Tag Archives: Education for All

The EU gets ambitious on education

 

School children

School children in Central African Republic (Credit: DFID / Simon Davis)

An exciting week in Brussels this week, as EU leaders met yesterday for a ‘High Level Conference on Education and Development‘. Afterwards, European Development Commissioner, Andris Piebalgs, made some ambitious pledges that will hopefully add to the momentum for a game-changing post-2015 agenda for education…

European CommissionBuilding on the World Bank’s recently-announced goal to end extreme poverty by 2030, Mr Piebalgs made an exciting pledge to ensure that by 2030 “every child will be able to complete basic education, regardless of their circumstances and have basic literacy and numeracy skills“.

He said:

I find it unacceptable that there are still 61 million children who don’t have access to basic education today… every child has the right to a quality education, no matter where they live.”

The goal for 2030 was announced at the high-level event, where the European Union highlighted spending €4.2 billion on education from 2007 to 2011 and helping 9 million students receive primary education in developing countries since 2004.

During the meeting, the European Commission announced that it will allocate at least 20 percent of its 2014-2020 aid budget for human development and social inclusion, with as much as €2.5 billion ($3.2 billion) for education.

The EU conference comes at a crucial moment, building on the momentum on education from the recent World Bank / UN joint “Learning for All” Ministerial meetings on education in Washington DC, and also coming the week before the UN’s High Level Panel on Post-2015 Development (co-chaired by David Cameron) releases its report back to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon outlining their ideas for the successor framework to the Millennium Development Goals.

Alice Albright

Alice Albright, new Chief Executive of the Global Partnership for Education

The conference also happened in the same week as a major Global Partnership for Education (GPE) Board meeting, the first attended by Alice Albright, the new Chief Executive of GPE. At their Board meeting, the GPE announced grants of US$439million for quality education for children in 12 Low-Income Countries. There is a real sense of the GPE gearing up to meet the challenge of education for all, with ambitious changes in the pipeline and planning for a major replenishment for the GPE provisionally scheduled for June 2014.

We’ll be watching this closely and keeping you updated!

Recording of Disability and Education campaign update call now availble

We are pleased to announce that a recording of May Disability and Education campaign update call is now available for download. We were joined on the call by Dan Jones, Campaigns Manager at RESULTS UK. Click here to download the call.

Dan spoke about the work that RESULTS and our grassroots campaigners have been doing on:

  • Working on securing an IDSC inquiry into disability and development.
  • Advocating for DFID to improve and mainstream the work they do on disability and education.
  • Upcoming plans for supporting the 2014 replenishment of the Global partnership for Education, the world’s foremost education multilateral

World leaders gather on global education crisis

Girls in Nigeria

Image courtesy of GCE UK / Martin Godwin

This week, an unprecedented gathering of world leaders in Washington DC is seeking to urgently accelerate progress on achieving education for all. 61 million children of primary school age are still out of school around the world, and with less than 1,000 days remaining to the deadline for the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), urgent action is needed right now to ensure every child goes to school by 2015.

Heads of global development agencies and ministers from eight developing countries that account for a large proportion of the world’s out-of-school children are meeting to discuss urgent action to remove the barriers to achieving the Millennium Development Goal (MDG2) of universal primary education by 2015 and to close the gap between rich and poor in learning access and outcomes.

Education summit key players

Key Players: (from left to right) Ban Ki-Moon (UN Secretary-General), Jim Kim (President of World Bank), Gordon Brown (UN Special Envoy on Education), Alice Albright (CEO of Global Partnership for Education)

The “Learning for All Ministerial” meetings are taking place ahead of the World Bank Spring Meetings and are co-hosted by Jim Kim, the Bank’s President, Ban Ki-Moon, the UN Secretary-General, and former UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown, now the UN’s Special Envoy on Global Education. The countries under discussion are: Bangladesh, Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Haiti, India, Nigeria, Yemen, and South Sudan.

Just a few weeks ago, UNESCO released a new estimate of the annual financing gap for achieving education for all, putting it at an astonishing $26billion a year – that’s the gap after existing national government and donor commitments. Without urgent action to close this gap, I’m afraid many children will still be out of school in 2015, and many more will also be in school but receiving such a poor quality education that they are learning very little. The UN estimates that 250million children are still unable to read or write by the time they should be reaching grade 4 of school. At least 1.7million additional teachers need to be recruited if universal primary education is to be achieved by 2015 (1million in Africa alone).

