| GLOBAL ACTION WEEK FOR EDUCATION 
 | 
| 26 April to 30 April – The week will focus on more and 
better financing for education, in-line with the policy framing of the One 
Billion Voices campaign. Actions and activities undertaken during the week 
will be focused on securing an increase in the public financing of education to 
ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning 
opportunities for all. The GCE movement jointly developed a policy call to 
action for the campaign and GAWE will work towards the achievement of the 
policy recommendations as set out in that document, from which the topline 
recommendations for governments are to:
 
Increase 
state funding for education to 20% of public expenditure.
Increase 
their tax base in order to increase resources, working towards a minimum 
tax-to-GDP ratio of 20%.
Enable 
urgent debt cancellation for the least developed countries; and Debt alleviation 
for middle and upper-middle-income countries.
Ensure 
inclusive education systems through equitable financing and programmes that 
prioritise the most marginalised.
Provide 
free quality education for all and end the trend towards the privatization and 
commercialization of education.
Improve 
the quality of teaching through adequate recruitment, remuneration and continued 
teacher training.
Listen 
and respond to the voices of those affected. Space must be allowed for 
individuals and civil society to speak up.
Developed 
countries must continue to work towards the goal of 0.7% overseas aid, with 20% 
of this spent on education, and increasing their contributions to the Global 
Partnership for Education and Education Cannot Wait.   Read more here, including 
actions you can take.    | 
| HUMAN RIGHT TO 
EDUCATION | 
| Human Right to education: horizons and meanings in the 
post-pandemic magazine from CCNGO CG elected member CLADE. Includes numerous 
think pieces from Latin American NGOs on education & the pandemic with 
particular focus on: What next?; Inequalities; Educators and teachers; 
Privatization; Finance; Human right violations; Social pact for education 
https://redclade.org/wp-content/uploads/alem_551_en.pdf   | 
| SOLIDARITY ACTIONS | 
| From CCNGO CG member Liaison Committee: Solidarity 
actions to share the voices of the most vulnerable and to understand the 
changing situations on the ground
 From the outset of the global pandemic in 
March 2020, eight NGO-UNESCO partners: Make Mothers Matter, The 
International Federation of Business and Professional Women,  
International Catholic Cooperation Center for 
UNESCO, The Association 
Montessori Internationale, World Organization 
for Early Childhood Education and Care, International Fellowship of 
Reconciliation, International 
Movement ATD Fourth World, South 
Asia Foundation decided to collaborate, together with their local 
associations, in solidarity actions to share the voices of the most 
vulnerable and to understand the changing situations on the ground.
 The 
exchanges on the Facebook solidarity pages opened on all continents via the 
Internet have rapidly enabled interconnection between local associations and 
reliable feedback to international NGOs.
 Faced with this unprecedented 
health, economic, social, cultural and humanitarian crisis:
 What major 
challenges do local populations face?
 To what extent is civil society 
mobilised?
 What concrete consequences of the crisis should be considered when 
defining future post-COVID priorities?
 The project report that you can 
read 
and download here provides some food for thought in 
response to these questions.
 Based on real situations, experienced by 
people on different continents and spontaneous initiatives created to fight the 
pandemic and protect the weakest, this project of solidarity between NGO-UNESCO 
partners lies within the UNESCO framework and its shared values (Read article on the UNESCO 
website).
 This contribution is based on the 
conviction that the indispensable reconstruction of "living together" will be 
impossible without strengthening civil society partnerships, particularly 
with local NGOs, to meet the populations' specific needs and to work towards 
building a more peaceful and just world. Website : https://www.reseausolidariteong.com/
 | 
| POWER AND ACTION OF YOUTH 
VIDEO | 
| Watch this short 
documentary focusing on the power and action of 
youth, developed in the framework of a partnership that bridges the justice and 
education sectors to guide young people towards building strong, just and 
democratic societies.
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| ENABLING TEACHERS, EMPOWERING 
GIRLS | 
| The role of teachers in continuing girls’ engagement with 
learning, supporting the most marginalized to catch up when they return to 
school, and creating safe, inclusive environments, is more important than ever. 
Equally important is the need to focus on supporting teachers and their 
professional development, bearing in mind the stressors that teachers themselves 
may be facing due to COVID-19 and as schools re-open.
 The UK’s Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office 
Girls’ Education Challenge recently launched a Quality Teaching Framework which outlines factors that determine quality teaching 
for marginalized, adolescent girls.
 Adolescence is a key moment during which 
marginalized girls may face increased health, social and protection challenges, 
which can put their education at risk.
 
 The Framework is a tool to help practitioners and 
policy-makers working with marginalized girls to think through and adapt their 
approaches to teacher professional development, including organisation and 
delivery, content and support mechanisms.
 | 
| GLOBAL SKILLS ACADEMY UPGRADES GIRLS’ AND WOMEN’S 
EMPLOYABILITY SKILLS | 
| The Global Skills Academy (GSA) continues to work towards 
its mission of helping young people build employability skills and resilience, 
with more than 23,000 women and girls in 22 countries receiving access to the 
GSA’s contributions as of February 2021. 
 The GSA offers high-quality free online trainings to 
respond to the growing consequences of COVID-19 on skills development and youth 
employment around the world, with a priority focus on the least developed 
countries. Women and girls are among those who have been affected the most by 
the crisis, which has resulted in economic recession and unprecedented 
disruptions in the labour market and halted skills development.
 
 Training opportunities cover a variety of areas 
including digital, entrepreneurial and leadership skills and are provided in 
various languages including English, French and Spanish, targeting not only 
students, young job seekers and entrepreneurs, but also education professionals 
such as teachers, trainers, instructional designers and administrative 
personnel. As part of UNESCO’s efforts to cater to different context-specific 
skills needs, beneficiaries are identified with the help of the 
global UNEVOC network to 
ensure relevant matching the demand and supply.
 
 GSA’s current courses providers include members such 
as Coursera, Dior, Festo, Huawei, IBM, Microsoft, Orange Digital Centres, PIX, 
and Telefonica. International Organizations such as ILO, OECD, UNITAR, ITU and 
WHO will also contribute to the GSA including through skills needs mapping, 
monitoring tools and resources.
 | 
| E-EVENTS THIS WEEK | 
| Below some of events for a full list, please visit the events’ 
page. 18 March:  From 8-22 March: Talking 
Across Generations (TAG): Ethics of Artificial Intelligence event on 
Facebook 24 March 9:00 am to 10:30 am EST (New York) : 
Gender Flagship Event – Girls and women: 
Leading the charge to ensure #LearningNeverStops  Register here or follow the 
event on UNWebTV | 
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| This weekly update is published by UNESCO Education. 
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