Education of Syrian Refugee Children: Managing the Crisis in Turkey, Lebanon, and Jordan

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Shelly CulbertsonLouay Constant
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RAND Corporation
ISBN
ISBN 978-0-8330-9239-7
ํ˜•ํƒœ์‚ฌํ•ญ
xviii, 95 p.
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์˜์–ด์•„๋ž์–ด
๋ฐœํ–‰ ์—ฐ๋„
2015
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Refugees and migrantsMarginalized childrenEducational policy

With four million Syrian refugees as of September 2015, there is urgent need to develop both short-term and long-term approaches to providing education for the children of this population. This report reviews Syrian refugee education for children in the three neighboring countries with the largest population of refugees โ€” Turkey, Lebanon, and Jordan โ€” and analyzes four areas: access, management, society, and quality. Policy implications include prioritizing the urgent need to increase access to education among refugees; transitioning from a short-term humanitarian response to a longer-term development response; investing in both government capacity to provide education and in formal, quality alternatives to the public school systems; improving data in support of decisionmaking; developing a deliberative strategy about how to integrate or separate Syrian and host-country children in schools to promote social cohesion; limiting child labor and enabling education by creating employment policies for adults; and implementing particular steps to improve quality of education for both refugees and citizens.