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12 Years of Quality Education for All Girls: A Commonwealth Perspective

Authors: This report has been written by Rebecca Gordon, Lauren Marston, Pauline Rose and Asma Zubairi in the Research for Equitable Access and Learning (REAL) Centre, Faculty of Education, University of Cambridge.

Reseña: Escrito por la Universidad de Cambridge, el estudio proporciona nuevos análisis e información sobre las barreras a la educación de las niñas en los países de la Commonwealth y las medidas necesarias para desmantelarlas. Como hogar de más de la mitad de los niños sin escolarizar del mundo, los países de la Commonwealth tienen un papel importante que desempeñar en la realización de los objetivos mundiales en educación y hay mucho que podemos hacer para aprender y apoyarnos mutuamente. El informe sugiere que los gobiernos de todo el mundo necesitan destinar más fondos a los primeros años de educación, especialmente para las niñas en áreas rurales remotas. También destaca la necesidad de enfoques específicos para ayudar a las niñas a superar los muchos desafíos que enfrentan al llegar a la pubertad. Un proyecto reciente en Kenia implementó «conversaciones comunitarias», cuyo objetivo era abordar las normas dañinas que conducen al matrimonio precoz. Se encontró que estas conversaciones disminuyen los niveles de abandono escolar de las niñas y aumentan la asistencia. En Jamaica, la Fundación del Centro de Mujeres ayuda a reintegrar a las niñas a la escuela secundaria después de dar a luz, mediante una combinación de matrícula académica, provisión de guarderías y otros servicios de salud. Las participantes tienen más probabilidades de completar su educación y menos probabilidades de tener un segundo embarazo. El informe proporciona muchos otros ejemplos de lo que funciona para proporcionar a más niñas una educación de calidad. Lo alentamos a leer este importante informe, que nos lleva un paso más cerca de comprender mejor cómo podemos lograr un mundo donde todos los niños tengan acceso a una educación de calidad. La tarea para los gobiernos y los educadores ahora es aprender lecciones e implementar los mejores modelos a escala. Para eso, necesitamos un compromiso político visible de los países de todo el mundo y una inversión sostenida de recursos. Debemos mantener el impulso para garantizar que las niñas más pobres del mundo completen 12 años de educación de calidad. Estamos profundamente comprometidos con este tema y trabajaremos junto con los colegas del Gabinete y con la Plataforma para la Educación de las Niñas para promover acciones concretas.


Written by the University of Cambridge, the study provides fresh analysis and insights into the barriers to girls’ education in Commonwealth countries, and the measures that are needed to dismantle them. As home to over half of the world’s out of school children, Commonwealth countries have a major role to play in realizing the global goals on education and there is much we can do to learn from and support one another.

The report suggests that governments across the world need to target more funding to the early years of education, especially for girls in remote rural areas. It also highlights the need for targeted approaches to help girls overcome the many challenges they face as they reach puberty.

A recent project in Kenya implemented ‘community conversations’, which aimed to tackle harmful norms that lead to early marriage. These conversations were found to decrease levels of girls’ dropout from school and increase attendance.

In Jamaica, the Women’s Centre Foundation helps to reintegrate girls into secondary school after they have given birth, through a combination of academic tuition, nursery provision, and other health services. Participants are more likely to complete their education and less likely to have a second pregnancy. The report provides many other examples of what works to provide more girls with a quality education.

We encourage you to read this important report, which takes us a step closer to understanding better how we can achieve a world where all children have access to quality education. The task for governments and educationalists now is to learn lessons and implement the best models at scale. For that, we need visible political commitment from countries across the world and sustained investment of resources.

We must keep up the momentum to ensure that the world’s poorest girls complete 12 years of quality education. We are deeply committed to this issue and will work together with Cabinet colleagues and with the Platform for Girls’ Education to promote concrete action.

Descargar: https://www.educ.cam.ac.uk/centres/real/downloads/Platform%20for%20Girls/REAL%2012%20Years%20of%20Quality%20Education%20for%20All%20Girls%20A4_Summary.pdf

Fuente: http://www.ungei.org/index_6561.html

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Education Can’t Wait Invests In Ethiopia Refugees’ School

Africa/ Ethiopia/ 03.12.2019/ Source: newbusinessethiopia.com.

Education Can’t Wait (ECW), a global fund dedicated to education in emergencies, invests in the construction of 84 classrooms for refugees in Gambella region of Ethiopia.

