Resources
Explore a wide range of valuable resources on GCED to deepen your understanding and enhance your research, advocacy, teaching, and learning.
3,433 Results found
Tableau de bord pour l’ODD 4, rapport d’étape sur les points de référence nationaux: focus sur les enseignants Year of publication: 2024 Corporate author: Global Education Monitoring Report Team | UNESCO Institute for Statistics (UIS) Il s'agit de la deuxième évaluation des progrès des pays vers les points de référence, ou objectifs nationaux, que les pays ont fixés pour huit indicateurs de l'ODD 4 afin de marquer leur contribution aux objectifs mondiaux. L’évaluation couvre la période depuis 2015 et examine la probabilité que chaque pays atteigne son point de référence pour 2025 ou – lorsqu’un tel objectif n’a pas été fixé – la valeur qu’il aurait atteinte s’il avait progressé au rythme historique (2000–15) des 25 % des pays qui s’améliorent le plus rapidement.Le tableau de bord de l’ODD 4 2024 révèle que les progrès vers les objectifs nationaux sont en retard pour la plupart des indicateurs. Dans deux cas – l’écart entre les genres au détriment des garçons dans l’achèvement du deuxième cycle du secondaire et les dépenses publiques d’éducation en proportion des dépenses publiques totales – les pays reculent même.En revanche, les progrès sont plus rapides pour le huitième indicateur de référence, la connectivité Internet dans les écoles, qui a été ajouté suite à la priorité accordée à la transformation numérique lors du Sommet sur la transformation de l’éducation en 2022. Un tiers des pays ont fixé des objectifs nationaux en 2023 et les progrès sur l’indicateur sont examinés pour la première fois dans cette édition.Les progrès sont également relativement rapides en ce qui concerne le pourcentage d'enseignants possédant les qualifications minimales requises, qui est également l'indicateur central de cette édition. De nouvelles données sont présentées sur les politiques nationales concernant les niveaux de qualification minimaux requis pour accéder à la profession enseignante, les politiques de développement professionnel continu obligatoire et les politiques de formation des enseignants sur la tec
SDG 4 Scorecard: Progress Report on National Benchmarks; Focus on Teachers Year of publication: 2024 Corporate author: Global Education Monitoring Report Team | UNESCO Institute for Statistics (UIS) This is the second assessment of country progress towards the benchmarks, or national targets, that countries have set for eight SDG 4 indicators to mark their contribution to the global targets. The assessment covers the period since 2015 and reviews the probability that each country will achieve its 2025 benchmark or – where such a benchmark was not set – the value they would have achieved if they had progressed at the historic (2000–15) rate of the fastest improving 25% of countries.The 2024 SDG 4 Scorecard finds that progress towards national targets is off track for most indicators. In two cases – the gender gap at the expense of boys in upper secondary education completion and public education expenditure as share of total public expenditure – countries are even moving backwards.In contrast, progress is faster in the eighth benchmark indicator, school internet connectivity, which was added following the priority given to digital transformation at the Transforming Education Summit in 2022. One third of countries set national targets in 2023 and progress on the indicator is being reviewed for the first time in this edition.Progress is also relatively fast in the percentage of teachers with minimum required qualifications, which is also the focus indicator of this edition. New evidence is presented on national policies for minimum required qualification levels to enter the teaching profession, compulsory continuous professional development policies, and teacher training policies on technology in education.
