Jamaica Gleaner

One C’bean state in UNICEF education survey

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A NEW study by the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has found that Barbados ensures that education is funded equally between the richest and poorest households.

The study, titled ‘Addressing the learning crisis: an urgent need to better finance education for the poorest children’, was published yesterday to coincide with a meeting of education ministers, gathered at the World Economic Forum (WEF) Annual Meeting in Davos, Switzerlan­d.

UNICEF is urging world leaders to address ‘shameful’ disparitie­s in public education spending.

According to the study, only five of the 42 countries involved in the survey ensured that education is funded equally between the richest and poorest households.

It named the five as Barbados, the only Caribbean Community (CARICOM) country in the survey, as well as Denmark, Ireland, Norway and Sweden.

EXAMPLE TO FOLLOW

The study calls for all countries to follow this example, prioritise public funding for lower levels of education, and provide at least one year of universal pre-primary education for every child.

“We are at a critical juncture. If we invest wisely and equitably in children’s education, we have the best possible chance of lifting children out of poverty by empowering them with the skills they need to access opportunit­ies, and create new ones for themselves,” said UNICEF Executive Director, Henrietta Fore.

The study warns that no country can achieve the goal of inclusive and quality education for all unless it makes quality education a reality for all segments of the population.

“But, in too many countries, government­s spent the least in education resources on the poorest children,” it stated.

“The most disadvanta­ged children, who face the strongest barriers to learning opportunit­ies, will be the ones acutely facing the amplifying nature of shortfalls in education.”

It noted, for example, school-towork transition­s are considerab­ly longer for those with low levels of education and skills.

“They are also more likely to transition to low-paying, lowskilled jobs. For them, the full promise of education will remain unrealised unless we start moving towards a more equitable path.”

The study warns that excluding the poorest children from education perpetuate­s poverty and is a key driver of the global learning crisis. Obstacles they face include discrimina­tion due to gender, disability, ethnic origin, and poor infrastruc­ture.

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