Daily Nation Newspaper

'IN SCHOOL, BUT LEARNING NOTHING'

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By SEAN COUGHLAN LONDON - Six out of 10 children and teenagers in the world are failing to reach basic levels of proficienc­y in learning, warns a hard-hitting report from the United Nations.

The UN describes the findings as "staggering" and representi­ng a "learning crisis."

Much of the focus of internatio­nal aid in education has been on the lack of access to schools, particular­ly in poorer countries in sub-Saharan Africa or in conflict zones.

But this new research from the Unesco Institute for Statistics warns of the lack of quality within schools - saying more than 600 million school-age children do not have basic skills in maths and reading.

Huge divide

In sub-Saharan Africa, the research suggests 88 percent of children and adolescent­s will enter adulthood without a basic proficienc­y in reading.

And in central and southern Asia, 81 percent are not reaching an adequate level in literacy.

The report warns any ambitions for social and economic progress will be stifled without a literate and numerate population. In North America and Europe, only 14 percent of young people leave education at such a low level. But, the UN research suggests, only 10 percent of the world’s school-age children live in these more affluent, developed regions.

“Many of these children are not hidden or isolated from their government­s and communitie­s they are sitting in classrooms,” said Silvia Montoya, director of the Unesco Institute for Statistics.

She said the report was a “wake-up call for far greater investment in the quality of education.”

This problem of “schooling without learning” was also highlighte­d by the World Bank in a report this week.

It warned that millions of young people in low- and middle-income countries were receiving an inadequate education that would leave them trapped in low-paid and insecure jobs.

The president of the World Bank, Jim Yong Kim, introducin­g the report, said the failures in education for so many represente­d “a moral and economic crisis.”

Researcher­s warned of pupils in Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda and Nicaragua who after years in school were unable to do simple sums or read simple sentences.

A basic level of proficienc­y in primary school was reached by 99 percent of pupils in Japan, but by only 7 percent of pupils in Mali, they said.

There were also wide gulfs within countries. At the end of primary school in Cameroon, only 5 percent of girls from the poorest families were at a level to continue with their education, compared with 76 percent of girls from wealthy families, the report said.

What’s to blame?

The World Bank study exam-

.It ined the factors underlying such poor achievemen­t:

warned that in the poorest .Many countries many pupils arrived at school in no condition to learn

had suffered from malnutriti­on and ill health, the World Bank said, and the deprivatio­n and poverty of their home lives could mean they began

.There school physically and mentally underdevel­oped

were also concerns about the quality of teaching, with too many teachers not be

.There ing particular­ly well educated themselves

was also a problem of teacher absenteeis­m in some countries in sub-Saharan Africa, which has been linked to teachers not being regularly paid

The World Bank’s chief economist, Paul Romer, said there had to be a more honest admission that for many children being in school did not mean worthwhile lessons.

He said progress would depend on recognisin­g that “the facts about education reveal a painful truth”.

Lack of testing

The report warned of a lack of scrutiny over standards and the absence of even basic informatio­n about pupil achievemen­t.

While the debate in Western countries has been about excessive testing, the World Bank said that in poorer countries, there was “too little measuremen­t of learning, not too much.”

But the researcher­s also pointed to countries that had made progress, such as South Korea and Vietnam.

And at the United Nations last week there were internatio­nal pledges for greater investment in education.

“I have decided to set educa- tion as a top priority of French developmen­t and foreign policy,” said French President Emmanuel Macron.

Former UK Prime Minister and UN education envoy Gordon Brown said he wanted the Global Partnershi­p for Education, which channels aid to education projects, to have funds worth $2bn (£1.5bn) by 2020.

The European Union announced that 8 percent of its humanitari­an budget would be spent on education.

For children missing school because of the conflict in Syria, the Education Above All Foundation and Unicef, along with other charities, committed an extra $60m

“Funding our education goal will do far more than place a child at a desk. It will unleash opportunit­y and hope,” said Mr Brown.

 ??  ?? The UN and World Bank warn millions of pupils are not learning even basic literacy and numeracy
The UN and World Bank warn millions of pupils are not learning even basic literacy and numeracy
 ??  ?? Pupils in South East Asia are among high achievers by global standards
Pupils in South East Asia are among high achievers by global standards

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