The global learning crisis and what to do about it Amel Karboul

I’m the product
of a bold leadership decision.

After 1956, when Tunisia
became independent,

our first president, Habib Bourguiba,

decided to invest 20 percent
of the country’s national budget

in education.

Yes, 20 percent,

on the high end of the spectrum
even by today’s standards.

Some people protested.

What about infrastructure?

What about electricity,
roads and running water?

Are these not important?

I would argue

that the most important
infrastructure we have are minds,

educated minds.

President Bourguiba helped establish
free, high-quality education

for every boy and every girl.

And together with millions
of other Tunisians,

I’m deeply indebted
to that historic decision.

And that’s what brought me here today,

because today, we are facing
a global learning crisis.

I call it learning crisis
and not education crisis,

because on top of
the quarter of a billion children

who are out of school today,

even more, 330 million children,

are in school but failing to learn.

And if we do nothing,

if nothing changes,

by 2030, just 13 years from now,

half of the world’s children and youth,

half of 1.6 billion children and youth,

will be either out of school
or failing to learn.

So two years ago,
I joined the Education Commission.

It’s a commission brought together
by former UK Prime Minister

and UN Special Envoy
for Global Education Gordon Brown.

Our first task was to find out:

How big is the learning crisis?

What’s actually the scope of the problem?

Today we know:

half of the world’s children by 2030

will be failing to learn.

And that’s how actually we discovered

that we need to change the world’s focus
from schooling to learning,

from just counting
how many bodies are in classrooms

to actually how many are learning.

And the second big task was,

can we do anything about this?

Can we do anything
about this big, vast, silent,

maybe most-neglected international crisis?

And what we found out is, we can.

It’s actually amazing.

We can, for the first time,

have every child in school and learning

within just one generation.

And we don’t even have to really
invent the wheel to do so.

We just need to learn
from the best in class,

but not any best in class –

the best in your own class.

What we did is actually
we looked at countries by income level:

low-income, mid-income, high-income.

We looked at what the 25 percent
fastest improvers in education do,

and what we found out is

that if every country moves
at the same rate as the fastest improvers

within their own income level,

then within just one generation

we can have every child
in school and learning.

Let me give you an example.

Let’s take Tunisia for example.

We’re not telling Tunisia,
“You should move as fast as Finland.”

No disrespect, Finland.

We’re telling Tunisia,

“Look at Vietnam.”

They spend similar amounts
for primary and secondary pupils

as percentage of GDP per capita,

but achieves today higher results.

Vietnam introduced a standardized
assessment for literacy and numeracy,

teachers in Vietnam are better monitored
than in other developing countries,

and students' achievements
are made public.

And it shows in the results.

In the 2015 PISA –

Program for International
Student Assessment –

Vietnam outperformed
many wealthy economies,

including the United States.

Now, if you’re not an education expert,

you may ask, “What’s new and different?

Don’t all countries track student progress
and make those achievements public?”

No. The sad answer is no.

We are very far from it.

Only half of the developing countries

have systematic learning assessment
at primary school,

and even less so
at lower secondary school.

So if we don’t know

if children are learning,

how are teachers supposed to focus
their attention on delivering results,

and how are countries supposed
to prioritize education spending

actually to delivering results,

if they don’t know
if children are learning?

That’s why the first big transformation

before investing

is to make the education system
deliver results.

Because pouring more money
into broken systems

may only fund more inefficiencies.

And what deeply worries me –

if children go to school and don’t learn,

it devalues education,

and it devalues spending on education,

so that governments
and political parties can say,

“Oh, we are spending
so much money on education,

but children are not learning.

They don’t have the right skills.

Maybe we should spend less.”

Now, improving current
education systems to deliver results

is important, but won’t be enough.

What about countries where
we won’t have enough qualified teachers?

Take Somalia, for example.

If every student in Somalia
became a teacher –

every person who finishes
tertiary education became a teacher –

we won’t have enough teachers.

And what about children in refugee camps,

or in very remote rural areas?

Take Filipe, for example.

Filipe lives in one
of the thousands of communities

alongside the Amazonas rivers.

His village of 78 people has 20 families.

Filipe and a fellow student

were the only two
attending grade 11 in 2015.