The classrooms inaugurated this week were constructed in Nguenyyiel, Terkidi, Kule, and Jewi refugee camps and will enable 8,500 refugee children, 38 per cent of them girls, to receive quality education on a double shift basis, according to the press statement from UN agency for children – UNICEF.

The classrooms have been constructed as part of a US $15 million two-year investment from Education Cannot Wait aimed at expanding education opportunities for children affected by emergencies and protracted humanitarian crisis in refugee camps and host communities in Gambella and Benishangul-Gumuz regions.

In addition to these classrooms, Education Cannot Wait is supporting the construction of three new inclusive model secondary schools and 41 classrooms in eight secondary schools to benefit 3,600 children from refugee camps and the surrounding host communities in the two regions. The schools will be fully fitted with water, toilets, and furniture.

Since April 2017, Education Cannot Wait’s investment has surpassed its targets and reached over 138,000 children in refugee and host communities in the two regions.

The support has included training of 683 teachers at certificate and diploma level, distribution of 500 education and recreation kits and provision of school grants to improve education quality, training refugee and host community teachers in child-centered teaching methods and conducting accelerated school readiness classes for over 12,000 out-of-school children aged between six and seven years.

Partners in the school construction project include the Ministry of Education, Regional Education Bureaus, the Agency for Refugee and Returnee Affairs, UNHCR, UNICEF, Plan International and the United Nations High Commission for Refugees.

ECW was launched by international humanitarian and development aid actors, along with public and private donors, to address the urgent education needs of 75 million children and youth in conflict and crisis settings. To date, ECW investments span more than 30 countries affected by armed conflict, disaster and forced displacement.

ECW’s investment modalities are designed to usher in a more collaborative approach ensuring relief and development organizations join forces to achieve education outcomes.

ECW is hosted by UNICEF. The Fund is administered under UNICEF’s financial, human resources and administrative rules and regulations, while operations are run by the Fund’s own independent governance structure.

Source of the notice: https://newbusinessethiopia.com/education/education-cant-wait-invests-in-ethiopia-refugees-school/

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Kenya: Quality education dependent on competence and motivation of teachers

Africa/Kenya/01-12-2019/Author(a): Claire Wanja/Source: www.kbc.co.ke

Quality education outcomes depend on the competence and motivation of teachers, the Country Manager of Twaweza East Africa, Dr. Emmanuel Manyasa has said.

“I would rather have children under a tree with a competent and motivated teacher than in well-constructed classrooms without such a teacher,” Manyasa.

Manyasa was speaking on the sidelines of two day Conference on the place of evidence in reforming education Reforms for Sustainable National Transformation at a Machakos hotel yesterday. The event attracted education policymakers, policy practitioners, researchers, Development partners in the Education.

Manyasa said the teacher is the most important actor in curriculum management and delivery, noting that they should be retooled and motivated at all times.

He underscored the importance of rigorous and reliable evidence as a basis for decision making.

A senior lecturer at the University of Nairobi, School of Education, Dr Andrew Riechi similarly underscored the importance of well-educated and trained teacher in ensuring quality learning outcomes in schools.

The conference aimed to provide a platform for sharing of knowledge and policy-relevant findings of high-quality research from MOE and various practitioners, researchers and academics working in the education fieldin Kenya.

It was sought to initiate discussions to promote evidence-based solutions and adoption of practices that target transformative education in Kenya; and to provide input towards the creation of an ‘evidence gap map’ that would help shape the future research agenda in the education sector.

Source and Image: https://www.kbc.co.ke/quality-education-dependent-on-competence-and-motivation-of-teachers/

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Ending child marriage and teenage pregnancy in Kenya

Africa/ Kenya/ Fuente: www.kbc.co.ke.

 

Early pregnancy and early marriage worsens poverty conditions of families and girls, instead of reducing it, Machakos County Director for Education, Mrs. Shamsa Adan Mohammed has said.

She said access to education was the surest way to breaking the vicious cycle of poverty that teenage pregnancy and early marriages sustained in families.

She girls should take advantage of the Free Primary and Day Secondary Education programme the government provided to break the chains of poverty by completing primary and secondary education.

She made the remarks at Makivenzi ABC Girls Secondary schools during a Joint Mission to assess the preparedness of the Counties in implementing Secondary Education Quality Improvement Project (SEQIP) in 110 sub counties are the most disadvantaged sub counties in 30 counties.

