Ressources

Explorez une large gamme de ressources sur le GCED afin d’approfondir votre compréhension et de renforcer vos activités de recherche, de plaidoyer, d’enseignement et d’apprentissage.

  • Searching...
Recherche avancée
© APCEIU

141 résultats trouvés

Global Education Meeting: Fortaleza Declaration; Unlocking the Transformative Power of Education for Peaceful, Equitable and Sustainable Futures Année de publication: 2024 Auteur institutionnel: UNESCO | Brazil. Ministry of Education The 2024 Global Education Meeting (GEM), held in Fortaleza, Brazil, marked a significant milestone in the global pursuit of education equity and financing, with the adoption of the powerful Fortaleza Declaration by over 650 participants including over 50 Ministers from across the globe.  Reunión mundial sobre la educación: Declaración de Fortaleza; Aprovechar el poder transformador de la educación para forjar futuros pacíficos, equitativos y sostenibles Année de publication: 2024 Auteur institutionnel: UNESCO | Brazil. Ministry of Education Este documento recoge la declaración de los ministros, los jefes y los miembros de las delegaciones nacionales, los representantes de los organismos de las Naciones Unidas, los asociados humanitarios y para el desarrollo, las organizaciones internacionales y regionales, las organizaciones de la sociedad civil, la profesión docente, los jóvenes y los estudiantes, el sector privado y las fundaciones, a partir de su participación en la Reunión Global sobre Educación (GEM) 2024, llevada a cabo los días 31 de octubre y 1° de noviembre. Esta reunión, organizada por la UNESCO y con sede en Brasil, tuvo el propósito de trazar la ruta para que la educación sea la prioridad de las naciones, las regiones y el mundo como un elemento clave para alcanzar todos los ODS, adoptando un enfoque integrado y de aprendizaje permanente, centrado en el fortalecimiento y la transformación de la educación.  Global Education Monitoring Report, 2021, Central and Eastern Europe, Caucasus and Central Asia: Inclusion and Education; All Means All Année de publication: 2021 Auteur institutionnel: Global Education Monitoring Report Team | European Agency for Special Needs and Inclusive Education | Network of Education Policy Centers Prepared by the Global Education Monitoring (GEM) Report, in partnership with the European Agency for Special Needs and Inclusive Education and the Network of Education Policy Centers, the regional report on inclusion and education in Central and Eastern Europe, the Caucasus and Central Asia offers a deep dive into the core challenges and key solutions. The region is working hard to overcome a legacy, whereby children with disabilities attended special schools, once wrongly regarded as an effective solution, segregated by type of disability, if not fully excluded from education.The report draws on in-depth profiles of 30 education systems in the region. It also presents the additional risks to inclusion now posed by the COVID-19 pandemic. Building on the 2020 Global Education Monitoring Report, it documents barriers facing learners, particularly where multiple disadvantages intersect. Its recommendations provide a systematic framework for identifying and dismantling these barriers, according to the principle that ‘every learner matters and matters equally’.  Всемирный доклад по мониторингу образования 2021 г. : для всех означает для всех инклюзивность и образование; центральная и восточная европа,кавказ и средняя азия Année de publication: 2021 Auteur institutionnel: Global Education Monitoring Report Team | European Agency for Special Needs and Inclusive Education | Network of Education Policy Centers В этом докладе описана огромная и географически разнородная территория, которую объединили в один регион схожие образовательные системыи подходы, сформированные во второй половине 20 века в рамках государственного социализма. Образование было доступно, гендерное неравенство и неравенство, связанное с местом проживания, было искоренено. Но образовательные системы подвергали дискриминации детей с особыми потребностями, которые посещали специальные школы. Это решение ошибочно считалось эффективным: ученики разделялись по типу инвалидности, а некоторые из них полностью исключались из системы образования.Начиная с 1989 года, регион старается преодолеть это тяжелое наследие и перейти к инклюзивному образованию, основанному на правах человека, подходу, который часто поддерживается международными организациями. В законодательство и образовательную политику было включено более широкое понимание инклюзии. Педагогическое образование и программы повышения квалификации учителей были пересмотрены и реструктурированы. Тем не менее, прогресс неравномерен. Многие изменения произошли на бумаге, в то время как глубинные убеждения и реальная практика практически не изменились. В то же время образовательные системы пытаются преодолеть негативные последствия политического и экономического кризисов, которые углубили неравенство и усилили социальную напряженность. Такие факторы как гендер, удаленное место проживания, бедность, этническая принадлежность, язык, миграция, принадлежность к числу перемещенных лиц, тюремное заключение, сексуальная ориентация, гендерная идентичность и религиозные и другие убеждения связаны с неравенством образовательных возможностей.Составленный группой по подготовке Всемирного доклада по мониторингу образования, в партнерстве с Европейским агентством по специальным потребностям и инклюзивному образованию и Сетью центров образовательной политики, этот доклад содержит подробные описания 30 образовательных систем региона. В докладе также представлены дополнительные риски для инклюзии, возникшие в результате пандемии COVID-19. Основываясь на Всемирном докладе ЮНЕСКО по мониторингу образования, этот документ фиксирует барьеры, с которыми сталкиваются учащиеся. Рекомендации, данные в докладе, предлагают систему для выявления и устранения этих барьеров, в основе которой лежит принцип «каждый ученик важен и важен одинаково».  