Now, the Amazonas is a state
in the northwest of Brazil.

It’s four and a half times
the size of Germany,

and it’s fully covered
in jungle and rivers.

A decade ago, Filipe
and his fellow student

would have had just two alternatives:

moving to Manaus, the capital,
or stopping studying altogether,

which most of them did.

In 2009, however, Brazil passed a new law

that made secondary education
a guarantee for every Brazilian

and an obligation for every state
to implement this by 2016.

But giving access
to high-quality education,

you know, in the Amazonas state,
is huge and expensive.

How are you going to get, you know,
math and science and history teachers

all over those communities?

And even if you find them,

many of them would not want to move there.

So faced with this impossible task,

civil servants and state officials

developed amazing creativity
and entrepreneurship.

They developed the media center solution.

It works this way.

You have specialized,
trained content teachers in Manaus

delivering classroom via livestream

to over a thousand classrooms
in those scattered communities.

Those classrooms have five to 25 students,

and they’re supported
by a more generalist tutoring teacher

for their learning and development.

The 60 content teachers in Manaus

work with over 2,200 tutoring teachers
in those communities

to customize lesson plans
to the context and time.

Now, why is this division

between content teacher
and tutoring teacher important?

First of all, as I told you,
because in many countries,

we just don’t have
enough qualified teachers.

But secondly also because
teachers do too many things

they’re either not trained for
or not supposed to do.

Let’s look at Chile, for example.

In Chile, for every doctor,

you have four and a half people,

four and a half staff supporting them,

and Chile is on the low end
of the spectrum here,

because in developing countries,
on average, every doctor

has 10 people supporting them.

A teacher in Chile, however,

has less than half a person,

0.3 persons, supporting them.

Imagine a hospital ward
with 20, 40, 70 patients

and you have a doctor
doing it all by themselves:

no nurses, no medical assistants,

no one else.

You will say this is
absurd and impossible,

but this is what teachers are doing
all over the world every day

with classrooms of 20, 40, or 70 students.

So this division between content
and tutoring teachers is amazing

because it is changing
the paradigm of the teacher,

so that each does what they can do best

and so that children
are not just in school

but in school and learning.

And some of these content teachers,

they became celebrity teachers.

You know, some of them run for office,

and they helped raise
the status of the profession

so that more students
wanted to become teachers.

And what I love about this example

is beyond changing
the paradigm of the teacher.

It teaches us how we can harness
technology for learning.

The live-streaming is bidirectional,

so students like Filipe and others
can present information back.

And we know technology
is not always perfect.

You know, state officials expect

between five to 15 percent
of the classrooms

every day to be off live-stream

because of flood, broken antennas
or internet not working.

And yet, Filipe is one
of over 300,000 students

that benefited from
the media center solution

and got access to postprimary education.

This is a living example

how technology is not just an add-on

but can be central to learning
and can help us bring school to children

if we cannot bring children to school.

Now, I hear you.

You’re going to say,

“How are we going to implement this
all over the world?”

I’ve been in government myself

and have seen how difficult it is
even to implement the best ideas.

So as a commission,
we started two initiatives

to make the “Learning
Generation” a reality.

The first one is called
the Pioneer Country Initiative.

Over 20 countries from Africa and Asia

have committed to make
education their priority

and to transform their education
systems to deliver results.

We’ve trained country leaders

in a methodology
called the delivery approach.

What this does is basically two things.

In the planning phase,
we take everyone into a room –

teachers, teacher unions,
parent associations,

government officials, NGOs, everyone –

so that the reform
and the solution we come up with

are shared by everyone
and supported by everyone.

And in the second phase,

it does something special.

It’s kind of a ruthless
focus on follow-up.

So week by week you check,

has that been done,
what was supposed to be done,

and even sometimes sending a person
physically to the district or school

to check that versus
just hoping that it happened.

It may sound for many common sense,

but it’s not common practice,

and that’s why actually many reforms fail.

It has been piloted in Tanzania,

and there the pass rate
for students in secondary education

was increased by 50 percent
in just over two years.

Now, the next initiative
to make the Learning Generation a reality

is financing. Who’s going to pay for this?

