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The Global Education Challenge: A View from the World Bank. Global Seminar Series 18 October 2006 Washington DC. Overview. The Education For All Challenge (EFA) The Education for the Knowledge Economy Challenge (EKE) The World Bank’s New Education Strategy (ESSU). The Education Challenge.
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The Global Education Challenge: A View from the World Bank Global Seminar Series 18 October 2006 Washington DC
Overview • The Education For All Challenge (EFA) • The Education for the Knowledge Economy Challenge (EKE) • The World Bank’s New Education Strategy (ESSU)
The Education Challenge • Evidence is overwhelming that education – particularly for girls– can break the cycle of poverty, halt the spread of AIDS, and create more stable and prosperous nations • Around the world, over 100 million children are out of school, of which 58 million girls (primary school fees a barrier in some 89 countries)
Many countries will not reach UPC by 2015 if past trends continue
The Global EFA Challenge • Quality –1/3 drop out before last grade, poorly trained teachers, 800 million illiterate, TIMSS –most did not reach the lowest mark in math • Economic growth undermined by HIV/AIDs, armed conflict, weak governance
The Global EFA Challenge • Resource needs for all countries to reach UPC (between US$5.6 and 10 billion per year for all developing countries) • UK has pledged 15 billion $ over next ten years
The global EKE challenge • education stimulates economic growth through increased productivity (skilled labor, technical and managerial innovations) • contributes to poverty reduction and achievement of the MDGs • increases countries’ capacity to cope with natural emergencies
economic development is increasingly linked to a nation’s ability to acquire and apply knowledge
knowledge is a key factor in explaining the difference between poverty and wealth
To improve competitiveness and welfare… : • Strong human capital base (secondary education, tertiary education, lifelong learning) • National innovation system (training of graduates and contribution to knowledge generation, adaptation and dissemination)
changing education and training needs • higher skill levels • flexibility to adapt to change • need for continuing education • learning to learn and unlearn continuously
changes in job task-skill demands in the USA (1960 – 1998) Source: Autor, Levy, and Murnane (2003) “The Skill Content of Recent Technological Change: An Empirical Exploration,” Quarterly Journal of Economics.
PISA results for selected developing countries OECD Average
Education Sector Strategy Update Broadening our Perspective Maximizing our Effectiveness • Integrating education into a country-wide perspective • Applying a sector-wide approach • Becoming more results-oriented
Integrating Education into a Country Perspective • Macro-economic dimensions • Linkages with other sectors (health, water, transport, etc.) • Focus on service delivery
Progress towards one MDG depends on progress achieved on others • Some 200 million school years are lost each year as a result of ill health • iron-replete children performed 100-400% better on standardized tests than anemic children • Each year Zambia loses half as many teachers as it trains to HIV/AIDS • In Morocco, existence of paved road more than doubles girls’ attendance at school • Mothers who have completed primary education are 50% more likely to immunize their infants • In Africa, access to piped water increased school attendance by 2-16% by lowering collection time • In South America, bringing water and sanitation coverage to 100% would decrease under five mortality due to diarrhea by 22%
Applying a Sector-Wide Approach • From pre-school to tertiary education • Intra-sectoral dimensions • Supply and demand factors • Determinants of quality, equity, efficiency • Public-private partnerships
26% 2000 2000 55% 18% 9% 1980 1980 49% 42% 3% 1960 1960 17% 80% Korea and Senegal:balanced expansion of education attainment? 2% 2000 8% 89% 1% 1980 6% 93% 0.5% 1960 4% 95%
Education for Innovation and Competitiveness To improve growth and welfare:
Becoming more Results-Oriented • Establishing key outcomes and indicators • Analyzing what drives outcomes • Carrying out learning assessments • Systematically engaging in impact evaluation • Developing sound education information systems (EMIS) with attention to data quality • Using results effectively to reform policy and inform project design
Education Sector Strategy Update ONE SIZE DOES NOT FIT ALL
Education Sector Strategy Update THINKING GLOBALLY ACTING LOCALLY
“The only person who is educated is the one who has learned how to learn…and change” Carl Rogers