RESULTS are determined to see world leaders taking the bold action required. Today (Friday), we, along with the Global Campaign for Education, Global Partnership for Education (GPE), Oxfam and Plan, have arranged a major discussion on “Financing Education as a Global Public Good: 1000 Days to 2015 and Beyond” (see the invite below for all the details). Our hope is that this session will identify a range of ambitious actions that bilateral donors, national governments, the GPE, the World Bank, the private sector and others can take to get us back on track with education for all.

Financing Education as a Global Public Good

Watch this space for updates from this major global gathering, coming soon!

No Child Forgotten: Education and Inequality Post-2015

Girl in Nigeria

Image courtesy of GCE UK / Martin Godwin

“The Millennium Development Goals have left behind millions of forgotten children. Had they tackled educational inequality 9 million more children could now be in school in Nigeria and Pakistan alone.”

The Global Campaign for Education (GCE) UK today launched a new report in Parliament at an event organised by RESULTS for the All-Party Group on Global Education For All.  The new report - No Child Forgotten: Education and Inequality post 2015states that the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) have done too little to concentrate efforts on the poorest and most marginalized children. It recommends actions to address this when the world agrees a new post-2015 development goals framework. The event took place just as a major global consultation event on post-2015 education was taking place in Dakar, Senegal.

In 2000 the world agreed the MDGs, which included a goal that all children should have the chance to go to school by 2015 and a goal to achieve global gender equality in education. However, the GCE UK report shows that there was too little incentive to focus on inequalities, and nothing said about the quality of education.

Although big progress has been made – with 50 million more children now in school – 61 million children are still denied their right to even a basic primary education. Most of these are from disadvantaged groups; girls, the poorest, children living in disadvantaged areas and children with disabilities. In addition, many millions of children who are in school are receiving such a poor quality education that they are failing to learn even the basics of reading and writing.

It is vital that we focus on the most pervasive inequalities and that no child is forgotten, including those most at risk – youngsters with severe disabilities.” – David Blunkett MP

David Blunkett MP, who chaired the report launch event in Parliament today, said, “This time round we can’t make the same mistakes. As we get close to 2015 and work on a new strategy for reaching the goal of universal primary education, it is vital that we focus on the most pervasive inequalities and that no child is forgotten.

The event saw Will Paxton from Save The Children representing GCE UK on a panel of speakers alongside Manos Antoninis from the UNESCO Education For All Global Monitoring Team, Claire Melamed from the Overseas Development Institute (ODI) and Jane Edmondson from the Department for International Development (DfID).

UNESCO have themselves just published briefings ahead of the global consultation in Senegal, including their own proposals for post-2015 goals, targets and indicators which include a strong focus on tackling inequalities. UNESCO have also published new figures on the “education for all global financing gap” – the amount of additional money needed to achieve universal basic education over and above existing government and donor aid resources. Their new brief estimates that there remains a huge $26 billion per year gap in education financing, and that this gap is getting worse as donor aid to education is stagnating.

GCE UK believes that there is a huge opportunity for the British government and the Department for International Development to lead the way and ensure that there is a greater focus on tackling inequality. DfID is a major donor to education globally, and with the UK’s commendable objective of spending 0.7% of national income on overseas aid from this year onwards combined with David Cameron’s role as a Co-Chair of the UN Post-2015 High Level Panel, the UK is in a strong position to take this forward and influence other world leaders.

The GCE report sets out a vision for the ‘post 2015 development framework’- the set of goals that will replace the Millennium Development Goals, and it suggests that assessment mechanisms should be put in place to measure inequalities both in access to education and in the quality of learning outcomes.

The report can be downloaded in full here.

RESULTS welcomes Alice Albright as new CEO of Global Partnership for Education

Alice Albright

Alice Albright. Image courtesy of US Global Leadership Coalition (http://www.usglc.org)

Last week, Dan Jones (our Campaigns Manager and education lead) had the opportunity to welcome Alice Albright to the UK as part of a roundtable with other civil society organisations during her first few weeks as the new (and first) Chief Executive of the Global Partnership for Education (GPE). This is exciting news!