So we believe and argue

that domestic financing has to be
the backbone of education investment.

Do you remember when I told you
about Vietnam earlier

outperforming the United States in PISA?

That’s due to a better education system,

but also to Vietnam
increasing their investment

from seven to 20 percent
of their national budget in two decades.

But what happens if countries
want to borrow money for education?

If you wanted to borrow money
to build a bridge or a road,

it’s quite easy and straightforward,

but not for education.

It’s easier to make a shiny picture
of a bridge and show it to everyone

than one of an educated mind.

That’s kind of a longer term commitment.

So we came up with a solution

to help countries escape
the middle income trap,

countries that are not poor enough
or not poor, thankfully, anymore,

that cannot profit from grants
or interest-free loans,

and they’re not rich enough

to be able to have attractive
interests on their loans.

So we’re pooling donor money
in a finance facility for education,

which will provide
more finance for education.

We will subsidize,
or even eliminate completely,

interest payments on the loans

so that countries that commit to reforms

can borrow money,

reform their education system,
and pay this money over time

while benefiting
from a better-educated population.

This solution has been recognized
in the last G20 meeting in Germany,

and so finally today
education is on the international agenda.

But let me bring this back
to the personal level,

because this is where the impact lands.

Without that decision
to invest a young country’s budget,

20 percent of a young country’s
budget in education,

I would have never
been able to go to school,

let alone in 2014

becoming a minister in the government

that successfully ended
the transition phase.

Tunisia’s Nobel Peace Prize in 2015

as the only democracy
that emerged from the Arab Spring

is a legacy to that bold
leadership decision.

Education is the civil rights struggle,

it’s the human rights struggle
of our generation.

Quality education for all:

that’s the freedom fight
that we’ve got to win.

Thank you.

(Applause)


是一个大胆的领导决定的产物。

1956 年突尼斯
独立后,

我们的第一任总统哈比卜·

布尔吉巴决定将
国家预算的 20%

用于教育。

是的,即使按照今天的标准,也有 20%

处于频谱的高端

有人抗议。

基础设施呢?

电力、
道路和自来水呢?

这些不重要吗?

认为我们拥有的最重要的
基础设施是思想,

受过教育的思想。

布尔吉巴总统帮助为每个男孩和每个女孩建立了
免费、高质量的教育

与数
百万其他突尼斯人一起,


对这一历史性决定深表感激。

这就是今天把我带到这里的

原因,因为今天,我们正
面临全球学习危机。

我称其为学习危机
而不是教育危机,

因为除了今天失学
的 10 亿儿童之外

,还有

更多的 3.3 亿

儿童在上学但没有学习。

如果我们什么都不做,

如果什么都不改变,

到 2030 年,也就是从现在起 13 年后,

世界上一半的儿童和青年,

即 16 亿儿童和青年中的一半

,要么失学,
要么无法学习。

所以两年前,
我加入了教委。

这是一个
由英国前首相


联合国全球教育特使戈登·布朗召集的委员会。

我们的首要任务是找出:

学习危机有多大?

问题的实际范围是什么?

今天我们知道:

到 2030 年,世界上一半的儿童

将无法学习。

这就是我们实际上

发现我们需要将世界的焦点
从学校教育转变为学习,

从仅仅计算
教室里

有多少人到实际有多少人在学习。

第二个大任务是,

我们能对此做些什么吗?

对于这场巨大的、巨大的、无声的、

也许是最被忽视的国际危机,我们能做些什么吗?

我们发现,我们可以。

这真的很神奇。

我们第一次

可以让每个孩子都

在一代人的时间内上学和学习。

我们甚至不必真正
发明轮子来做到这一点。

我们只需
要向班里最好的学习,

但不是班上最好的——

你自己班里最好的。

我们所做的实际上是
按收入水平观察国家:

低收入、中等收入、高收入。

我们研究了教育进步最快的 25% 的人

了什么,我们

发现如果每个国家的进步
速度都与本国收入水平上进步最快的人的速度相同

那么在一代人之内,

我们就可以让每个孩子
都上学 和学习。

让我给你举个例子。

让我们以突尼斯为例。

我们不是在告诉突尼斯,
“你应该像芬兰一样快速行动。”