Outcomes-Focused Policy Making in Scotland Year of publication: 2021 Corporate author: Government of Scotland | Scotland's International Development Alliance | SDG Network Scotland | Oxfam Scotland | International Development Education Association Scotland (IDEAS) | Bridge 47 Scotland’s International Development Alliance has co-created a new Scottish policy making guide focused on the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the National Performance Framework (NPF). The guide supports holistic policy making that reflects our interconnected world & addresses the need to better navigate its complexities.The resource is the result of a partnership between the Scottish Government’s National Performance Framework team, the International Development Education Association of Scotland (IDEAS) Network, Scotland’s International Development Alliance, the SDG Network Scotland and Oxfam Scotland. The partnership was initiated, supported and funded by the Bridge 47 – Building Global Citizenship project and special thanks go to Northern Star Associates for their work developing the content.What is the resource?The National Performance Framework (NPF) is Scotland’s way of localising the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The 17 different goals and 11 NPF National Outcomes are key measures of how Scotland can move towards a more just and sustainable future. The resource has two main parts. The first half features a general overview of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), Scotland’s National Performance Framework (NPF) and how the two are interlinked. The second half provides practical, interactive activities to explore how to apply the NPF and SDGs in the policy making process.Why is this resource important?Policy is a mechanism for creating change. Ensuring that the policy produced in Scotland is inclusive and takes a holistic view of systemic problems will have a positive impact for both people and planet.This resource comes at a critical juncture. The Covid-19 pandemic has emphasised local-global interconnections and the difficulties posed by complex global problems. They require us to be holistic in our policy making and understand we are part of a bigger system, where the decisions we make and the actions we take have an impact on others locally and globally, now and in the future.How was the resource created?The guide was co-created by a partnership between the NPF team at the Scottish Government and civil society stakeholders including the SDG Network Scotland, Scotland’s International Development Alliance and the EU project, Bridge 47. The development of the resource was funded through the Bridge 47 – Building Global Citizenship project, which is based at the International Development Education Association of Scotland (IDEAS) network. As a project, Bridge 47 supports building partnerships across different sectors with the aim of raising awareness of the SDGs and the transformative power of education as outlined in SDG Target 4.7.
COVID-19 Responses Around the World: A Teaching Resource for Ages 9-14 Year of publication: 2021 Corporate author: Oxfam GB This resource helps learners to discuss their thoughts and feelings about the pandemic with others. Learners will also find out about ways to stop the current ‘infodemic’ – the rapid spread of misinformation and disinformation about COVID-19.This material will help learners to:discuss their thoughts and feelings about COVID-19.investigate some of the incredible ways in which people have been responding to this crisis.understand the difference between information, disinformation and misinformation.consider their own responses to the pandemic and possible actions that they might take to manage their own wellbeing and support others.
Transformative Learning Journeys: Venturing Into the Wilds of Global Citizenship Education Year of publication: 2021 Corporate author: Bridge 47 With the intensive courses of the Transformative Learning Journey, Bridge 47 created experimental learning spaces for communities of practitioners, researchers and activists of transformative education from around the world.The courses endeavored to challenge common concepts of Global Citizenship Education, to explore questions like those below and to experiment with different, holistic and potentially more transformative, practices of learning and co-creating.What are the (cultural) root causes of the global multi-crisis?How to decolonize and transform a modern system that is broken beyond fixing?What do we have to learn, unlearn or let go of- individually and collectively - in order to allow, embrace and foster real change? What characterizes transformative learning, and how can education create holistic spaces to trigger, support and accompany such learning processes? How transformative is our own organizational and educational practice?Do we have to re-imagine education and activism and become more radical? Are we asking the right questions?Based on the positive resonance, Bridge 47 wants to share some of the learnings through this publication. The book gives insights into the design, content and methodology of the course. Featuring diverse contributions from participants, it is a mosaic of perspectives and experiences of transformation, decolonization and learning. It also comprises some tools and invitations for reflection. It is not a cohesive prescription of how to facilitate transformative learning – as there is none - but an invitation to relate to and play."This book is dedicated to all the curious people out there who are passionate about education in caring for our world and each other - the dreamers, the healers, the lovers, the teachers for a different future to emerge. It goes to the fighters who are desperate and overwhelmed in face of complex challenges and are worn out by their struggle for justice and change – to find inspiration, energy and courage to treat ourselves gently, to let go and to make space for new things to emerge."
