Education for Some More than Others ? A Regional Study on Education in CEE/CIS 2007.

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Education for Some More than Others ?

A Regional Study

on Education

in CEE/CIS

2007

Why the title

‘Education for Some More than Others?’

BACKGROUNDFollow-up to UNICEF IRC report (1998) - “Education for All ?” - which found marked increase in disparities in quantity & quality of education in CEE/CIS

How far has this trend towards ‘Education for Some More than Others’ continued?

How far have the 12 steps towards ‘Education for All’ recommended in 1998 been taken, & what additional steps are needed now?

A COMPREHENSIVE REVIEW

1. The regional context

2. Education reforms – where are we now ?

3. Access and equity issues

4. Learning and Labour Outcomes

5. Costs, financing and governance

The report examines:

FOCUS ON EQUITY

The report analyses equity and disparity issues in basic education – from 3 different angles :

From a Human Rights point of view

From a Social Cohesion point of view

From a longer-term Economic point of view

Geographic Coverage

29 countries – 6 Sub-Regions

Baltic States

Caucasus

Central Asia

Central and Eastern Europe

South and Eastern Europe

Western CIS

ArmeniaAzerbaijan

Georgia

Kazakhstan

Kyrgyzstan

Tajikistan

TurkmenistanTurkey

Uzbekistan

Albania

Bulgaria

Bosnia and Herzegovina

Belarus

Croatia

Moldova

TFYR of Macedonia

Romania

SerbiaUkraine

Montenegro

Russian Federation

CEE/CIS Region

THE CEE/CIS CONTEXT

CONTEXT

Economic recovery throughout the region but … fiscal difficulties in weaker economies

Increased average standard of living but … increased income inequality and rising unemployment rates

Decline in absolute poverty but persisting pockets of poverty – particularly child poverty

Prevalence of child labour (Moldova, Central Asia, SEE) – to the detriment of schooling

Steep downward trend in the population aged 0-17

KEY FINDINGS

KEY FINDINGS (1)

Reversal and Deterioration of Education in CEE/CIS

Almost two decades after the onset of transition …

Provision and quality of education in CEE/CIS has not improved; instead, it has deteriorated in many ways

Trends observed in 1998 towards increased disparities in education have continued.

KEY FINDINGS (2)

2.4 million children of primary-school age (9%) out of school in the region in 2004

12 million children of secondary-school age (22%) out of school in the region in 2004

More than 14 million children entering adult life without either any kind of formal education or a school diploma

KEY FINDINGS (3)

3 countries – Georgia, Moldova and Tajikistan - unlikely to achieve MDG 2 (universal primary education completion by 2015)

2 countries – Turkey and Tajikistan - not on track to achieve MDG 3 (elimination of gender disparities at all levels of education by 2015)

KEY FINDINGS (4)

Family background (family income, parental education) is increasingly a determinant of inequality in enrolment and attendance – mainly at pre-school level

Ethnic groups – particularly Roma - are at great educational disadvantage with enrolment and completion rates well below those of the majority-group children (see graphs on next slides)

Children with Special Needs : number of children in institutions or receiving benefits tripled between 1990 and 2000 – from 500,000 to 1.5 million

Children out of school :

Roma children Net Enrolment Primary Education (%)

0

20

40

60

80

100

Roma Majority

Source : OSI & TRANSMONEEE

Figure 3.17: Educational attainment by ethnicity, Bulgaria, Hungary & Romania, 2000

0%10%20%

30%40%50%60%70%

80%90%

100%

Non-Roma

Roma Non-Roma

Roma Non-Roma

Roma

Bulgaria Hungary Romania

Higher education (complete &incomplete)

Some secondary

Primary or below

Budget Deprivation in Tajikistan

LEARNING OUTCOMES

More public expenditure on education produces better results up to a certain level – CEE and Baltic States (see graph on next slide)

Socio-economic background is one of the most important factors influencing learning outcomes

Between-country disparities:

Within-country disparities :

Relevance of Education:

Countries in the region do better in TIMSS and PIRLS than in PISA → source of concern

ARM

MDA

ALBMKD

TUR

ROU

BGR

RUS

LVA

POL

SVK

LTU

CZE

EST

HUN

NOR

USA

SWE

NLD

NZL

ITASVN

1

3

5

7

9

11

13

15

17

0 250 500 750 1000 1250 1500 1750 2000 2250 2500

public expenditure on education per capita (in US$ at PPPs)

aver

age

rank

on

mea

n ac

hiev

emen

t in

2 to

6 te

sts

LABOUR MARKET OUTCOMES

Statistics show that young workers of both sexes do benefit from staying in education system as long as possible

But focus-group discussions show that people in poorer countries are skeptical about reaping benefits of education - particularly in case of girls in Azerbaijan, Tajikistan, Turkey

High youth unemployment rates : 35.6% in SEE (2001) and 30.4% in CEE (2005)

COSTS, FINANCING & GOVERNANCE (1)

Public expenditure on education increased but remains insufficient in most countries and tends to benefit the richest families

Reforms have been initiated but have not penetrated the classrooms – particularly in poorer and rural areas

Out-dated teaching methods, lack of relevance of curricula, poorly paid and demotivated teachers, low transition to upper-secondary education → decreasing quality + falling demand for education

COSTS, FINANCING & GOVERNANCE (2)

Decentralization: funding burden passed to local communities and families to the detriment of equity

Student/ teacher ratios: Demographic dividend scope for efficiency gains

Private tutoring becoming more widespread (69% of secondary school students in some countries) → Danger of unethical practices, low-income families lose out

POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS

POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS (1)

Need to re-define the basic package of educational services that a state should provide free to its citizens

Need to increase efficiency – take better advantage of demographic dividend - make greater use of Medium Term Expenditure Frameworks

Need to improve governance of education systems – decentralization, community participation

POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS (2)

Make use of existing frameworks – Fast Track Initiative, EU accession and affiliation processes (Stability Pact, European Neighborhood Policy) to push reforms forward

Other measures : promote early childhood approaches, child-friendly school principles, child-centered teaching methods, school fee abolition, cash transfers …etc

IMPLICATIONS FOR UNICEF

IMPLICATIONS FOR UNICEF

Need to make better use of field presence/experience to contribute to education reforms through evidence-based advocacy and policy dialogue

Need to expand/refine sector analysis to explore further such areas as governance, costing, financing, political economy, accountability, efficiency … using a human rights lens

Need to build capacity within UNICEF Offices and among partners to play such a new role

UNICEF’s WORK IN CEE/CIS

UNICEF’s WORK IN CEE/CIS

Lead donor agency for FTI in 4 countries

Lead role in ECCE reform and expansion – 12 countries initiated the development of Early Learning and Development Standards (ELDS)

Child-Friendly School approach gaining momentum – 6/15 countries involved in the development of Child Friendly School Indicators or Standards for Quality Education

Less project work – Greater involvement at policy level

Girls Education Campaign in Turkey

Thank You

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