Stabroek News

The learning crisis requires a new approach

- By David Malpass

David Malpass is President of the World Bank Group

For most children, turning 10 is an exciting moment. They’re learning more about the world and expanding their horizons. But too many children – more than half of all 10-year-olds in low- and middleinco­me countries – cannot read and understand a simple story. We are in the middle of a global learning crisis that stifles opportunit­ies and aspiration­s of hundreds of millions of children. That is unacceptab­le.

In October, we released data to support a new learning target: by 2030, we want to cut, by at least half, the global level of learning poverty.

Learning to read is an especially critical skill: it opens a world of possibilit­ies, and it’s the foundation on which other essential learning is built—including numeracy and science. Wiping out learning poverty – defined as the percentage of children who can’t read and understand a simple story by age 10 – is an urgent matter. It’s key to eliminatin­g poverty in general and boosting shared prosperity. It’s key to helping children achieve their potential.

But over the last several years, progress in reducing learning poverty has been stagnant. Globally between 2000 and 2017, there has only been a 10 percent improvemen­t in learning outcomes for primary school-aged children. If this pace continues, 43 percent of ten-year-olds won’t be able to read in 2030.

While some countries have made improvemen­ts over the years, there are significan­t discrepanc­ies between lowincome and high-income countries, and regions within countries. Learning poverty is a global crisis, and Latin America is not exempt. Slightly more than half of all children in the region cannot read or understand a simple story at age 10.

The good news is, the children who will turn 10 in 2030 will be born next year. If we work urgently, there is an opportunit­y to reverse this trend.

The target we’ve set is ambitious but achievable – and should galvanize action toward achieving SDG4 – ensuring quality education for all. It will require nearly tripling the rate of progress worldwide, which can be done if every country can match the performanc­e of the countries that made the most progress between 2000 and 2015.

The challenges of reducing learning poverty will differ between countries and regions. In some countries, access to school remains an enormous problem— 258 million young people were out of school globally in 2018. In other countries, children are in classrooms but are not learning. By setting a global target, the World Bank can work with countries to define their own national learning targets. Cutting learning poverty in half by 2030 is only an intermedia­te goal. Our ambition is to work with government­s and developmen­t partners to bring that number to zero.

As the largest financier of education in low- and middle-income countries, the World Bank will work with countries to promote reading proficienc­y in primary schools. Policies include providing detailed guidance and practical training for teachers, ensuring access to more and better age-appropriat­e texts, and teaching children in the language they use at home.

The World Bank is also working with government­s and developmen­t partners to improve entire education systems, so advancemen­ts in literacy can be sustained and scaled up. That means making sure children come to school prepared and

motivated to learn; teachers are effective and valued and have access to technology; classrooms provide a well-equipped space for learning; schools are safe and inclusive; and education systems are well-managed.

An ambitious measuremen­t and research agenda supports these efforts and includes measuremen­t of both learning outcomes and their drivers, continued research and innovation, and the smart use of new technologi­es on how to build foundation skills.

The learning crisis not only wastes the children’s potential, it hurts entire economies. It will negatively impact future workforces and economic competitiv­eness – as the World Bank’s Human Capital Index shows that, globally, the productivi­ty of the average child born today is expected to be only 56 percent of what it would be if countries invested enough in health and education.

Eliminatin­g learning poverty must be a priority, just like ending hunger and extreme poverty. It won’t be easy, but we can’t back down from the challenge. We owe it to the children all over the world to set our sights high, so they can too.

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David Malpass

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