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The team was led by the National Coordinator of the Project, Ms Jane Mbugua, and World Bank Task Team Leader, Ms Huma Ali Waheed. The team visited eight schools in Murang’a and Machakos Counties, which is among 30 Counties to benefit from the project.

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The Project worthy Shs.20 billion, and funded by the World Bank, aims at improving student learning and transition from Primary to Secondary education in 110 sub counties that the most disadvantaged areas in 30 counties.

The Project targets 7,852 Primary Schools and 2,147 secondary schools in 110 Sub counties in the 30 Counties.

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Under the project, Class 7 and 8 and forms 1-4 in targeted schools have already received textbooks in Mathematics, English and Science subjects, thereby achieving a student-textbook ratio of 1:1.

Under the project, Kenya Institute for Curriculum Development (KICD) has received technical support in developing Competence based curriculum grade 4, 5and 6.

Schools in the target regions have been selected schools and are set to benefit from infrastructure support which includes classrooms, science laboratories, library, toilets, water facilities and electricity.

Embedded in the project, is a scholarship programme to enable vulnerable students to complete secondary schools.

The Teachers Service Commission (TSC) has recruited 600 teachers to serve the targeted region in the last financial year, to address teacher shortage in the area. Kenya National Examinations Council has been able, under the auspices of the Project, to strengthen national examinations and assessments systems.

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The strengthening of the national examinations and assessments systems follows adoption of the Competence based curriculum. KNEC will now examine and assess the effectiveness of the teaching and learning of the repertoire of skills that learners are expected to learn and internalise.

The project aims at, among others, addressing barriers to access to inclusive quality education in the region, as part of the strategy to meeting the Sustainable Development Goals.

Source of the notice: https://www.kbc.co.ke/ending-child-marriage-and-teenage-pregnancy-in-kenya/

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India is reforming education for the first time since 1986 – here’s why Australia should care

Asia/ India/ Fuente: theconversation.com.

India released a Draft National Education Policy (DNEP) in June 2019. It’s the first comprehensive policy proposal on education in the country since 1986 and a major, game changing statement.

Australia has a moral duty to engage with the global challenge of providing quality education to hundreds of millions of Indian youth. And by engaging with India as it rolls out this policy, Australian universities stand to gain knowledge and research capacity, among many other things.

What’s the new policy trying to achieve?

India’s National Policy on Education was framed in 1986 and modified in 1992. Clearly a lot has change in the country since then.

The proposed new policy is remarkable for two main reasons.

First, it takes a cold-eyed look at the existing educational structures and processes in India. The document reflects honestly and in depth on state-level universities and colleges where the majority of students study. In these institutions, the facilities, teaching, and governance are usually poor.

 


A second remarkable element to the draft is the scale and boldness of the vision. The policy aims to make changes across all levels of education – from early childhood to university.

The draft policy, which is currently in the consultation phase, recommends doubling funding for public education from the present figure of roughly 3% of GDP to 6%.

It aims to change the structure of school education so children begin their schooling at three years old, with three preschool years incorporated into the formal structure.

The draft policy also calls for an overhaul of teacher training which will now occur in universities rather than specialist colleges, which are often of low quality.

In tertiary education (though the draft is weak on the issue of vocational education), the policy sets a target of 50% of youth being enrolled in universities by 2035 (in 2016, the figure was 24.5%).

 


The DNEP recommends dismantling the current system of universities and private and public colleges to develop between 10,000-15,000 multi-disciplinary universities, which would be funded in part through the increased government investment in higher education.

The document notes the current system is made up of more than 850 universities and about 40,000 colleges, with 20% of those colleges offering just a single program of study, and 20% having under 100 students.

The DNEP states:

The main thrust of this policy regarding higher education is the ending of the fragmentation of higher education by moving higher education into large multidisciplinary universities and colleges, each of which will aim to have upwards of 5,000 or more students.

The new institutions are envisioned to promote education in the arts and social sciences. The focus on “liberal arts” will encourage critical thinking and appreciation of the value of education beyond just preparing the population for employment.

The DNEP emphasises the importance of developing a research culture across most universities in India and stresses the value of internationalisation by “preparing our students to participate in world affairs through providing them with learning experiences that cut across countries and cultures”.

It also aims to to “attract students from other countries to participate in our higher education programmes”.