The GPE is the only multilateral funder dedicated to ensuring every child can receive a quality education, and so has a crucial and urgent leadership role to play in tackling the global education crisis. The appointment of their first Chief Executive is part of an ongoing programme of reform to strengthen the GPE’s capacity to meet its objectives, and Ms Albright was quick to point out her years of experience at GAVI (the Global Alliance on Vaccines and Immunisations) which involved successful efforts to scale up GAVI to meet the big challenge of ensuring every child receives basic vaccinations.

The Global Partnership for Education is a unique partnership made up of over 50 developing country governments, as well as other donor governments, civil society organizations, teacher organizations, international organizations, and private sector organizations and foundations, whose joint mission is to galvanize and coordinate a global effort to provide a good quality education to children, prioritizing the poorest and most vulnerable.

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New UK support for girls education announced

Girls education

Photo and copyright: Erik Törner, IM Individuell Människohjälp www.manniskohjalp.se

Last week, Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg and International Development Minister Lynne Featherstone launched new education projects in Mozambique and Ethiopia that will help 89,000 girls gain an education and improve their life chances.

I’m convinced that giving girls a good education is the single most effective thing we can do to break the cycle of poverty

- Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg

These projects were three of the first fifteen ‘Step Change’ programmes to be awarded funding under the UK Department for International Development’s new Girls Education Challenge Fund, which aims to create education opportunities for some of the world’s most marginalised girls.

As a result of the Millennium Development Goals’ focus on gender equality, significant progress has been made in expanding girls’ access to education in the poorest countries. But despite this, girls continue to be disadvantaged in many countries and regions.  Sixty-eight countries have yet to achieve gender parity in primary education. Girls account for 65% of children not in school in Western Asia, and 79% in Northern Africa. And in many countries girls are also less likely to go on to secondary school, putting them at a further disadvantage.

So the Girls Education Challenge Fund is hugely important, particularly because of its focus on supporting innovative projects led by a range of organisations aiming to reach the most marginalised girls.

Nick Clegg & Lynne Featherstone in Mozambique

Nick Clegg & Lynne Featherstone in Mozambique. Photo: Crown copyright.

According to DFID, the projects in Mozambique and Ethiopia will help 89,000 girls get a decent education by boosting literacy, training teachers and even training bus drivers to provide safe school transport. Among the other projects that are being funded are initiatives to reach girls in challenging environments like Afghanistan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Sierra Leone and Somalia.

The UK’s focus on girls education is vital, showing much-needed leadership to the international community. We hope that this new fund and its focus on innovation may in time also provide a model for DFID as they seek to strengthen their support to other marginalised groups such as children with disabilities.

Education and disability on the agenda for Post-2015 Panel

On Friday, the UN’s High Level Panel on the Post-2015 Development Framework concluded a major meeting in Monrovia, the capital of Liberia. Co-chaired by Prime Minister David Cameron, Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and Indonesian President Yudhoyono, the Panel will report to UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon in May on their proposals for the successor framework to the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), which expire in 2015.

Co-chairs of UN High Level Panel

Co-chairs of UN High Level Panel (credit Foreign & Commonwealth Office/Patrick Tsui)

Excitingly, the meeting in Monrovia included several positive references to the importance of quality education, and to ensuring the inclusion of disabled people within post-2015 goals. RESULTS have long argued that ensuring universal access to quality basic education (currently MDG 2) must remain central to post-2015 goals, especially given that 61 million children of primary school age are still out of school around the world, and many of those in school are failing to achieve sufficient learning outcomes.

We have also repeatedly highlighted that people with disabilities have been ignored within existing global development efforts. In 2000, people with disabilities were completely absent from the discussions and the final MDGs did not mention disability at all, despite the fact that people with disabilities make up 15% of the global population – 1 in 7 people – and are disproportionately likely to be among the very poorest.

So it was particularly welcome that disability was a high profile issue in Monrovia, with a scheduled outreach session bringing together the panel and civil society specifically focusing on disability.

