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World Conference on Early Childhood Care and Education WC ECCE 27 to 29 September 2010 Moscow, Russian Federation

Early inequity leads to lifelong inequity in learning outcomes and educational opportunities

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World Conference on Early Childhood Care and Education WC ECCE 27 to 29 September 2010 Moscow, Russian Federation. Early inequity leads to lifelong inequity in learning outcomes and educational opportunities. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Early inequity leads to lifelong inequity in learning outcomes and educational opportunities

World Conference on Early Childhood Care and Education

WC ECCE27 to 29 September 2010

Moscow, Russian Federation

Page 2: Early inequity leads to lifelong inequity in learning outcomes and educational opportunities

Early inequity leads to lifelong inequity in learning outcomes and educational opportunities

Source: UNESCO, Global Monitoring Report 2010, from Paxson and Schady (2005).

In Ecuador, a study of 3- to 5-year-olds marks a clear association between a child’s cognitive score and the family’s socioeconomic status. The gap begins early and widens over time.

Page 3: Early inequity leads to lifelong inequity in learning outcomes and educational opportunities

Vulnerable children excluded from ECCE programmes

3-to 5-year olds from urban areas or with educated mothers are more likely to participate in early learning programmes

Source: UNICEF, Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys (MICS3).

Page 4: Early inequity leads to lifelong inequity in learning outcomes and educational opportunities

Varied access to programmes for children under age 3

Countries in region with at least one formal programme including children under 3 (%)

Source: UNESCO, EFA Global Monitoring Report .

Page 5: Early inequity leads to lifelong inequity in learning outcomes and educational opportunities

Wide variation in pre-primary participation across regions

Source: UNESCO, EFA Global Monitoring Report 2011.

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

World Sub-SaharanAfrica

Arab States East Asia andthe Pacific

South andWest Asia

Latin Americaand the

Caribbean

maximum

minimum

weighted average

Djibouti

Seychelles Mexico

Rep. Korea

BhutanMyanmar

B. FasoCôte d'Ivoire, DRC, Niger

Maldives

Guatemala

UAE

Pre

-pri

mar

y gr

oss

enro

lmen

t rat

io (

%)

in

2008

Page 6: Early inequity leads to lifelong inequity in learning outcomes and educational opportunities

0 1 4 8 12 16

AGE

Sensing

Pathways

(vision, hearing)

Language

Higher

Cognitive Function

3 6 9-3-6

Months Years

C. Nelson, in From Neurons to Neighborhoods, 2000

Con

c ep

t ion

Human Brain Development – Synapse FormationEarly childhood is an optimal moment to support sensory, cognitive, social & language

development

Page 7: Early inequity leads to lifelong inequity in learning outcomes and educational opportunities

Heckman’s curve - rates of return to human capital investments across all ages

Heckman, 2008: Schools, Skills, and Synapses

Page 8: Early inequity leads to lifelong inequity in learning outcomes and educational opportunities

• Early Childhood Care and Education providing for holistic attention that include health, nutrition, early stimulation and protection, resulting in: – Better school readiness, attendance, learning, internal

efficiency– Improved early brain development– Improved cognitive development and primary school

achievement – Higher school enrolment – Reduced drop out rates– Improved delivery of nutrition and health services – Reduced risks of social delinquency– Gender parity

Page 9: Early inequity leads to lifelong inequity in learning outcomes and educational opportunities

• Studies point to significant relationships between cognitive achievement and school expenditure, teachers’ and practitioners’ educational training and adequate play and learning facilities

• School performance (as measured by test scores) is significantly improved by textbook provision, smaller class sizes, adequate instructional time and sound teaching practices, including an age appropriate curricula

• Policy development should target disadvantaged and vulnerable groups and aim towards gender equality and inclusive education

Page 10: Early inequity leads to lifelong inequity in learning outcomes and educational opportunities

Examples of successful quality interventions

• Health sector-based intervention– e.g. Posyandu (“health service post”) in Indonesia combining basic

health services with parenting education • Welfare sector-based intervention

– e.g. Conditional cash transfer in Mexico, Nicaragua• Education sector-based intervention

– e.g. Community-based ECD centres in disadvantaged areas in Nepal; Madrasa Preschool Programme in East African countries

– e.g. Non-formal education programme for parents to promote better parenting in rural Tanzania

• Multi-sectoral intervention– e.g. Parenting education for parents with children 0-6: Educate Your

Child of Cuba and Better Early Childhood of Brazil

Page 11: Early inequity leads to lifelong inequity in learning outcomes and educational opportunities

Strong foundations

Early childhood care and education

New York26 October 2006

Global Launch

Page 12: Early inequity leads to lifelong inequity in learning outcomes and educational opportunities

12

A diverse field

Providers• Governments (national, subnational)• Private sector (non-profit and for-profit)• International non-governmental organizations• Community-based organizations

Informal provision of care for children aged 0 to 8, by parents or extended family, mainly at home but sometimes in other family or community settings.

