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Effective Literacy Policies & Programs ADEA Biennial 2006 27-31 March 2006 Libreville, Gabon

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Effective Literacy Policies & Programs ADEA Biennial 2006 27-31 March 2006 Libreville, Gabon. ADEA Working Group on Non Formal Education. Structural Issue. The structure of the ADEA Biennial highlighted some of the dichotomies debated in our sessions Children v/s adults - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Effective Literacy Policies & Programs ADEA Biennial 2006 27-31 March 2006 Libreville, Gabon ADEA Working Group on Non Formal Education
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Page 1: Effective Literacy  Policies & Programs ADEA Biennial 2006 27-31 March 2006 Libreville, Gabon

Effective Literacy Policies & Programs

ADEA Biennial 200627-31 March 2006Libreville, Gabon

ADEA Working Group on

Non Formal Education

Page 2: Effective Literacy  Policies & Programs ADEA Biennial 2006 27-31 March 2006 Libreville, Gabon

Structural Issue

The structure of the ADEA Biennial highlighted some of the dichotomies debated in our sessions

Children v/s adultsFormal education v/s non formal educationEffective schools v/s effective literacy

It was recommended that future Biennials should reconsider this conventional classification

Page 3: Effective Literacy  Policies & Programs ADEA Biennial 2006 27-31 March 2006 Libreville, Gabon

Human rights Issue

Literacy is both a human right and a prerequisite for socio-economic development as expressed in national and international conventions (EFA, MDGs).

Recommendation: Ministers of Education and their development partners in ADEA should take a leadership role of ensuring that literacy is firmly established as a priority and given unambiguous visibility in policies such as those of the AU, NEPAD, PRSPs, National Educational Plans etc.

Page 4: Effective Literacy  Policies & Programs ADEA Biennial 2006 27-31 March 2006 Libreville, Gabon

Knowledge society

From literacy to the knowledge society

Literacy is a prerequisite for entering into the information society and for the future knowledge society.

From a literate society – information society – knowledge society

Page 5: Effective Literacy  Policies & Programs ADEA Biennial 2006 27-31 March 2006 Libreville, Gabon

A LITERATE SOCIETY IS A PREREQUISITE A LITERATE SOCIETY IS A PREREQUISITE FOR FOR

AN INFORMATION AND A KNOWLEDGE AN INFORMATION AND A KNOWLEDGE SOCIETYSOCIETY

LITERATELITERATESOCIETYSOCIETY

INFORMATIONINFORMATIONSOCIETYSOCIETY

KNOWLEDGE KNOWLEDGE SOCIETYSOCIETY

LITERACY AND LIFELONG LEARNING

Page 6: Effective Literacy  Policies & Programs ADEA Biennial 2006 27-31 March 2006 Libreville, Gabon

Diversity

There is a need to draw on the diversity of social partners (central, local government and civic organisation e.g. faith based and community based associations, NGOs, private sector, grassroots organisations) learners, resources, modes of management of programs, contexts for effective literacy programs.

Page 7: Effective Literacy  Policies & Programs ADEA Biennial 2006 27-31 March 2006 Libreville, Gabon

A conducive literate environment• Providing neo-literates opportunities of using their

acquired literacy skills• Literacy skills are not only use of reading but also of

writing and numeracy skills in support of enhanced livelihoods and active citizenship, including gender equality

• A literate environment offers reading materials, and provides synergies with other communication media (radio, TV, IT)

• It promotes local and indigenous knowledge (art, orality, language, traditional medicine etc.)

Recommendation: Immediate steps be taken to work at all levels to promote such an environment

Page 8: Effective Literacy  Policies & Programs ADEA Biennial 2006 27-31 March 2006 Libreville, Gabon

Language

The various options and the adoption and implementation of language policies are part of an ongoing debate.

Recommendations:

- Strong support for publication in African languages

- Promote use of African languages in pedagogy, official documents and spaces

Page 9: Effective Literacy  Policies & Programs ADEA Biennial 2006 27-31 March 2006 Libreville, Gabon

Literacy programmes must be intersectoral

• Eradicating illiteracy implies eradicating poverty which means sound pro-poor economic policies

• Therefore many sectors need to converge with education to ensure minimal learning and living conditions of the population (e.g. health, agriculture labour, welfare, etc).

• The budgets of various sectors should contribute to the delivery of literacy programmes

Page 10: Effective Literacy  Policies & Programs ADEA Biennial 2006 27-31 March 2006 Libreville, Gabon

The gap between discourse & practice

Too many decades/declarations and recurrent discourse, so little effective implementation.

