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The latest numbers show that some 24 million
children will never enter a classroom with girls remaining the most
disadvantaged in the study. In South and West Asia alone, 80 per cent of
out-of-school girls are unlikely to start school compared to just 16 per cent
for their male counterparts.
Global Education Targets at Risk Amid Surge in Out-of-School Numbers - UN
Report – Girls’ Education
6 July 2015 – The number of out-of-school children and
adolescents around the world has risen to worrying levels, dealing a potential
blow to education targets aimed at achieving universal primary and secondary
education, a new United Nations report has warned.
According to the study
released today by the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) and the Education
for All Global Monitoring Report (EFR GMR), 124 million children and adolescents
are now out of school while international aid to education continues to remain
below 2010 levels.
In addition, the latest numbers show that some 24 million
children will never enter a classroom with girls remaining the most
disadvantaged cohort figuring in the study. In South and West Asia alone, 80
per cent of out-of-school girls are unlikely to start school compared to just
16 per cent for their male counterparts.
In a press release accompanying the report's publication,
UNESCO's Director General, Irina Bokova, pointed to warnings that unless
countries “make serious commitments” towards increasing education aid, the
ambitious targets made by the international community promising 12 years of
free and equitable access to quality education “could remain elusive for
millions of children and youth.”
The problem of education funding is of particular
concern, the study adds. Despite a six per cent increase in aid to education,
investment levels are four per cent lower today than in 2010 and risk stagnating
for the next few years.
“Aid needs to be shooting upwards, not creeping up by a
few percentage points,” declared Aaron Benavot, Director of the EFA GMR. “The
world just set itself the huge goal of providing 12 years of free education.
This simply won't happen unless donors get serious about funding.”
Estimates suggest that it will cost an extra $39 billion
to provide the 12 years of education to everyone in low and lower-middle income
countries. In order to fill this shortfall, however, UNESCO and EFA GMR note
that donor countries must increase their aid to education six-fold.
“The Oslo Summit on Education for Development and the
Third Financing for Development Conference in Addis Ababa next month present a
real test of donor commitment,” Mr. Benavot continued. “Without it, targets and
promises for progress are unlikely to be met.”