Why Australia should care

The poor quality of school and university described in the DNEP is a critical global challenge. As it stands, large parts of India, especially northern India, are unlikely to meet the United Nation’s Sustainable Development Goal 4, which calls for accessible, quality education for everyone.

Australia should partner with India to address the needs of the hundreds of millions of young people demanding a better education.

Australia has a lot to gain from engaging with India on its new education policy. MICK TSIKAS/AAP

By interacting with top Indian researchers and students, Australia can also improve its own research and knowledge capacity. Australia can make commercial gains from working with India in the redevelopment of its education system.

Australian universities can act in five areas in particular:

1. Build research capacity in India and across the Australia-India boundary

Australia already has a research partnership with India, the Australia India Strategic Research Fund (AISRF). This should be extended, through a joint new research fund with India’s already established new National Research Foundation.

India faces a major challenge in creating a body of excellent researchers capable of occupying positions in its proposed new universities. It is therefore crucial that research partnership also involves building this capacity, especially by creating new PhD training and post-doctoral positions.

2. Partner with India in open and distance learning (ODL)

The DNEP’s goal of increasing the number of students in university in India to 50% can’t occur through bricks and mortar expansion. India has a lot of experience on ODLs but Australia and India could usefully partner in the development of better quality technology platforms.

3. Help train Indian school teachers

Australia has major strength in teacher education. India is looking to other countries to assist in training the staff in universities who will be responsible for training teachers in the new system. Australian action in this area would greatly help Indian education into its next phase.

4. Provide expertise on internationalisation

Australia has been very successful since the 1990s in internationalising its education. Education is now one of Australia’s largest exports. Australian universities and peak bodies such as the Group of Eight Universities could be partners in India’s efforts to internationalise.

5. Building campuses in each other’s countries

The DNEP recommends overturning regulation that prevents foreign universities from establishing campuses in India. It invites the world’s top 200 universities to develop a physical presence in the subcontinent. It also encourages Indian institutions to consider opening campuses abroad.

Australian universities could approach Indian institutions to discuss the development of a physical presence in each other’s countries, such as laboratory spaces, research centres or campuses.

The DNEP is remarkable on many levels: a bold effort to rethink education from first principles in a country containing one fifth of the world’s youth. Australia should make it a priority to engage.

Source of the notice: https://theconversation.com/india-is-reforming-education-for-the-first-time-since-1986-heres-why-australia-should-care-121812

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Linking data to get results: India shows how countries can use their national assessments for global reporting

Por Silvia Montoya, Director of the UNESCO Institute for Statistics (UIS) and Professor Hrushikesh Senapaty, Director, National Council of Educational Research and Training of India (NCERT)

The international reporting of learning outcomes is a critical but complex undertaking at the global, regional and country levels. Yet in just a few years, we have made remarkable progress in resolving measurement challenges associated with SDG Indicator 4.1.1: “proportion of children and young people: (a) in grades 2/3; (b) at the end of primary; and (c) at the end of lower secondary achieving a minimum proficiency level in (i) reading and (ii) mathematics, by sex.”

This is why the Inter-agency and Expert Group on SDG Indicators (IAEG-SDGs) recently decided to upgrade 4.1.1. to a tier 1 indicator: the Group recognized that the indicator is “conceptually clear, has an internationally established methodology and standards are available, and data are regularly produced by countries for at least 50 per cent of countries and of the population in every region where the indicator is relevant”.

This upgrade was no easy feat. Just a year ago, we went through the first phase of the process, by presenting a new methodology and standards. This involved painstaking negotiations with countries and just about every cross-national assessment initiative in order to build consensus around a set of global minimum proficiency levels.

Increasing the use of national assessments to monitor quality education

To monitor learning globally, we must overcome three main challenges to compare data from countries with different assessments. First, the assessments do not always use the same definitions of proficiency. Second, we need consistent quality, based on shared technical standards, to ensure that national and regional data are fit for purpose. Third, we must accommodate multiple viewpoints, which means: identifying relevant areas of learning that can and should be measured globally; conceptualizing how national and regional data can inform global measurement; and striking a balance between global perspectives on education and local influences and goals.

The best way to address these challenges is by linking up national assessments in order to express them on a common scale. There are two main ways this can happen: statistical and non-statistical. Statistical linking is generally more accurate but also more complicated and expensive to apply (e.g. either the same students take two or more assessments or common items are embedded in two or more assessments in different countries through a new data collection).