Tablero de control para el ODS 4: informe sobre el progreso hacia los puntos de referencia nacionales; foco en docentes Year of publication: 2024 Corporate author: Global Education Monitoring Report Team | UNESCO Institute for Statistics (UIS) Esta es la segunda evaluación del progreso de los países hacia los puntos de referencia, o metas nacionales, que los países han establecido para ocho indicadores del ODS 4 para marcar su contribución a las metas globales. La evaluación cubre el período desde 2015 y revisa la probabilidad de que cada país alcance su punto de referencia para 2025 o, cuando no se haya establecido dicho punto de referencia, el valor que habría alcanzado si hubiera progresado al ritmo histórico (2000–15) del 25 % de los países que mejoran más rápidamente.El Tablero de Control para el ODS 4 de 2024 revela que el progreso hacia las metas nacionales está desviado en la mayoría de los indicadores. En dos casos – la brecha de género a expensas de los niños que terminan la educación secundaria alta y el gasto público en educación como proporción del gasto público total – los países incluso están retrocediendo.Por el contrario, el progreso es más rápido en el octavo indicador de referencia, la conectividad a Internet en las escuelas, que se añadió tras la prioridad otorgada a la transformación digital en la Cumbre sobre la Transformación de la Educación en 2022. Un tercio de los países estableció objetivos nacionales en 2023 y el progreso en el indicador está siendo revisado por primera vez en esta edición.El progreso también es relativamente rápido en el porcentaje de docentes con las calificaciones mínimas requeridas, que también es el indicador central de esta edición. Se presenta nueva evidencia sobre políticas nacionales en cuanto a los niveles mínimos de calificación requeridos para ingresar a la profesión docente, políticas de desarrollo profesional continuo obligatorio y políticas de formación docente sobre tecnología en educación.
Creating sustainable futures for all; Global education monitoring report, 2016; gender review Year of publication: 2016 Author: Sachs, Jeffrey D Corporate author: Global Education Monitoring Report Team Education and gender equality are central concerns in the new sustainable development agenda. The Education 2030 Framework for Action, agreed by the global education community in November 2015 to accompany the SDG agenda, recognizes that gender equality is inextricably linked to the right to education for all, and that achieving gender equality requires an approach that ‘ensures that girls and boys, women and men not only gain access to and complete education cycles, but are empowered equally in and through education’ (UNESCO, 2016a, p. 8). Women, girls, boys and men all need to be given opportunities for active participation in society, for their voices to be heard and their needs met (UN Women, 2016a). To facilitate and achieve this, better evidence-based knowledge and understanding of gender issues in and through education are needed. The Gender Review of the 2016 Global Education Monitoring Report (GEM Report) recognizes and largely focuses on the challenges facing girls and women because of the disproportionate overall disadvantage they continue to experience in and beyond education. But it also understands that gender disadvantage can be experienced by boys and men, and that gender equality involves males, relationships and power. Gender inequality affects us all. Achieving gender equality must involve us all.
Résumé sur l'égalité des genres: créer des avenirs durables pour tous; Rapport mondial de suivi sur l'éducation, 2016 Year of publication: 2016 Author: Sachs, Jeffrey D Corporate author: Global Education Monitoring Report Team L’éducation et l’égalité des genres sont des préoccupations essentielles dans le nouveau programme de développement durable. Le Cadre d’action Éducation 2030, approuvé par la communauté mondiale de l’éducation en novembre 2015 en complément du Programme 2030, reconnaît que l’égalité des genres est indissociable du droit à l’éducation pour tous, et que, pour qu’elle devienne une réalité, il faut adopter une démarche « qui garantisse que les filles et les garçons, les femmes et les hommes non seulement ont le même accès aux différents cycles d’enseignement, jusqu’à leur terme, mais aussi qu’ils ont les mêmes possibilités de s’épanouir dans l’éducation et grâce à l’éducation » (UNESCO, 2016a, p. 8). Femmes, filles, hommes et garçons ont tous besoin que des possibilités leur soient données de participer activement à la vie sociale et de faire entendre leur voix et qu’il soit répondu à leurs besoins (ONU Femmes, 2016a). Faciliter et permettre la réalisation de cet objectif exige une connaissance et une compréhension mieux étayées par des données factuelles de la manière dont l’égalité des genres peut être assurée dans l’éducation et par l’éducation. Le Résumé sur l’égalité des genres de l’édition 2016 du Rapport mondial de suivi sur l’éducation (Rapport GEM) reconnaît les difficultés rencontrées par les filles et les femmes du fait du désavantage global disproportionné auquel elles continuent de se heurter dans leurs études et au-delà, et est grande partie centré sur ces difficultés. Mais il admet aussi que les garçons et les hommes peuvent eux aussi être désavantagés du fait de leur sexe et que l’égalité des genres les concerne et est affaire de relations et d’exercice du pouvoir. L’inégalité entre les genres nous touche tous. Instaurer l’égalité entre les genres est notre responsabilité à tous.