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MPs urge Cameron to end extreme poverty post-2015

Sir Malcolm Bruce MP

Sir Malcolm Bruce MP, Chair of the International Development Select Committee (Image courtesy of IDS)

Last week the influential International Development Select Committee published its findings from an inquiry on the post-2015 development goals being created to replace the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), and RESULTS UK received a special mention for its views on education.

The MPs’ report emphasised that new global development goals to end extreme poverty, improve health and education, and promote sustainability must be simple and measurable.

In relation to education (currently MDG 2) , the report quoted RESULTS’ submission to the inquiry, which argued that education is one of the most effective means of increasing the health, wealth and stability of nations, and so must remain a key goal post-2015.

Within education, we argued for a greater focus on equity and quality. While striving for basic education that is free, universal and compulsory, we should also be developing a goal and indicators that prioritise equity of access, particularly for the most marginalised and vulnerable. Crucially, we said that post-2015, the world can’t focus only on enrolment i.e. getting children through the school door. We have to ensure they are receiving an education that is high quality, inclusive and sets them up for life. The MPs’ report said:

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RESULTS welcomes announcement of major education summit in 2013

Gordon Brown meets school children as part of Send my Friend campaign

Gordon Brown meets school children as part of the Send my Friend campaign

Last week the UN Secretary-General’s Special Envoy on Global Education (and former British Prime Minister) Gordon Brown announced that there will be a major global education summit in April 2013 co-hosted by Ban Ki-Moon, (UN Secretary-General), Jim Kim (President of the World Bank) and Mr Brown himself. As he put it:

“We will hold a summit in Washington on April 19th to be hosted by the secretary-general, the president of the World Bank, Jim Kim, and myself. At that summit we will agree urgent measures to get children into school by end of 2015, offering the support of international organizations to back up the efforts of off-track countries that are ready to do more.”

This is welcome news. This year, UNESCO confirmed that 61 million children of primary school age are still out of school around the world, and that “the world is not on track” to meet the Millennium Development Goal of achieving universal primary education by 2015. It is clear that ambitious global action is needed to change this situation urgently, and here at RESULTS we hope that the just-announced summit may provide a last chance to galvanise global efforts to meet the target by the 2015 deadline.

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Global Consultation on Education in the post 2015 framework launches E-discussion on equitable access to education

As the 2015 target date for achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) approaches, there are a growing number of processes, preparations and debates on what a post-2015 agenda and framework will look like.

In addition to the UN system processes, the United Nations Development Group (UNDG) is leading planning efforts to catalyse a “global conversation” on post-2015 through a series of 11 global thematic consultations. The aim of these consultations is to bring together a broad range of stakeholders to review progress on the MDGs and to discuss the options for a new framework.

Amongst others issues, a global thematic consultation on education, led by UNESCO and UNICEF, will provide stakeholders with the opportunity to define the form and scope that education goals and targets should take in the post-2015 agenda.

The overall objective is to generate an inclusive process and discussion around the importance of increased prioritisation of, and investment in quality basic education in the post-2015 agenda; stimulate discussion and critical analysis on how MDGs 2 and 3 have supported progress in education and equity; and to identify remaining gaps and new issues.

The global consultation on education will focus on four areas:

  1. Review the international education and development experience since 2000
  2. Identify current development trends and challenges, as well as future scenarios which need to be taken into account when defining the post-2015 education framework
  3. Discussion of cross-cutting themes, including gender, human rights, inequalities, disabilities and child labour
  4. The nature of the post 2015 agenda

To ensure the inclusion of a broad variety of stakeholders (not just experts and technocrats), the consultation has created an inter-active web platform where civil society groups, NGOs and marginalised groups can contribute to online discussions on the four focus areas listed above.

Today, the first of four online discussions will go live until 24 December. Three other discussions will then follow from early January to the end of February. Following the online discussions, the opinions, comments and recommendations from contributors will be fed into high level regional and global consultations with UN officials, governments and NGO representatives in early March.

This month’s discussion will focus on the theme of Equitable Access to Education. Given that we have focused on the issue of inclusive education over the last year, in particularly the marginalisation of children with disabilities, this month’s e-discussion presents an exciting opportunity to highlight the importance of including children living with disabilities within the post 2015 agenda.

To join the discussion and to offer your thoughts and recommendations see the e-discussion forum on the World We Want website.