Primary education (age 6 up)

ECCE policies and programmes for ages 3 and up -pre-primary education -non-formal education

ECCE policies and programmes for ages 0 to 2 -organized care and education -non-formal care or education -support to parents

Informal care and child rearing

Organized care and education

- parental leave

Page 13: Early inequity leads to lifelong inequity in learning outcomes and educational opportunities

13

Action Now!

1. Act on all goals: early childhood,literacy and primary school

2. Act with urgency

3. Emphasize equity and inclusion

4. Increase public spending, and focus it better

5. Increase aid to basic education, and allocate where most needed

6. Move ECCE up national and international agendas

7. Increase public financing for ECCE, and target it

8. Upgrade the ECCE workforce

Clear progress but more effort is needed

Page 14: Early inequity leads to lifelong inequity in learning outcomes and educational opportunities
Page 15: Early inequity leads to lifelong inequity in learning outcomes and educational opportunities
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1616

General information

• Origin: Resolution 35 C/Resolution 15 adopted by the General Conference in October 2009

• Dates: 27-29 September 2010• Sponsors: Russian Federation, ADEA, Saudi

Arabia Fund, UNICEF, UNDP, ED/BAS, RBs and other FOs

Page 17: Early inequity leads to lifelong inequity in learning outcomes and educational opportunities

1717

Conference objectives• Heighten global awareness of ECCE as the right of all

children and as development imperative• Encourage a dynamic and far-reaching reflection on the

transformative powers of ECCE and reinforce its role as a basis for development

• Take stock of progress, identify challenges and establish more effective benchmarks towards achieving Education for All

• Engage governments, policy-makers, researchers and a range of institutions in reorienting national systems and programmes to take into account the early childhood years as a human right and an integral part of development

• Promote global exchange of good practices

Page 18: Early inequity leads to lifelong inequity in learning outcomes and educational opportunities

18

Programme: main thrust• Opening: The ECCE global challenge - Setting the stage• Plenary I: The ECCE development imperative• Plenary II: The global state of the art: Scaling up

towards 2015• Commission 1: Enabling the scale-up towards 2015 –

Policy, finance, legal and institutional frameworks• Commission 2: Regions / Russian Federation• Plenary III: ECCE country best practices• Commission 3: Quality and responsiveness• Commission 4: Exclusion and marginalization • Commission 5: Monitoring and evaluation of ECCE at

national and international levels• Plenary IV: Summary of the Conference• Plenary V: Presentation and adoption of Plan of Action• Closing: The way forward

Page 19: Early inequity leads to lifelong inequity in learning outcomes and educational opportunities

1919

Outcome

• Moscow Plan of Action on ECCE - an actionable plan

Page 20: Early inequity leads to lifelong inequity in learning outcomes and educational opportunities

2020

Post-conference follow-ups

• Annual virtual review• Biannual regional reviews linked to

regional events (e.g. ADEA 2011)• Application of the HCDI to monitor and

report progress toward 2015 and beyond

• Post-conference follow-up plans of FO, RB, Institutes, HQ

Page 21: Early inequity leads to lifelong inequity in learning outcomes and educational opportunities

UNESCO’s actions

I. Support equitable access to quality ECCE• Heightening advocacy and support for ECCE

– First World Conference on ECCE (Moscow, 2010) and the implementation of the Moscow Framework for Action and Cooperation

• Strengthening the analytical and knowledge base for ECCE policy development– Handbook on ECCE

• Strengthening national capacities to deliver ECCE– ECCE subsector analysis (e.g. Mongolia)– Thematic policy review on ECCE integration in Rep. of Korea

• Strengthening global and national capacity for monitoring Goal 1– Holistic Child Development Index

• Intensifying resource mobilisation– Establishment of UNESCO ECCE Fund

Page 22: Early inequity leads to lifelong inequity in learning outcomes and educational opportunities

Recommendation: Leveraging resources (i)

• Mobilize national resources for primary education and ECCE

- public and private - and use them more

effectively

Page 23: Early inequity leads to lifelong inequity in learning outcomes and educational opportunities

Recommendation: Leveraging resources (ii)

• Increase the levels of donor resources for primary education and ECCE - and use them more effectively

Source: UNESCO, EFA Global Monitoring Report 2011.

Disbursements of aid to basic education stopped increasing in 2008

Page 24: Early inequity leads to lifelong inequity in learning outcomes and educational opportunities

Recommendation: Partnering with UNESCO

• UN specialized agency for education, with the mandate to lead EFA

• 5 functions - laboratory of ideas, standard-setting, clearing house, capacity builder, catalyst for international cooperation

• A strong network of units, offices and specialized institutes that enable effective delivery in the field

• Existing partnership mechanisms with external partners and networks (e.g. ADEA WGECD, ARNEC) for greater impact

Page 25: Early inequity leads to lifelong inequity in learning outcomes and educational opportunities
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http://www.unesco.org/new/ru/world-conference-on-ecce/resources/

Page 27: Early inequity leads to lifelong inequity in learning outcomes and educational opportunities

• Nota Bene:Photos are taken from UNESCO Photobank and

from the free internet sources ( such as flickr.com and others)