Pathways toward an education that leaves no one behind

Pathways toward an education that leaves no one behind

When

16 Jun 2021    
2:00pm - 3:15pm

Event Type

Webinar

While the number of children completing primary school education has increased markedly over the past 50 years, in 2018, the World Bank found that 125 million children lacked the minimum literacy skills to continue their education, even after four years of enrolment. This realisation that schooling is not equivalent to learning has sparked a global debate on how to improve the quality of primary school education in low- and middle-income countries.

This renewed focus is critical now more than ever, as policymakers shift their focus to rebuilding the global economy after the Covid-19 pandemic. How can they ensure that the policies implemented bolster the access to and quality of primary school education? And more importantly, how can they ensure that these policies capture the multiple disadvantages of vulnerable children from left-behind groups?

Ahead of the G20 Education Ministers meeting and informed by ODI’s upcoming publication, ‘Pathways towards quality primary education: improving completion and learning outcomes’, we bring together a group of experts to examine successful reforms that have brought vulnerable children to the forefront of policy implementation and consider what is needed to push the agenda forward.

REGISTER HERE

Chair: Susan Nicolai, Senior Research Fellow, Equity and Social Policy, ODI and Director of Research, EdTech Hub @susan_nicolai

Panellists:

  • Rukmini Banerji, CEO, Pratham Education Foundation @Pratham_India
  • Matt Brossard, Chief, READ (Research on Education And Development) Unit, UNICEF Innocenti @UNICEFInnocenti
  • Shem Bodo, Senior Programs Officer, Association for the Development of Education in Africa (ADEA)
  • José Manuel Roche, Policy Advisor, Senior Analyst and Evaluator in International Development, Consultant @jomroche
  • Moizza Binat Sarwar, Research Fellow, Equity and Social Policy, ODI @MoizzaBSarwar