Education For All

A ten point plan for transforming aid to education

Thursday 27 October 2011 by Joseph O'Reilly

Early next month, donor and developing country governments, UN agencies, private sector companies and civil society will all meet in Denmark at the first ever replenishment of the Global Partnership for Education.

Some ten years earlier donors had met in Amsterdam where they created the Partnership’s predecessor, the Education For All Fast Track Initiative or FTI.

Their aim was to harmonise donor efforts in support of developing country governments that had credible plans to deliver education. Whilst the FTI has played a useful role it along with the international community as a whole has fallen short of its promise of education to the world’s children.

Progress in securing the right to education has been far too slow and on present trends the vast majority of the 67 million children who are still out of school today are unlikely to be in education in 2015.

However, some of the world’s poorest countries have demonstrated that universal primary schooling and wider education goals set for 2015 are attainable. But with only four years to go we urgently need a renewed effort in support of education.

Urgent need

The Global Partnership for Education has a central role to play in that effort.

In recent years there have been significant reforms and in the past few months the Fast Track Initiative has been reinvigorated and re-branded.

The first full meeting of the new Partnership, in Copenhagen in November 2011, must be the moment for change – for serious commitments to secure the funding of the Partnership, to close the broader global fund gap for education, to improve the quality of aid to education and to accelerate the process of reform.

Save the Children along with other civil society organisations that are part of the Global Campaign for Education has identified ten key principles for improving the amount, quality and effectiveness of aid to basic education, which we are urging the Global Partnership for Education to adopt. They are:

1. Pay a fair share for basic education.

2. Untie aid and ensure technical assistance is country-led.

3. Harmonise aid behind government plans.

4. Use the most aligned aid modalities.

5. Deliver predictable aid to basic education and focus on teachers.

6. Ensure country ownership and civil society engagement.

7. Focus on Education For All and on education rights.

8. Address strategic issues in domestic financing of education.

9. Deliver on promises.

10. Build a true Global Partnership for Education.

It’s an ambitious reform agenda but it’s a vitally important one.

Quality aid

Where quality aid to basic education is delivered the impact is immediate. Children’s lives are changed the moment they enter school. It is not just an investment in the future but something that delivers immediately on children’s right to education – the right to a better life today.

But it is also the soundest investment in the future because it enables people to improve their health and their income, to hold governments to account and contribute to national development.

That is why the replenishment of the Global Partnership for Education is so important and why these principles should be at the heart of a reinvigorated Partnership: because transforming aid to education can help transform the world.

You can read more about them in our new publication ‘Fund the future: a ten point plan for transforming aid to education’.

Educate girls now and you educate a future, empowered mum

Wednesday 9 March 2011 by Elin Martinez

Millions of girls continue to experience disadvantage and discrimination that prevents and interrupts not only their right to education, but many of their other fundamental rights.

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Global Monitoring report: Education can’t Wait

Tuesday 1 March 2011 by Elin Martinez

The Global Monitoring Report (GMR) on Education for All launched today. This report gives an up-to-date review of the state of education worldwide. This year’s report focuses on a huge crisis: the neglect of education in conflict-affected fragile states. According to the report, 28 million children are not in school and are surrounded by conflict and poverty (making up 42% of the global number of children out of school).

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Latest 1GOAL vidblogs from South Africa

Monday 19 July 2010 by Adrian Lovett

It’s only a week since the World Cup ended, though it seems longer since the vuvuzelas fell silent and the world became a little more ordinary again.  One of the upsides of coming home is that I was finally able to upload my last few vidblogs for the 1GOAL campaign. 

On Tuesday 6 July I got changed into my suit at a petrol station near the airport and headed straight into meetings with President Zuma’s office.  Tuesday 6 July

On Thursday I got the chance to go to Winnie Ngwekazi Primary School in Soweto and had a kickabout with Shaka Hislop, John Barnes and a group of 9-year-olds (this is work, honest). Thursday 8 July

On Sunday we finally got to the big education summit… here’s how it went: Final Day 

And if you want to see all of 12-year-old Nthabiseng Tshabalala’s challenge to world leaders at the summit, here it is: Nthabiseng’s speech

The campaign goes on, with lots to do before the UN Millennium Development Goals summit in September.  Keep up to date here.

Final Day

Wednesday 14 July 2010 by Adrian Lovett

Johannesburg, Sunday 11th July. 5.30 alarm call as I’m on the South African Broadcasting Corporation’s (SABC) ‘Weekend Live” at breakfast time to talk about the leaders’ summit later today, focused on getting an education for every child as a legacy of the World Cup. It’s the big moment for the 1GOAL campaign.

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1GOAL: Off to Pretoria

Tuesday 15 June 2010 by Adrian Lovett

Went to Pretoria today to meet with President Zuma’s staff about the 7 July World Education Summit.  Here’s my update…

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Our day out (and 1GOAL too many)

Monday 14 June 2010 by Adrian Lovett

Here’s my vidblog for the weekend, which took us all day to upload because our internet connection can come and go a bit here…

Sign up for 1GOAL: Education for all

1GOAL: It’s England’s day

Saturday 12 June 2010 by Adrian Lovett

11.30am, in half an hour the 1GOAL school bus sets off for the England / USA game. It won’t be a luxury ride for the next three hours, but it should have character…

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Adrian’s1 GOAL World Cup video diary: Part 2

Friday 11 June 2010 by Adrian Lovett

Videoblog 2 from South Africa: The big day arrives – kick-off

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1GOAL: One day to go in South Africa

Thursday 10 June 2010 by Adrian Lovett

5.30am alarm call to go to do BBC Breakfast News live from the Orlando Stadium, where the big World Cup kick-off concert is happening tonight. Interviewed by BBC sport man Chris Hollins (here we are below). It’s been really warm during the day since I arrived in South Africa on Tuesday, but this morning in that park across the road from the stadium it was FREEZING.

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