Difference between revisions of "MODFL/Mainstream/Potential"
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| − | Earlier in this unit, you read about alarming UNESCO (UIS) statistics on number of children and youth who are out of school (59 million children of primary school age, 62 million of lower secondary school age and 138 million of upper secondary age<sup>11</sup>). You also read about the extent of youth unemployment in the different regions of the world, a problem that is getting worse in many countries. This problem is also linked to the challenge of low participation in school by girl children, which you have just read about above. The traditional brick-and –mortar model for providing education cannot address the problem of access to education, neither can it provide enough training to redress | + | Earlier in this unit, you read about alarming UNESCO (UIS) statistics on number of children and youth who are out of school (59 million children of primary school age, 62 million of lower secondary school age and 138 million of upper secondary age<sup>11</sup>). You also read about the extent of youth unemployment in the different regions of the world, a problem that is getting worse in many countries. This problem is also linked to the challenge of low participation in school by girl children, which you have just read about above. The traditional brick-and –mortar model for providing education cannot address the problem of access to education, neither can it provide enough training to redress the growing problem of youth unemployment. Open schooling has great potential to reach more learners and provide more resilient education systems in more cost-effective ways than the traditional brick and mortar model. As Kanwar observes, existing open schooling initiatives in developing contexts in Africa, Asia, the Caribbean and the Pacific, as well as in developed contexts such as Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the United Kingdom, clearly demonstrate that it is possible not only to open the doors of learning for all, but to keep them open even under the most trying circumstances, (Kanwar, (2020)<sup>12</sup> . It can be demonstrated that an integrated schooling system, with physical, distance and online learning components, can be both more resilient and more inclusive, (COL, 2020)<sup>13</sup> . To achieve universal primary and secondary education by 2030, there is a compelling reason for developing countries to mainstream open schooling. |
| − | possible not only to open the doors of learning for all, but to keep them open even under the most trying circumstances, (Kanwar, (2020)<sup>12</sup> . It can be demonstrated that an integrated schooling system, with physical, distance and online learning components, can be both more resilient and more inclusive, (COL, 2020)<sup>13</sup> . To achieve universal primary and secondary education by 2030, there is a compelling reason for developing countries to mainstream open schooling. | + | |
Latest revision as of 06:34, 22 April 2024
Earlier in this unit, you read about alarming UNESCO (UIS) statistics on number of children and youth who are out of school (59 million children of primary school age, 62 million of lower secondary school age and 138 million of upper secondary age11). You also read about the extent of youth unemployment in the different regions of the world, a problem that is getting worse in many countries. This problem is also linked to the challenge of low participation in school by girl children, which you have just read about above. The traditional brick-and –mortar model for providing education cannot address the problem of access to education, neither can it provide enough training to redress the growing problem of youth unemployment. Open schooling has great potential to reach more learners and provide more resilient education systems in more cost-effective ways than the traditional brick and mortar model. As Kanwar observes, existing open schooling initiatives in developing contexts in Africa, Asia, the Caribbean and the Pacific, as well as in developed contexts such as Australia, Canada, New Zealand and the United Kingdom, clearly demonstrate that it is possible not only to open the doors of learning for all, but to keep them open even under the most trying circumstances, (Kanwar, (2020)12 . It can be demonstrated that an integrated schooling system, with physical, distance and online learning components, can be both more resilient and more inclusive, (COL, 2020)13 . To achieve universal primary and secondary education by 2030, there is a compelling reason for developing countries to mainstream open schooling.