没有不尊重,芬兰。

我们告诉突尼斯,

“看看越南”。

他们
为中小学生花费的金额与

人均 GDP 的百分比相似,

但如今取得了更高的成绩。

越南引入
了识字和算术的标准化评估

,越南的教师比其他发展中国家受到更好的监控

,学生的成绩
被公开。

它显示在结果中。

在 2015 年 PISA(

国际学生评估计划)中,

越南的表现优于包括美国
在内的许多富裕经济体

现在,如果您不是教育专家,

您可能会问:“有什么新的和不同的

?不是所有国家都跟踪学生的进步
并公开这些成就吗?”

不,可悲的答案是否定的。

我们离它很远。

只有一半的发展中国家

在小学进行了系统的学习评估,
在初中

就更少了

因此,如果我们不

知道孩子们是否在学习,

教师应该如何将
注意力集中在交付成果上

,如果国家不知道孩子们是否在学习,他们应该
如何将教育支出

实际放在交付成果上

这就是为什么投资前的第一个重大转变

是让教育系统
取得成果。

因为将更多的钱
投入到损坏的系统中

可能只会导致更多的低效率。

让我深感担忧的是——

如果孩子上学不学习,

就会贬低教育

,贬低教育支出,

所以政府
和政党可以说,

“哦,我们
在教育上花了这么多钱,

但孩子们没有在学习。

他们没有合适的技能。

也许我们应该少花钱。”

现在,改善当前的
教育系统以取得成果

很重要,但还不够。

那些
我们没有足够合格教师的国家呢?

以索马里为例。

如果索马里的每个学生都
成为老师——

每个完成
高等教育的人都成为老师——

我们将没有足够的老师。

那么难民营

或偏远农村地区的儿童呢?

以菲利普为例。

Filipe 生活

在亚马逊河沿岸的数千个社区之一。

他村78人,有20户人家。

Filipe 和一个同学

是 2015 年仅有的两个
11 年级学生。

现在,亚马逊河是
巴西西北部的一个州。


的面积是德国的四倍半,

完全
被丛林和河流所覆盖。

十年前,菲利普
和他的

同学只有两个选择:

搬到首都马瑙斯,
或者完全停止学习,

他们中的大多数人都这样做了。

然而,在 2009 年,巴西通过了一项新法律

,规定中等教育
是每个巴西人的保障,

每个州都有义务在
2016 年之前实施。

但是
,在亚马逊州,提供高质量教育的机会

是巨大的 并且昂贵。

你将如何在这些社区中找到
数学、科学和历史

老师?

即使你找到他们,他们中的

许多人也不想搬到那里。

因此,面对这个不可能完成的任务,

公务员和国家官员

发挥了惊人的创造力
和企业家精神。

他们开发了媒体中心解决方案。

它以这种方式工作。


在 Manaus 拥有受过专业培训的内容教师,

通过直播

向分散社区的 1000 多个
教室授课。

这些教室有 5 到 25 名学生

,他们
得到了更通才的辅导老师的支持,以

促进他们的学习和发展。

Manaus 的 60 名内容教师

与这些社区的 2,200 多名辅导教师
合作,

根据
具体情况和时间定制课程计划。

现在,为什么

内容教师
和辅导教师之间的这种划分很重要?

首先,正如我告诉你的,
因为在许多国家,

我们没有
足够的合格教师。

但其次也是因为
教师做了太多

他们没有受过训练
或不应该做的事情。

让我们以智利为例。

在智利,每个

医生都有四个半人,

四个半工作人员支持他们,

而智利在这里处于
低端,

因为在发展中国家
,平均每个医生

都有 10 个人支持他们 .