In contrast, non-statistical linking makes it possible to use existing national data and avoid the need for a new data collection. While this approach is generally less accurate, experts argue that it is acceptable when statistical linking is not feasible because of methodological, operational or financial constraints. In particular, policy linking (which is one of the non-statistical approaches) allows us to link one assessment to another using the same set of descriptions of performance levels.

We are convinced that the new policy linking methodology will engage countries and help build statistical capacity. We also know that every new tool can be further refined. By testing the methodology, we may learn more about how pre-existing conditions can impact implementation, what benchmark methods to use, and how sensible the results are in order to reduce the risk of any possible bias in international comparisons and reporting.

This is why, the UIS, with the financial support of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the UK Department for International Development (DFID), is organizing a series of pilot tests in countries, such as Bangladesh and India, where millions of children are making their way through the countries’ vast education systems.

Working with teachers and curriculum experts in India

indiaIndia is committed to education reform based on hard evidence and is eager to contribute to the work of the Global Alliance to Monitor Learning (GAML). The UIS and India’s National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) are working today, in the first of two workshops, to apply the new policy linking methodology to national assessments for Grades 3 and 5, which cover 1.4 million children from diverse language groups and educational contexts. The workshops involve about 10 curriculum and assessment experts, mostly from NCERT, and 36 language and math teachers.

There are two major steps in the workshops. First, the teachers will map each item used in Grades 3 and 5 assessments to the global proficiency levels expressed in the Global Content Framework (GCF). Developed by the UIS, the GCF is based on the assessment frameworks of more than 100 countries and provides consistent performance standards for pupils in Grades 2-6 in reading and mathematics.

In the second step, the workshop panel (including teachers, curriculum and assessment experts) will assess the knowledge, skills and abilities required to solve each item in the national assessments. Based on this evaluation, they will then match each item to the global proficiency levels to determine the cut off scores that they will use for international reporting.

Finally, the group will review each assessment item again and determine whether learners in each proficiency category would get the item correct or incorrect. The facilitators will then compile and average the scores identified by the panellists and make recommendations to NCERT and the Ministry of Human Resource Development, who will then make a final decision on the benchmarks and cut off scores at the national level that are consistent with the global minimum proficiency levels.

At the end of this process, India will be able to assess how well and how deeply its national standards capture the knowledge, skills and understanding contained in the global definition of minimum proficiency levels. The country will be able to equate these levels to the local context and define the most relevant definition of proficiency at the country level. In short, the country will gain valuable insight for policymaking while benefiting from consistent reporting towards SDG 4.

The UIS is developing a Policy Linking Toolkit with support from the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), which will be available soon and will provide a step-by-step guide for countries and their assessment organizations to use the methodology.

Requirements for effective policy linking

Policy linking is a promising low-cost, relatively rapid, and sufficiently rigorous non-statistical method to compare and aggregate results from different assessments. It can provide lessons learned across countries to guide future programming and improve learning outcomes. In addition, national authorities can use its results for global reporting on students who meet minimum proficiency standards by grade and subject.

Policy linking does, however, require government buy-in and commitment. By hosting these cutting edge workshops, India is confirming its own commitment and setting an example for others to follow.

Fuente: https://gemreportunesco.wordpress.com/2019/11/18/linking-data-to-get-results-india-shows-how-countries-can-use-their-national-assessments-for-global-reporting/

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OCDE Politicy Note: Philanthropy and Education Quality Education for All: Lessons and Future Priorities

OECD netFWD (2019), “Philanthropy and Education – Quality Education For All: Lessons and Future
Priorities”, OECD Development Centre, Paris

Esta nota de política analiza el apoyo de las fundaciones a la educación en los países en desarrollo. Se basa en los resultados de la Encuesta de la OCDE sobre Filantropía Privada para el Desarrollo y en las estadísticas del CAD de la OCDE que recopilan datos sobre donaciones de 2013-15 y 2017. También reúne una selección de estudios de casos para explorar aún más cómo las fundaciones están invirtiendo para ampliar el acceso a la educación , mida mejor los resultados de aprendizaje, capacite a los maestros y líderes escolares para brindar una educación de calidad y aprenda de su propio trabajo en el terreno.

Descargar: NetFWD_PolicyNoteOnEducation

Fuente: https://www.oecd.org/site/netfwd/NetFWD_PolicyNoteOnEducation.pdf

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