From the AP:
“UN chief says 1 billion students
affected by virus closures”
U.N. Secretary-General Antonio
Guterres said Tuesday the coronavirus pandemic has led to the largest
disruption of education in history, with schools closed in more than 160
countries in mid-July, affecting over 1 billion students. In addition, the U.N.
chief said at least 40 million children worldwide have missed out on education
“in their critical preschool year.” As a result, Guterres warned that the world
faces “a generational catastrophe that could waste untold human potential,
undermine decades of progress, and exacerbate entrenched inequalities.” Even
before the pandemic, Guterres said, the world faced “a learning crisis,” with
more than 250 million children out of school, and only a quarter of secondary
school youngsters in developing countries leaving school “with basic skills.” According
to a global projection covering 180 countries by the U.N. education agency
UNESCO and partner organizations, some 23.8 million additional children and
youths from pre-primary school to university level are at risk of dropping out
or not having access to school next year due to the pandemic’s economic impact.
“We are at a defining moment for the world’s children and young people,”
Guterres said in a video message and a 26-page policy briefing. “The decisions
that governments and partners take now will have lasting impact on hundreds of
millions of young people, and on the development prospects of countries for
decades to come.” According to the policy briefing, “the unparalleled education
disruption” from the pandemic is far from over and as many as 100 countries
have not yet announced a date for schools to reopen. Guterres called for action
in four key areas, the first being reopening schools. “Once local transmission
of COVID-19 is under control,” he said, “getting students back into schools and
learning institutions as safely as possible must be a top priority.” UNESCO’s
Assistant Director-General for Education Stefania Giannini told reporters the
Paris-based agency plans to hold a high-level virtual meeting in the fall,
likely during the second half of October, to secure commitments from world
leaders and the international community to place education at the forefront of
recovery agendas from the pandemic. “There may be economic trade-offs, but the
longer schools remain closed the more devastating the impact, especially on the
poorest and most vulnerable children,” Giannini warned. She stressed that
schools are not only for learning but provide social protection and nutrition,
especially for vulnerable youngsters. The coronavirus crisis has amplified
digital, social and gender inequalities, Giannini said, with girls, refugees,
the disabled, displaced and youngsters in rural areas the most vulnerable and
facing limited opportunities to continue their learning. Guterres said
increasing financing for education must be given priority. Before the pandemic,
low- and middle-income countries faced an education funding gap of $1.5
trillion annually, he said, and the gap in education financing globally could
increase by 30% because of the pandemic. The secretary-general said education
initiatives must target “those at greatest risk of being left behind,”
including youngsters in crises, minorities, and the displaced and disabled. And
these initiatives should urgently seek to bridge the digital divide that has
become even more evident during the COVID-19 crisis, he said. On a positive
note, Guterres said the pandemic is providing “a generational opportunity to
reimagine education” and leap forward to systems that deliver quality
education. To achieve this, he called for investments in “digital literacy and
infrastructure” and education systems that are more flexible, equitable and
inclusive. UNESCO’s Giannini said innovations made so far during the pandemic,
including online learning and education on radio and television, “proves change
can happen quickly.” She said a coalition of global organizations launched a
campaign Tuesday called “Save Our Future” to amplify the voices of children and
young people and urge governments worldwide to recognize that investing in
education is critical to COVID-19 recovery and to the future of the world.
^ This is a major, worldwide
problem that if not solved will effect how things are done decades from now
(when those students enter the workforce.) ^
https://news.yahoo.com/un-chief-says-1-billion-054145930.html
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