50% of children in Sub-Saharan Africa would not complete school by 2030 – UNESCO

0
27
UNESCO logo

The United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organisation has said that projections show that up to 50 percent of children would not have completed secondary school in sub-Saharan Africa by 2030.

It said that the new projections about meeting the 2030 deadline for the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) may be under threat as a result as more than a third of ways of achieving the goals are related to education access.

It said in 2030, when all children should be in school, one in six aged 6-17 will still be excluded.

Many children are still dropping out: by 2030, it is expected 40% will still not be completing secondary education rising to 50% in sub-Saharan Africa.

UNESCO advised that countries should match their education plans with their global commitments to get back on track.

“The new global education goal, SDG 4, calls on countries to ensure that children are not only going to school but also learning, yet the proportion of trained teachers in sub-Saharan Africa has been falling since 2000,” it said.

At current trends, by 2030, learning rates are expected to stagnate in middle-income countries and Latin America, and drop by almost a third in Francophone African countries. Without rapid acceleration, globally, 20% of young people and 30% of adults will still be unable to read by the deadline.

ALSO READ:  UNESCO, IAEA donate teaching equipment to ABU

EduCeleb.com reports the 2030 Agenda for SDGs emphasises leaving no-one behind. Yet, UNESCO observed that only 4% of the poorest 20% complete upper secondary school in the poorest countries, compared to 36% of the richest.

The gap is even wider in lower-middle-income countries.

The Global Education Monitoring Report calculated in 2015 that there was a $39 billion annual finance gap to achieve the global education goal, yet aid to education has stagnated since 2010.

“The onus shouldn’t all be on donors to fix the problem,” said the director of the UNESCO Institute for Statistics, Silvia Montoya.

“Countries need to face up to their commitments too.

“Currently less than half of countries are providing the data we need to monitor progress towards the global education goal. What is the point in setting targets if we can’t track them? Better finance and coordination are needed to fix this data gap before we get any closer to the deadline,” she said.

A complementary publication by the Global Education Monitoring Report analysed policies that countries said they have put in place to implement the education goal since 2015.

ALSO READ:  Sustainability scholarship for students participating in green initiatives

It recommends that countries align their education plans with SDG4 so that they can get back on track.

“Countries have interpreted the meaning of the targets in the global education goal very differently,” Director of the Global Education Monitoring Report, Manos Antoninis said. 

“This seems correct given that countries set off from such different starting points. But they must not deviate too much from the promises they made back in 2015. If countries match their plans with their commitments now, they can get back on track by 2030.”

The report shows that many countries have prioritised equity and inclusion since 2015 to meet the goal, with school vouchers issued to indigenous students in Bolivia, tuition fees abolished for the poorest in Vietnam and conditional cash transfers given to refugee children in Turkey, and to children with severe intellectual disabilities in South Africa.

Learning has been prioritised too, with a third of countries introducing learning assessments to look at trends over time, and one in four countries using learning results to reform their curricula.

For information on Press Releases, Photos, Promotional Events and Adverts, Please message us on WhatsApp via (+234) 09052129258, 08124662170 or send an email to: info@educeleb.com.
ALSO READ:  9 year old girl becomes first female winner of SPELL&THRILL! Competition

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.