Resumen sobre género: creación de futuros sostenibles para todos; Informe de seguimiento de la educación en el mundo, 2016 Year of publication: 2016 Author: Sachs, Jeffrey D Corporate author: Global Education Monitoring Report Team Para la nueva agenda internacional de desarrollo sostenible, la educación y la igualdad de género constituyen preocupaciones básicas. El Marco de Acción Educación 2030, suscrito por la comunidad educativa mundial en noviembre del 2015, en sintonía con la agenda para los ODS, reconoce que la igualdad de género está íntimamente ligada al derecho a la educación para todos y que para alcanzar la igualdad de género se requiere un enfoque que “garantice no solo que las niñas, los niños, las mujeres y los hombres obtengan acceso a los distintos niveles de enseñanza y los cursen con éxito, sino que adquieran las mismas competencias en la educación y mediante ella” (UNESCO 2016a, p.28). Todas las mujeres, las niñas, los niños y los hombres han de tener la posibilidad de participar activamente en la sociedad, de que se oigan sus voces y se satisfagan sus necesidades (ONU-Mujeres, 2016a). Para facilitar y alcanzar estos objetivos, es necesario disponer de conocimientos basados en evidencia, acerca de los temas relacionados con el género en el ámbito de la educación y mediante ella. El Resumen sobre Género del Informe de Seguimiento de la Educación en el Mundo (Informe GEM) identifica y se centra principalmente en los desafíos a los que han de hacer frente las niñas y las mujeres a causa de las desventajas globales y desproporcionadas que siguen experimentando en su período de formación y después de él. Pero tiene presente asimismo que los niños y los hombres pueden sufrir desventajas de género, y que la igualdad de género también afecta a los varones, a sus relaciones y al poder. Por tanto, todos debemos participar en lograr la igualdad de género.
Gender, migration and non-formal learning for women and adolescent girls Year of publication: 2019 Author: Amy North Corporate author: Global Education Monitoring Report Team Processes of international migration and displacement are highly gendered. Who migrates, and how they experience migration and displacement, is affected by gender norms and relations in both in countries of origin and countries of settlement, the gendered dynamics of conflict and violence, and the gendered nature of global and local labour markets. These gendered dynamics of migration both affect and are affected by education in often complex ways, as education may both facilitate processes of migration, and be enabled or limited by them, and as gendered engagements with education prior to and during migration and settlement may have a significant influenced on how these processes are experienced. This paper is concerned with exploring this gender-migration- education nexus through a focus on the educational engagements and experiences of migrant and refugee women and adolescent girls. It first considers the wider body of research that has explored the relationship between gender, migration and displacement, particularly in relation to the experiences of migrant women and girls, before drawing out some of the key conceptual ideas from this, considering their implications for education, and presenting a conceptual diagram to represent this relationship. It then focuses more specifically on experiences of non-formal education for women and adolescent girls in refugee contexts and in host countries. Finally it identifies a number of key issues and recommendations emerging from this research. 