Recommendation: more focus and support for implementation

Page 11: Effective Literacy  Policies & Programs ADEA Biennial 2006 27-31 March 2006 Libreville, Gabon

REDUCED GOALS, EXPANDED TIMEFRAMES

Paradox of International Development Trends

Basiceducation

(basiclearningneeds of all) Primary

education(4 years)

P

2000-2015Millennium

DevelopmentGoals

1990-2000-2015Education

for All

Page 12: Effective Literacy  Policies & Programs ADEA Biennial 2006 27-31 March 2006 Libreville, Gabon

Literacy is a prerequisite for economic and human development

Literacy is not part of the MDG agenda but is part of the EFA

Even if the MDGs do not mention adult literacy, it is evident that literacy is essential for achieving all other goals.

Recommendation: Investing in literacy and adult basic education will impact on all MDGs

Page 13: Effective Literacy  Policies & Programs ADEA Biennial 2006 27-31 March 2006 Libreville, Gabon

Financial resources Indicators/benchmarks provide indications

on elements of costs and impact of investment in literacy

Recommendations:

• Increase financial commitment by government and aid agencies

• There needs to be a sustained budget allocation for adult literacy.

Page 14: Effective Literacy  Policies & Programs ADEA Biennial 2006 27-31 March 2006 Libreville, Gabon

Financing & costs

Countries are setting up new financing strategies and partnerships

Recommendation: Partnerships and strategies should be established between government and new partners including the private sector and local actors to expand possibilities for resource mobilization.

Page 15: Effective Literacy  Policies & Programs ADEA Biennial 2006 27-31 March 2006 Libreville, Gabon

Financing & costs

Literacy’s core function in achievement of the MDGs and Quality Education for all, it should be at parity with UPE in funding mechanisms such as FTIRecommendation: Strong demand that the Fast Track Initiative actively becomes an EFA initiative and goes beyond its current restricted vision. It should include benchmarks on adult literacy as well as UPE to guide policy dialogue and assessment.

Page 16: Effective Literacy  Policies & Programs ADEA Biennial 2006 27-31 March 2006 Libreville, Gabon

Tension between theory and practice

Effective and Promising Programs in several areas (policies and strategies , capacity building in adult education, mobilization and management of funds, mobilization of partnerships, development of indicators of the right to education) were presented.

Recommendation: More case studies/promising practices be shared and analysed in future ADEA Biennials

Page 17: Effective Literacy  Policies & Programs ADEA Biennial 2006 27-31 March 2006 Libreville, Gabon

Linkages between NFE & FE

What does NFE have to offer formal education?• NFE has been practiced on a more experimental basis

(flexibility, diversity, context etc.) it can improve the quality and relevance of the formal education system.

Recommendation: the benefits of NFE should be accessed by FE

• However the issue was once again raised that the term “non-formal education” was confusing especially if we wish to address education and training within a lifelong learning perspective.

Recommendation: It was proposed once again that this terminology be revisited.

Page 18: Effective Literacy  Policies & Programs ADEA Biennial 2006 27-31 March 2006 Libreville, Gabon

indigenous knowledge and culture

The importance of acknowledging knowledge that exists within

• Individual

• Community

• Country

• Region

Page 19: Effective Literacy  Policies & Programs ADEA Biennial 2006 27-31 March 2006 Libreville, Gabon

National/regional qualification frameworks

Allow:

• Linkages between NFE and FE

• Validation of learning

• Bridges and ladders for learners

• Mechanisms for Recognition of Prior Learning

• Accreditation for learners

Page 20: Effective Literacy  Policies & Programs ADEA Biennial 2006 27-31 March 2006 Libreville, Gabon

SustainabilityLiteracy should be seen as a continuous process that requires sustained learning and application

Recommendations: - Focus on long term programs and

sustained investments.

- Build and adequately support a professional human resource base.

Page 21: Effective Literacy  Policies & Programs ADEA Biennial 2006 27-31 March 2006 Libreville, Gabon

1. Early Childhood

2. School children

3. Youth

4. Adults

5. Gender equity

  6. Improving quality

Page 22: Effective Literacy  Policies & Programs ADEA Biennial 2006 27-31 March 2006 Libreville, Gabon

Political will

Not only a matter of resources

but of effective advocacy, strategic partnerships and political will


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