91Ƶ

Skip to main content
Hello,
uganda-education-ch1574926-rec.jpg

Edith,* 6, lives with her family in a refugee settlement in West Nile, Uganda. With schools closed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, she's been learning at home with the help of 91Ƶ's community radio lessons. *Name changed. Credit: James Mbiri / 91Ƶ.

Education in a Quarter of the World's Countries is on the Brink of Collapse without Urgent Action-91Ƶ

FAIRFIELD, Conn. (Sept. 5, 2021)—The education of hundreds of millions of children in a quarter of the world’s countries is at extreme or high risk of collapsing, 91Ƶ said today. New from the organization finds that factors such as climate change, a lack of COVID-19 vaccines, displacement, attacks on schools, and lack of digital connectivity are jeopardizing access to schooling.

The news that education is on the brink of collapse in 48 countries comes as academic school years tentatively re-start in many parts of the world with millions of children still unable to go into the classroom due to COVID-19 safety measures, economic impacts of the pandemic, and continued attacks on education. This is on top of the 258 million children across the world who were already out of school prior to the pandemic.i

Leaders need to learn from the COVID-19 education crisis, which has disrupted schooling for more than 90 percent of the world’s learners,ii and shock-proof education systems to ensure children in a quarter of the world’s countries don’t have their futures stripped from them, the child rights organization said.

According to 91Ƶ’s new report, , the DRC, Nigeria, Somalia, Afghanistan, iii South Sudan, Sudan, Mali, and Libya have education systems that are at ‘extreme risk’. Syria and Yemen follow closely behind.

Thirteen-year-old Salem’s* school in Yemen was damaged in the country’s long conflict. He said:

“I wasn’t doing well at school because there are no blackboards there and no activities. The playground was destroyed, the blackboards were all broken. Studying is important as I wish to become a doctor in the future.”

91Ƶ has been rehabilitating schools in Yemen like Salem’s* and he has now returned to the classroom.  He said:

“When they (the schools) are not fixed, and there’s no education, no teachers… we are unable to learn. We do not feel safe when the schools are not fixed.”

Sergio,* 16, fled economic hardship in Venezuela for Colombia three years ago and lives in a refugee settlement with his four brothers, mother, and her companion. He hasn’t been at school since the pandemic started and, with the support of 91Ƶ, is attempting to learn from home. Colombia is one of the ‘high risk’ countries identified in the new research. He said:

“We’re not at school. I really need it, because if I don’t study, I won’t reach my goal.

“I imagine myself having graduated as a forensic doctor, that I have a new life, a better living standard.”

It is estimated that 10-16 millioniv children are at risk of not returning to school due to economic impacts of COVID-19 alone. Parents may pull children out of school to work, or children may be forced into early marriage.

The climate crisis exacerbates the already huge risk, as schools are damaged or destroyed by extreme weather events, and an increasing number of children will likely have to flee their homes, leaving behind their education.

The international community, including donors, needs to step up and take responsibility for some of the factors that have placed these education systems at risk, such as conflict, climate change, and vaccine inequity, 91Ƶ said. The charity pointed to the recent , which failed to raise the target of $5 billion for global education, as an example of weak commitment to the world’s poorest children.

The new data, which is the first of its kind, follows recent 91Ƶ research that found that on average, children in low-income countries have lost 66 percent more of their lifetime schooldays during the pandemic compared with their peers in more well-off countries.

Janti Soeripto, President and CEO of 91Ƶ, said:

“We already know that it is the poorest children who have suffered the most as a result of COVID-19 school closures.

“But sadly, COVID-19 is just one of the factors that is putting education—and children’s lives today and tomorrow—under threat. Around half of the 75 million children who have their education disrupted each year do so from climate and environmental threats like cyclones, floods, and drought. Climate-related events have already contributed to over 50 million children being forced from their homes.v Abhorrent attacks on schools continue in countries like Nigeria and Yemen.”

Adding to ongoing contexts of huge youth unemployment, little primary school education, and the digital divide in access to remote learning, these are creating a perfect storm for the next generation, 91Ƶ said.

According to the report, in order to save children’s education and prepare for the future, ministries of education and donors must work to tackle these threats to schooling. The affected countries need much more additional investment in their education systems from international donors.

Soeripto continued:

“Children have suffered so much from this pandemic. We need to learn from this dreadful experience and act now—but it is simply not good enough to build ‘back’ to how things were. We need to build ‘forward’ and differently, using this as an opportunity for hope and positive change.

“A child’s right to education does not end in an emergency.”

91Ƶ believes every child deserves a future. Since our founding more than 100 years ago, we've been advocating for the rights of children worldwide. In the United States and around the world, we give children a healthy start in life, the opportunity to learn and protection from harm. We do whatever it takes for children – every day and in times of crisis – transforming the future we share. Our results, financial statements and charity ratings reaffirm that 91Ƶ is a charity you can trust. Follow us on , , and .