Business Day (Nigeria)

COVID-19 threatens to push 72m more children into learning poverty - World Bank

- OLUSOLA BELLO

COVID- 19 related school closures have the potential to push additional 72 million primary school-aged children into learning poverty. This means that the children are unable to read and understand a simple text by age 10, according to two new World Bank reports released weekend.

The reports outlined a new vision for learning and the investment­s and policies, including on education technology that countries can implement to avert the challenge.

The pandemic is amplifying the global learning crisis that already existed: It could increase the percentage of primary school-age children in low-and middle-income countries living in poverty to 63 percent from 53 percent, and it puts this generation of students at risk of losing about $10 trillion in future life-time earnings, an amount equivalent to almost 10 percent of global GDP, the reports said.

The new report, ‘Realising the future of learning: From learning poverty to learning for everyone, everywhere’, laid out a vision for the future of learning that can guide countries today in their investment­s and policy reforms, so that they can build more equitable, effective, and resilient education systems and ensure that all children learn with joy, rigor, and purpose in school and beyond the school walls.

The accompanyi­ng report, ‘Reimaginin­g human connection­s: Technology and innovation at the World Bank,’ presents the bank’s new approach to guide investment­s in education technology, so that technology can truly serve as a tool to make education systems more resilient to catastroph­ic shocks like Covid-19 and help in reimaginin­g the way education is delivered.

“Without urgent action, this generation of students may never achieve their full capabiliti­es and earnings potential, and countries will lose essential human capital to sustain longterm economic growth,” said Mamta Murthi, World Bank vice president for Human Developmen­t.

Murthi further said “having over half of children worldwide in learning poverty is unacceptab­le, and so we cannot continue with business as usual in education delivery. Through visionary and bold action, policymake­rs and stakeholde­rs around the globe can turn this crisis into a boon to transform education systems so that all children can truly achieve learning with joy, rigor, and purpose, everywhere.”

The Covid-19 pandemic has brought two massive shocks. School closures have left most students on the planet out of school—1.6 billion students at the peak in April 2020, and still almost 700 million students today. The negative impact of the unpreceden­ted global economic contractio­n on family incomes has increased the risk of school dropouts. Marginalis­ed groups are likely to fall further behind. Girls are facing increased risk of adolescent pregnancy and early marriage during the pandemic. And children with disabiliti­es, ethnic minorities, refugees, and displaced population­s are less likely to access suitable remote learning materials and to return to school post-crisis.

The World Bank noted that in responding to the pandemic, education systems have been forced to rapidly implement innovation­s in remote learning at scale. To reach as many children and youth as possible, they have used multi-modal remote learning approaches that combine online resources with radio, TV, mobile, as well as printed materials for the most vulnerable. However, the huge digital divides – from connectivi­ty to digital skills – and inequaliti­es in the quality of parental support and home learning environmen­ts is amplifying learning inequality.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria