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Bridge Zambia Project Report Year of publication: 2019 Corporate author: Korean National Commission for UNESCO | Zambia National Commission for UNESCO The Bridge Zambia Project (the Project) has been implemented jointly between the Korean National Commission for UNESCO (KNCU) and its partners in Zambia since October 2010. In March 2019, KNCU’s involvement in the Project will come to an end and Zambia will take over full responsibility for the Project as it goes forward. The Project has supported grassroots activities through the establishment of a Community Learning Centre (CLC), which acts as a hub of community-led development activities in non-formal education. The Project has mobilized and empowered communities and local leadership to take charge of non-formal education programmes with the aim of assisting Zambia to attain UNESCO’s Education for All goals and UN Sustainable Development Goal 4 (SDG 4), concerning education quality. Measuring Distance to the SDG Targets 2019 - An Assessment of Where OECD Countries Stand Year of publication: 2019 Corporate author: OECD The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) set a broad and ambitious programme for the world to achieve by 2030. With 17 Goals, underpinned by 169 Targets, the complex and integrated nature of the 2030 Agenda presents national governments with huge challenges for implementation. To assist countries, the OECD has developed a unique methodology allowing comparison of progress across SDG goals and targets. Based on the UN Global List of 244 indicators, this study evaluates the distance that OECD countries need to travel to meet SDG targets for which data is currently available. This 2019 edition of the study presents the latest results for OECD countries, both on average and individually, as well as new exploratory approaches to assessing progress over time and transboundary aspects of the SDGs. By providing a high-level overview of countries’ strengths and weaknesses in performance across the SDGs, this study aims to support member countries in navigating the SDGs and in setting their own priorities for action within the broad 2030 Agenda.   HARNESSING THE POWER OF DATA FOR GENDER EQUALITY: Introducing the 2019 EM2030 SDG Gender Index Year of publication: 2019 Corporate author: Equal Measures 2030 In the 2019 Global Report “Harnessing the power of data for gender equality: Introducing the 2019 EM2030 SDG Gender Index”, the Equal Measures 2030 (EM2030) introduces the 2019 SDG Gender Index. The index is a comprehensive tool available to explore the state of gender equality across 129 countries (covering 95% of the world’s girls and women), 14 of the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), and 51 targets linked to issues inherent in the SDGs. The 2019 SDG Gender Index finds that, with just 11 years to go until 2030, nearly 40% of the world’s girls and women – 1.4 billion – live in countries failing on gender equality. Another 1.4 billion live in countries that “barely pass”. Even the highest-scoring countries have more to do, particularly on complex issues such as climate change, gender budgeting and public services, equal representation in powerful positions, gender pay gaps, and gender-based violence. No country in the world has reached the “last mile” on gender equality.  2019 Global Report overview: Section 1: A foreword from Equal Measures 2030’s partners: The African Women’s Development and Communication Network (FEMNET), The Asian-Pacific Resource & Research Centre for Women (ARROW), Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Committee for Latin America and the Caribbean for the Defense of Women’s Rights (CLADEM), Data2X, International Women’s Health Coalition (IWHC), KPMG, ONE Campaign, Plan International, Women Deliver. Section 2: Key findings from the 2019 SDG Gender Index. Section 3: Introducing the 2019 SDG Gender Index, the approach, what makes this index unique and how the findings should be interpreted. Section 4: Key global findings, patterns and comparisons of index scores between and within the different regions: Asia and the Pacific, Europe and North America, Latin America and the Caribbean, the Middle East and North Africa, Sub-Saharan Africa. Section 5: Regional overviews of index scores and gender equality context, and thematic deep drives on 1) inequalities in girls’ education, 2) women in science and technology research positions, 3) girls’ and women’s physical safety, 4) legal barriers for women, 5) women in government. Section 6: Leaving no one behind: multiple and intersecting forms of discrimination of girls and women. Section 7: Recommendations for action.  Trends Shaping Education 2019 Year of publication: 2019 Corporate author: OECD This book, published every two to three years, is designed to give policy makers, researchers, educational leaders, administrators and teachers a robust, non-specialist source to inform strategic thinking and stimulate reflection on the challenges facing education, whether in schools, universities or programmes for older adults. Trends Shaping Education 2019 is designed to support long-term strategic thinking in education. It provides an overview of key economic, social, demographic and technological trends and raises pertinent questions about their impact on education. This book fills an important need: decision makers and practitioners in education often have only anecdotal or local information on the megatrends that play out in their context; too often they do not have solid facts in front of them, especially about trends.