Educate All Girls and Boys in South Asia; the global out of school children initiative Année de publication: 2015 Auteur institutionnel: UNICEF South Asia The South Asia Out-of-School Children Initiative (OOSCI) is part of the global initiative launched by UNICEF and the UNESCO Institute for Statistics (UIS) in 2010. The goal of the initiative is to make significant and sustained reduction in the number of out-of-school children around the world by 1) developing comprehensive profiles of excluded children using consistent and innovative statistical methods; 2) linking these profiles to the barriers and bottlenecks that lead to exclusion; and 3) identifying, promoting and implementing sound policies that address exclusion from a multi-sectorial perspective. Inclusion and gender equality: brief on inclusion in education Année de publication: 2023 Auteur institutionnel: UNESCO <Brief on inclusion in education>Gender equality lies at the heart of inclusive education and efforts to ensure equal opportunities for all. To achieve inclusion and gender equality in and through education, governments must eliminate gender biases from curricula and learning materials, expand teacher training on gender-transformative pedagogy, and foster safe and inclusive learning environments to ensure that no one is left behind. This is key for the achievement of the United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and in particular Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 4 on ensuring the right to inclusive and equitable quality education and lifelong learning and SDG 5 on gender equality.<Introduction>Gender refers to the socially constructed roles and relationships, personality traits, attitudes, behaviours, values, relative power and influence that society ascribes to the two sexes on a differential basis. Gender affects people’s lives every day in myriad ways. Gendered expectations, whether of oneself or of others, impact the choices people make. They structure people’s relationships and have the power to shape what people believe they can and should accomplish. Gendered power structures distribute and influence power, often resulting in systemic inequalities (UNESCO, 2021).Gender also intersects with other characteristics which can exacerbate education exclusion, such as age, geography, poverty, disability, ethnicity, indigeneity, language, religion, and migration or displacement status. Addressing the overlapping differences that create disadvantage and marginalization can help to build more inclusive and equitable education systems.Achieving gender equality in and through education is essential for inclusive education and inclusive societies. It is key to the achievement of the United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and in particular Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 4 on ensuring the right to inclusive and equitable quality education and lifelong learning and SDG 5 on gender equality. In any country’s context, this means ensuring all learners have equal access to all levels of education, equal educational pathways and equal opportunities to apply the outcomes of their education. A world where inclusion and gender equality in and through education is achieved allows girls and boys, women and men and non-binary people to have equal rights and opportunities to education and the power and agency to shape their lives and futures.This brief discusses how gender equality impacts learners’ inclusion and the ways in which gender equality and inclusion are interconnected in education. Promoting gender equality in education Année de publication: 2009 Auteur institutionnel: UNESCO Kathmandu This publication was originally designed in 2003 when the Gender in Education Network in Asia-Pacific (GENIA) was established. Few gender in education resources were available at that time, and until the 2006 version, documents were mainly intended to be used by GENIA members, who are representatives (gender focal points) from ministries of education in the Asia-Pacific region. GENIA members have been using the Toolkit to sensitize and train their national counterparts ever since. However, the Toolkit has not only been distributed and used by gender focal points, but also by other people who have heard about GENIA, and/or who were interested in the resource materials published by UNESCO Bangkok. For this reason, the Toolkit has been accessible via the UNESCO Bangkok website1 since 2006. As a result, anyone searching the Web for information on gender equality can easily access the Toolkit. This fourth edition of the Toolkit, thus, expands the scope of the target audience. The content has likewise been adapted accordingly in order to meet the needs of all who could potentially access it. The Toolkit also integrates existing information and tools designed by other national or international organizations dedicated to promoting and providing training on gender equality in education and other sectors. Further information from these sources is obtained by consulting the references section at the end of the Toolkit. The Toolkit is designed as a user-friendly resource. As such, a matrix is provided on pages 4 and 5 to indicate each tool’s potential for use, based on its relevance to each prospective user group. Still, every tool will have relevance to many contexts or situations and, therefore, we encourage you to make use of all the materials by adapting them to your country context. At a club for teenage girls in Sierre Leone, 18-year-old Mbalu leads by example Année de publication: 2014 Auteur: Nerina Penzhorn Teenage pregnancy is one of the most pervasive social problems in Sierra Leone today - more than one third of all pregnancies involve teenage girls. UNICEF, in collaboration with the NGO BRAC, is tackling this complex issue through a simple idea -- providing a place where teenage girls enjoy hanging out while they have training in life skills, gain valuable knowledge and access mentoring from peers. Mbalu Bumbuya, 18, a mentor at one such club for adolescent girls called 'the Wharf Club', is changing lives with her passion to teach and motivate her peers. "I tell them how to protect themselves so that they can excel in life," she says. "And I encourage them not to drop out of school." The club has also helped Mbalu stay focused on her education. Educating the next generation of a Madagascar family Année de publication: 2015 Auteur institutionnel: United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) One million. That’s how many children are out of school in Madagascar. However, Lantonirina, 11, is focused on finishing school and dreams of becoming a teacher: "I don't plan to marry very early because I want to continue my studies.” Lantonirina’s mother and sister were both married as adolescents and had to leave school so she is determined to break the cycle. From Where I Stand: A Gender Equality Project for the Global Goals; Project Briefing Auteur institutionnel: United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) This project enables you to think about and contribute to encouraging women and girls to have equal opportunities to be heard and to have real opportunities to participate in all political, economic and public spheres.