, profesora de Sociología y Demografía de la Universidad de Pensilvania, una de las autoras de la investigación. Según el análisis, son los jóvenes latinos –nacidos en Estados Unidos– los que perciben mayor discriminación.

Para la realización de esta investigación, se examinaron las percepciones de discriminación en ámbitos interpersonales e institucionales. Se evaluó la discriminación interpersonal en la vida cotidiana por la frecuencia declarada de diversas formas de trato negativo en las interacciones, que son inconsistentes con la igualdad social entre los individuos. También se evaluó la discriminación institucional, a través de experiencias reportadas sobre injusticia o inequidad en el tratamiento dado por los agentes de las instituciones.

Los latinos indocumentados no aparecen como las personas más propensas a la discriminación, indica el informe, a pesar de que el clima social actual es hostil a ellos. En cambio, los tratos injustos son reportados más comúnmente por latinos nacidos en Estados Unidos que eran relativamente jóvenes y con bajos niveles de empleo, quienes divulgan experiencias con ambos tipos de discriminación.

LOS JÓVENES LATINOS NACIDOS EN EEUU PUEDEN TENER MAYORES EXPECTATIVAS PARA EL TRATAMIENTO EQUITATIVO Y PLENA INCLUSIÓN EN LA SOCIEDAD ESTADOUNIDENSE. CUANDO ESTO NO SUCEDE, ESTAS EXPECTATIVAS PUEDEN SER LA BASE PARA LA FRUSTRACIÓN

Nancy Landale, profesora de Sociología y Demografía de la Universidad de Pensilvania

De acuerdo con la investigación, los jóvenes latinos nacidos en el país están situados favorablemente en cuanto a las condiciones de su nacimiento y estatus legal, pero no son ni el grupo latino más favorecido ni el menos favorecido en general.

“Los jóvenes latinos nacidos en Estados Unidos son más propensos a reportar discriminación en los ámbitos interpersonal e institucional. La diversidad de vecindarios y sus características etnoraciales y los diferentes tipos de ingresos también tienen implicaciones para diferentes tipos de discriminación”, indica la investigación.

Landale, autora de la investigación, tiene una explicación al respecto. “Los jóvenes latinos nacidos en el país pueden tener mayores expectativas para el tratamiento equitativo y plena inclusión en la sociedad estadounidense. Cuando esto no sucede, estas expectativas pueden ser la base para la frustración y mayor sensibilidad al tratamiento discriminatorio”, dijo.

“Lo que termina sucediendo a los jóvenes latinos nacidos en Estados Unidos es que tienen mayores expectativas para la inclusión que otros grupos latinos y una mayor conciencia del injusto trato y de oportunidades bloqueadas. En consecuencia, son más proclives a experimentar discriminación en ámbitos interpersonales e institucionales que otros latinos, incluyendo a los inmigrantes latinos indocumentados”, indicó Landale.

Para Landale, los resultados de la investigación ayudan a entender la experiencia de la creciente población latina en Estados Unidos y lo que significa ser norteamericano. Estiman que los latinos nacidos en la nación afrontan sentirse excluidos en esta sociedad, al ver que importantes oportunidades les han sido bloqueadas debido a su raza o etnia.

Landale también comentó que el estatus legal parece estar entrelazado al nivel de ascensión social y que ambos no implican que los grupos teóricamente menos favorecidos manifiesten mayor discriminación.

“Estatuto jurídico y situación económica están entrelazados. A pesar de que los inmigrantes indocumentados son los más propensos a ser pobres y tener los niveles más bajos de educación, no son los más propensos a percibir que han sido tratados injustamente”, indicó la socióloga.

“Nuestro estudio muestra que la discriminación percibida es compleja y que los jóvenes latinos nacidos en Estados Unidos (que tienen mejor educación y hablan inglés, aunque no están bien establecidos en puestos de trabajo) son más propensos a sentir que han recibido un trato injusto y más probable interpretar trato negativo debido a su origen étnico o raza”.

Desde 1970, la población inmigrante se ha cuadruplicado en tamaño y en el presente cerca del 13 por ciento de los residentes de Estados Unidos son de origen extranjero, indica Landale, quien agrega que durante el mismo período ha habido un aumento en la población de inmigrantes provenientes de México y América Central y que del total, alrededor de 60 por ciento no está legalmente autorizado a residir en el país. El análisis, señala, contribuye a entender de qué manera las personas provenientes de México y Centroamérica se están incorporando a la sociedad norteamericana.

“Aunque nuestro estudio no podría evaluar la discriminación real debido a limitaciones de datos, una parte importante de la experiencia de los latinos nacidos en el país y en el extranjero es cómo perciben e interpretan sus experiencias cotidianas y el tratamiento que reciben por parte de agentes de instituciones (propietarios, policía, etcétera). Nuestro estudio arroja luz sobre esta importante cuestión y deja claro que jóvenes latinos nacidos en Estados Unidos no sienten inclusión y trato equitativo en el área de Los Ángeles”, señala Landale.

Siga a León Hernández en Twitter @El_Leon

Fuente: http://www.elnuevoherald.com/opinion-es/trasfondo/article165597852.html

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