Publicado: 13 febrero 2024 a las 2:00 pm
Categorías: Artículos
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The lack of data is making it difficult to track progress towards education goals.
UNESCO’s Institute for Statistics (UIS) has convened the first ever global Conference on Education Data and Statistics, to take place at UNESCO’s headquarters in Paris, from 7-9 February.
The conference will examine the gaps in global data that have caused significant blind spots on children’s education, and present solutions to the problem.
Almost half of countries are not measuring children’s learning levels as they progress through school, meaning that 680 million children’s educational achievements have never been measured. Some regions suffer particularly large learning data gaps: 93% of children in Central and Southern Africa and 62% in sub-Saharan Africa and Eastern and South-Eastern Asia have never had their reading skills assessed at the end of primary or secondary school since 2015.
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— Audrey Azoulay, Director-General of UNESCO
The UNESCO Institute for Statistics is the official source of data on the fourth Sustainable Development Goal on Education, SDG 4, and has, in recent years, introduced new approaches and models to fill data gaps. These efforts have increased the share of countries reporting on governments’ education spending from 68% to 90%, and on out-of-school children from 62% to 98%. This innovative approach provided new numbers on children out-of-school in countries such as Nigeria, Ethiopia and Kenya that had not reported data for over a decade.
UNESCO will present two new tools during the Conference, both designed by UIS, to reduce persistent data gaps and improve analysis for policy-making:
The global Conference aims to establish a community of practice among countries’ education statisticians, to help reach agreement on concepts, definitions, and methodologies for monitoring progress towards SDG 4. Bringing together UN agencies, regional organizations, and political leaders, the conference will tackle the factors preventing the effective monitoring of education progress, and debate the use of technology for collecting data.
The second edition of UNESCO’s SDG 4 Scorecard will also be launched at the Conference, demonstrating why comparable education data is important. Produced by the UIS and the Global Education Monitoring (GEM) Report, the Scorecard shows that countries’ progress towards their national SDG 4 benchmarks is insufficient. If countries were on track to reach their 2025 benchmarks, 76% of children would be participating in early childhood education and 66% of students would be proficient in reading by the end of primary school. However, currently these figures stand at 69% and 58% respectively.
Source
https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2024/02/unesco-data-gap-global-education/
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