2/12/2005
Huge Challenges Remain In Achieving Education For All
Significant
progress has been made towards achieving Education for All,
but huge challenges remain to be overcome
if the objectives
set by the world's nations five years ago are to be achieved.
UNESCO Director-General Koïchiro Matsuura told yesterday's
opening session in Beijing of the Fifth Meeting of the High Level
Group on Education for All (EFA), that even though the goal of
achieving gender parity by 2005 had been missed, more girls were
in school than ever before. Now the challenge is to halve adult
illiteracy by 2015 - one of the Millennium Development Goals.
Some 20 million new students are attending classes in low-income
countries in sub-Saharan Africa, South and West Asia, and national
spending on basic education as well as external aid to EFA have
also risen, Mr Matsuura said.
But unless current trends improve, gender parity "may not
be achieved by 2015 in as many as 86 countries." Moreover,
18 per cent of the world's adults were still illiterate, and
it was also clear that the quality of basic education remained
low and would not lead to meaningful learning outcomes unless
tackled with renewed vigour, he added.
The UNESCO chief welcomed the pledge by Chinese Premier Wen
Jiabao, who opened the meeting, substantially to increase China's
contribution to education development throughout the world
so as to accelerate
progress toward the EFA goals.
Mr. Wen pledged to train 1,500 teachers from developing countries
annually over the next three years, donate 100 experimental rural
schools to developing countries over the same time, and increase
the number and value of scholarships and university places for
students from developing countries to 10,000 annually.
He also promised to increase financial support for developing
countries hit by natural disasters and to grant $1 million in
aid to pertinent research and training projects undertaken by
UNESCO's International Institute for Capacity-Building in Africa
and the UNESCO International Centre for Girls and Women's Education
in Africa.
This year's meeting, bringing together ministers of education,
co-operation and development, the donor community and other intergovernmental
and non-governmental organisations, will focus on the goal of
halving adult illiteracy by 2015. It will also work on a Joint
Action Plan to stimulate action on the EFA goals and to offer
better and more concrete support at the national level to achieve
them.