5 New Year’s resolutions for the Global Partnership for Education

As we start 2019, we share some of our New Year’s resolutions to ensure more children are in school and learning.

January 10, 2019 by GPE Secretariat
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4 minutes read
Children and teacher raise their hands. Malawi Primary School. Credit: GPE/Tara O'Connell
Children and teacher raise their hands. Malawi Primary School.
Credit: GPE/Tara O'Connell

Happy New Year!

2018 was a year of significant milestones for education in general and for GPE too. It was promising to see more governments and world leaders step up their support toward achieving SDG 4 to “ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all” before, during, and after the GPE Financing Conference in Dakar in February 2018.

Although there were many things to celebrate last year, with over 260 million children across the world still not in school, we must do more. As we start 2019, let us share some of our new year’s resolutions:

Preschool students play outside at the Bartolome de las Casas preschool in Matagalpa, Nicaragua. Credit: GPE/Carolina Valenzuela
Preschool students play outside at the Bartolome de las Casas preschool in Matagalpa, Nicaragua.
Credit:
GPE/Carolina Valenzuela

More children in school

Children who don’t attend school or drop out are often the most vulnerable and marginalized: girls because of their gender or social norms, children with a disability and children living in remote areas.

These children are our priority.

GPE has helped build or renovated schools in remote areas in many partner countries, including in Burkina Faso, Cote d’Ivoire, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Eritrea, Nicaragua and Uganda, to give children living far away from urban centers a chance at education.

We support education for refugee children, who by no fault of their own find themselves in chaos and away from their normal routines. Last year, the GPE Board approved urgent grants to support children caught in conflict in Afghanistan, Myanmar, and South Sudan, as well as Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh.

As for marginalized girls, our gender equality strategy applies to all of the support we provide to partner countries, from the planning stage to implementation. With the UN Girls Education Initiative (UNGEI), we have organized 3 workshops gathering 18 countries to train partners on ensuring that all girls and boys have a fair chance at education.

Mariam Mohamed Vall, 32, a third year student at ENI-NKTT (L'Ecole Normale des Instituteurs de Nouakchott) teaches a fourth grade Arabic class at Ecole Annexe primary school; Nouakchott, Mauritania. Credit GPE/Kelley Lynch
Mariam Mohamed Vall, 32, a third year student at ENI-NKTT (L'Ecole Normale des Instituteurs de Nouakchott) teaches a fourth grade Arabic class at Ecole Annexe primary school; Nouakchott, Mauritania.
Credit:
GPE/Kelley Lynch

More trained teachers

Teachers are central to the learning process and play a critical role in improving learning outcomes. During the past year, all active GPE grants supported teacher training activities in partner countries. Here are some of the highlights:

  • More than 5,800 primary school teachers in Nigeria and over 1,500 early-years teachers in Cambodia received training,
  • Teacher training colleges in Mauritania have become more selective regarding their prospective trainees with a new entrance exam, with a view to improve the quality of teaching,
  • Saint Lucia strengthened teacher training by conducting a major regional teacher education conference.

This year, we hope to see more partner countries invest in quality teaching and we will continue to support them.

A painting on Kisiwandui Primary School’s wall in Zanzibar. Credit: GPE/Chantal Rigaud
A painting on Kisiwandui Primary School’s wall in Zanzibar.
Credit:
GPE/Chantal Rigaud

More inclusive education

In most developing countries, children with disabilities are excluded from school or learning activities. Inclusive education means education is accessible to all children, no matter their individual circumstances. It applies in particular to children with disabilities.

A grant of US$5.2 million to Zanzibar ensures that children with disabilities can attend Kisiwandui Primary School. With the right school environment, teacher training, and learning materials, inclusive education can turn into reality.

With a stocktake report on how disability is addressed in partner countries, GPE also provided the basis for better knowledge on what works and what doesn’t. It will help partners do more for children with disabilities over the next months.

The blackboard with school data in the office of the director at Saka primary school in Kandi, Benin. Credit: GPE/Chantal Rigaud
The blackboard with school data in the office of the director at Saka primary school in Kandi, Benin.
Credit:
GPE/Chantal Rigaud

More education data

Education data is crucial for governments to know how their education system is performing, to evaluate results and make the right decisions and allocate resources. However, too many developing countries still lack adequate systems to collect and analyze education data.

To tackle this issue, GPE launched a data solutions roundtable in early 2018  to leverage local, private and development partners’ expertise to improve the availability and use of accurate and timely education data. The three key areas of work are:

  • better tools for education management
  • better data communication and visualization tools
  • integration of data across different systems to produce holistic school-level information.

We are excited to see the roundtable progress this year and the solutions they propose to make education data more available, timely, and useful to partner countries.

President Emmanuel Macron of France, President Macky Salll of Senegal and GPE Board Chair Julia Gillard at the 2018 GPE Financing Conference. in Dakar, Senegal. Credit: GPE/Heather Shuker
President Emmanuel Macron of France, President Macky Salll of Senegal and GPE Board Chair Julia Gillard at the 2018 GPE Financing Conference. in Dakar, Senegal.
Credit:
GPE/Heather Shuker

More funding for education

Of course, none of these achievements will be possible without more commitments from all partners in the education sphere to increase funding for education. In Dakar last year, developing countries committed US$110 billion of their budgets to education, and donors announced more than US$2.3 billion for the GPE fund for 2018-2020. This was a fantastic outcome, but we know that more will be needed for the longer term.

The fact that aid to education increased by 13% between 2015 and 2016 after six years of decline was uplifting and we hope the trend will strengthen over the coming years.

Working in partnership is key

All of the results mentioned in this post would not have been possible without the support and hard work of all GPE partners. Similarly, we won’t achieve our new year’s resolutions without them.

So we also take this opportunity to thank all GPE partners around the world: only through partnerships we can attain quality education for all.

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Comments

African Prisons Educational Network shares 2019 New Year resolution of GPE as a common objective to accelarate SDG 4 : “ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all”. From Juveniles to Adult, Male or Female most Africans lacking Education or having little Education, often find themselves in prisons.. From this year, we will work more vigorously, reaching out more to GPE and other Global Educational Partners with concepts etc to advanced Education for All particularly in our African Prisons. Such as, Unesco Literacy Prize , 2018 winning concept of Nigerian Prisons Service as facilitated by us and ready for adaptive, collaborative introduction( with support from Unesco, Africa etc) to other African prisons.

Inclusive education is very dear to my heart . No child should be denied access to quality education irrespective of skin coour, country of origin, religion and so forth. We all will do what we can do to support GPE achieve their 2019 resolutions. Let us keep our fingers crossed to achieve more in 2019.

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