然而,智利的一名教师

只有不到半个人,即

0.3 人在支持他们。

想象一个有 20、40、70 名患者的医院病房

而您有一名医生
独自完成所有工作:

没有护士、没有医疗助理,

没有其他人。

你会说这是
荒谬和不可能的,

但这就是全世界教师每天

在 20、40 或 70 名学生的课堂上所做的事情。

所以内容和辅导教师之间的这种划分
是惊人的,

因为它正在改变
教师的范式,

所以每个人都做他们能做的最好的事情

,这样孩子
们不仅在学校,

而且在学校和学习中。

而其中一些内容老师,

他们成为了名人老师。

你知道,他们中的一些人竞选公职

,他们帮助提高
了这个职业的地位,

让更多的学生
想成为老师。

我喜欢这个例子

的原因不仅仅是改变
老师的范式。

它教会我们如何利用
技术进行学习。

直播是双向的,

因此像 Filipe 和其他人这样的学生
可以返回信息。

我们知道技术
并不总是完美的。

你知道,州官员预计

每天有 5% 到 15%
的教室

因为洪水、天线损坏
或互联网无法工作而停止直播。

然而,Filipe
是超过 300,000

名受益
于媒体中心解决方案

并获得小学后教育的学生之一。

这是一个活生生的

例子,技术不仅是一个附加组件,

而且可以成为学习的核心,如果我们不能让孩子上学
,它可以帮助我们为孩子们

带来学校。

现在,我听到了。

你会说,

“我们将如何
在全世界实施?”

我自己也曾在政府工作

,亲眼目睹了
即使是实施最好的想法也是多么困难。

因此,作为一个委员会,
我们启动了两项举措,

以使“学习
一代”成为现实。

第一个被
称为先锋国家倡议。

来自非洲和亚洲的 20 多个国家

已承诺将
教育作为优先事项,

并转变其教育
系统以取得成果。

我们

用一种称为交付方法的方法对国家领导人进行了培训

这基本上是两件事。

在规划阶段,
我们把每个人都带进一个房间——

教师、教师工会、
家长协会、

政府官员、非政府组织、每个人——


我们提出的改革和解决方案

被大家分享,
得到大家的支持。

在第二阶段,

它做了一些特别的事情。

这是
对后续行动的无情关注。

因此,您每周都检查

是否已完成,
应该做什么,

甚至有时会派人
亲自到学区或

学校检查,而不是
仅仅希望它发生。

对于很多人来说,这听起来可能是常识,

但这不是普遍的做法

,这就是为什么实际上许多改革都失败了。

它已在坦桑尼亚进行试点

,在短短两年多的时间里
,中学学生的通过

率提高了 50%

现在,
使学习一代成为现实的下一个举措

是融资。 谁来为此买单?

因此,我们认为并

认为国内融资必须
成为教育投资的支柱。

你还记得我
早些时候告诉你越南

在 PISA 中的表现优于美国吗?

这是由于更好的教育体系,

也是由于越南在 20 年内
将其投资

从国家预算的 7% 增加到 20
%。

但是,如果各国
想借钱教育怎么办?

如果你想
借钱修桥或修路,

这很容易和直接,

但不是为了教育。

制作一张闪亮
的桥梁图片并将其展示给每个人

比一个受过教育的人更容易。

这是一种更长期的承诺。

所以我们想出了一个解决方案

来帮助国家
摆脱中等收入陷阱,这些

国家还不够贫穷
或不贫穷,谢天谢地,这些国家

再也无法从赠款
或无息贷款中获利,

而且他们还不够富裕,

无法成为 能够获得有吸引力
的贷款利息。

因此,我们将捐赠资金集中
在一个教育融资设施中,


将为教育提供更多资金。

我们将补贴
甚至完全取消

贷款的利息支付,

以便致力于改革的国家

能够借钱、

改革其教育体系,
并随着时间的推移支付这笔钱,

同时受益
于受过更好教育的人口。

这一解决方案已
在上届德国 G20 会议上得到认可

,因此今天
教育终于被提上了国际议程。

但让我把它带
回到个人层面,

因为这就是影响的所在。

如果没有
决定投资一个年轻国家的预算,一个年轻国家预算的

20%
用于教育,

我将
永远无法上学,

更不用说在 2014 年

成为

成功
结束过渡阶段的政府部长。

突尼斯在 2015 年获得诺贝尔和平奖,

作为
从阿拉伯之春中出现的唯一民主国家,

是这一大胆
领导决定的遗产。

教育是民权斗争,是我们

这一代人的人权斗争

全民素质教育:


是我们必须赢得的自由斗争。

谢谢你。

(掌声)