Title: Partnerships for providing better access to basic education
1Partnerships for providing better access to basic
education
- Richard Maclure
- Faculty of Education
- University of Ottawa
- rmaclure_at_uottawa.ca
2Part 1 BASIC EDUCATION HEALTH EVIDENCE OF
THE CONNECTION. Source L. H. Summers (1994).
Investing in All the People Educating Women in
Developing Countries. EDI Seminar Paper No. 45,
The World Bank, pp. 9 13.
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5Part 2 TRENDS IN BASIC EDUCATION CURRENT
DISCOURSE
- Dakar Framework for Action
- MDGs
- Partnerships
- State/Civil society relations
- Paris Declaration The role of international
donors - Child rights approaches to education
6Dakar Framework for Action
- A re-affirmation of Jomtien EFA (1990)
- early childhood education
- free primary education
- appropriate learning and life-skills programmes
- significant advances in adult literacy
- eliminating gender disparities by 2005,
achieving gender equality in education by 2015 - good quality education measurable learning
outcomes.
7Commitments to the Dakar goals
- governments to prepare national action plans
- involvement of civil society
- no country to be thwarted by lack of resources /
global mobilisation of resources - annual monitoring report.
8The Millennium Development Goals
- Goal 2 Achieve universal primary education
- ensure that all boys and girls complete a full
course of primary education - Goal 3 Promote gender equality and empower women
- eliminate gender disparity in primary and
secondary education preferably by 2005, and at
all levels by 2015
9Partnerships
- A. State / Civil society relations
- Reasons underlying CSO participation in basic
education - limited government capacity to expand sustain
basic education - trends towards decentralization, democratization,
community participation in social services -
10- improved economies of scale
- better quality and performance outcomes
- international support for civil society capacity
building state/CSO collaboration
11B. The Paris Declaration The role of
international donors
- Key indicators of donor agency partnership
- ownership
- alignment
- harmonization
- managing for results
- transparency accountability
12Child rights approaches to education
- curricular reforms
- structural reforms e.g., healthy schools,
violence-free schools, feeding/nutrition
programs, etc. - constructivist, child-centred pedagogies (e.g.,
child-to-child strategies)
13Part 2 FALLACIES, LIMITATIONS,
CONTRADICTIONS
- EFA or MDGs ? dilemmas arising from shifting
competing agendas of different international
protocols - International national target setting flaws
fallacies
14Contradictions
- Education for . . . .
- development of human resources vs. uncertain
use of human resources - social equity mobility vs. social selection
reproduction - progressive change vs. reinforcement of the
status quo
15- success vs. the fostering of failure
- critical thinking vs. rote memorization
indoctrination - peace safety vs. sites of violence
16Diverse participant agendas
- healthy individual cognitive social growth
- employment family security
- human resource (capital) development economic
growth - citizenship and socio-political democatization
17Diverse nature effects of participation
- Civil society participation democratic action
or elitist co-optation? - Private sector participation revitalization of
education OR rollback of the state
marketization of a public good? - Participation as democratization or
de-politicization?
18Part 3 Ways Forward
- Increased attention support for local schools
and out-of-school education linked to local
needs / job creation / community health - Greater curricular pedagogical emphasis on
schools as havens of safety and as forums for
health education
19- Greater attention to childrens participation and
child-centred pedagogy as foundations of
appropriate good quality education - Increased attention to the viability of children
as participants in educational policy-making,
planning, delivery, and evaluation - Acknowledgment of the limits of education,
corresponding attention to context to capacity
building, transparency in governance, economic
investment, job creation
20- Unflagging attention to the nexus between gender
equity in education and increased community
health - Emphasis on inter-disciplinary evaluation
applied research that engages the partnership
among health education researchers, in
conjunction with health education policy-makers
practitioners.