` Les grandes mutations qui transforment l'éducation 2019 Year of publication: 2019 Corporate author: OECD Vous êtes-vous déjà demandé si l’éducation avait un rôle à jouer dans la préparation de nos sociétés à l’ère de l’intelligence artificielle ? Ou quel peut être l’impact du réchauffement climatique sur nos établissements scolaires, nos familles et collectivités ? La publication Les grandes mutations qui transforment l’éducation 2019 donne un aperçu des principales tendances économiques, politiques, sociales et technologiques qui affectent l’éducation. Si les mesures sont robustes, les questions soulevées dans ce recueil sont suggestives et ont pour objet d’informer la pensée stratégique et de stimuler une réflexion sur les défis de l’éducation – et montrer si et comment l’éducation peut influencer ces tendances. L’ouvrage couvre une riche variété de sujets liés à la mondialisation, la démocratie, la sécurité, le vieillissement et les cultures modernes. Le contenu pour l’édition 2019 a été révisé et étendu avec une large sélection d’indicateurs. En plus des différentes tendances et de leur interaction avec l’éducation, la publication inclut également une nouvelle section dédiée à la réflexion sur le futur, inspirée par des méthodologies de la prospective stratégique. Cet ouvrage a pour objet de fournir aux décideurs politiques, aux chercheurs, aux chefs d’établissements, aux administrateurs scolaires et aux enseignants, une source non spécialisée de tendances qui affectent l’éducation comparables à l’échelle internationale, dans les écoles, les universités ou encore dans les programmes de formation pour adultes. Cet ouvrage s’adresse également aux élèves/ étudiants et à la société dans son ensemble, notamment aux parents. Report of the regional training for Francophone Africa, cracking the code: quality, gender-responsive STEM education Year of publication: 2019 Corporate author: UNESCO The African Union recognized the importance of science, technology, research and innovation in stimulating socio-economic development in Africa in its Agenda 2063, and even earlier in the 2007 Addis Ababa Declaration on Science, Technology and Scientific Research for Development.There is a growing demand for professionals with science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) skills in Africa, and the so-called fourth industrial revolution is expected to create a wide range of new jobs in these fields. However, unless efforts are made to address the mismatch between current skills and what will be needed for the future, this revolution will leave a large part of the continent behind.One of the concerns of many African countries is the low participation and academic performance of girls in STEM studies. UNESCO, with the financial support of the Government of Japan and the Ministry of National Education of Senegal, as well as many partners, organized a regional training to strengthen the capacities of education systems to provide gender-sensitive STEM education where all children can learn, grow and develop to their full potential. This brief report presents the results and next steps.    UNESCO Malala Fund for Girls' Right to Education: 2017 annual report Year of publication: 2018 Corporate author: UNESCO The brutal assassination attempt made against Pakistani teenager and activist for girls’ education Malala Yousafzai gave birth to the UNESCO Malala Fund for Girls’ Right to Education. Part of the “Better Life, Better Future” Global Partnership for Girls’ and Women’s Education, the fund was established in 2012 to expand girls’ access to quality and gender-responsive education and ensure safe learning environments, especially in countries affected by conflict and disaster. The Islamic Republic of Pakistan initially committed 10 million USD to the Fund, and since 2014 the CJ Group is another major contributor to the Fund, along with other supporters.Fund objectivesThe Fund supports the implementation of holistic programmes which aim to: Expand access to education for girls and women, especially those hardest to reach and affected by conflict and disaster Improve the quality and relevance of education, ensuring that content, teaching practices, learning processes and environments are gender-sensitive Strengthen policy and capacity to ensure safe learning environments  EDUCATION IN CONFLICT Corporate author: EFA Global Monitoring Report Team | UNESCO PROGRESS IN GETTING ALL CHILDREN AND ADOLESCENTS INTO SCHOOL IS BEING HELD BACK BY CONFLICT - 34 million out-of-school children and adolescents live in conflict countries. - Children in conflict countries are two times more likely to be out of school than their peers elsewhere.- Adolescents in conflict countries are two thirds more likely to be out of school than their peers elsewhere.- Children in conflict countries are 30% less likely to complete primary school and half as likely to complete lower secondary school.- Girls are almost two and a half times more likely to be out of school if they live in a conflict country than those elsewhere.- Adolescent girls are almost 90% more likely to be out of secondary school than young women elsewhere.- The poorest children in conflict countries are twice as likely to be out of school as the poorest elsewhere.   서울교육 2018년 겨울호 (제60권 통권 233호) Year of publication: 2018 Corporate author: 서울특별시교육청 교육연구정보원 권두칼럼:통일교육 패러다임 전환 키워드: #평화특별기획:평화시대를 여는 새로운 통일교육 – 평화와 민주시민교육을 담는 통일교육으로 –화해로 나아가는 평화와 공존의 통일교육한반도 대변혁기의 학교 평화·통일교육 방향 – 통일교육연구학교 운영사례를 중심으로 –해외교육:독일 통일교육이 한국 통일교육에 주는 시사점통일독일의 동독청소년 사회통합을 통해 보는 21세기 통일한국의 청소년 사회통합 정책연구:평화에 대한 비판적 공부: 평화학 출처 URL:http://www.serii.re.kr/photo/viw.do?method=getView&mcode=S029a&seq=1081  Reaching the Unreached: Indigenous Intercultural Bilingual Education in Latin America Year of publication: 2009 Author: Luis Enrique López Corporate author: UNESCO The paper focuses on the educational situation of the most marginalized children and adolescents in Latin America: those belonging to indigenous homes and communities. To illustrate indigenous marginalization and exclusion as well as the development of intercultural bilingual education (IBE) six countries have been chosen: Bolivia, Ecuador, Guatemala, Mexico, Paraguay and Peru.