Webinar

What will it take to achieve transformative change for out of school children and youth?

Organized by
Accelerated Education Working Group (AEWG)
Inter-agency Network for Education in Emergencies (INEE)
,
University of Aukland
7 September 2022, 1:00pm - 2:15pm
UTC
Topic(s):
Accelerated Education Program (AEP)
English

INEE and the Accelerated Education Working Group (AEWG) are thrilled to share a new publication, which explores opportunities and challenges to institutionalizing Accelerated Education programmes (AEPs) into national education systems.  To launch this publication, we invite you to join us for a webinar that will focus on research undertaken in Colombia, Jordan, Nigeria, Pakistan, and Uganda.

[WEBINAR] What will it take to achieve transformative change for out-of-school children and youth?

Wednesday, 7 September 2022, 13:00-14:15 UTC
(time zone converter)

To register, click the link below:
https://rescue.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_x9-2pZC8Q-GpptQ7QuLQpQ 

(After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the web event.)
N.B. This web event will be conducted in English with closed captioning in English.

The need for viable, alternative, and accelerated pathways to enable learners to re-engage with education is more important than ever. 

The Accelerating Change for Children and Youths’ Education through Systems Strengthening (ACCESS) research project, is a collaborative endeavor between the University of Auckland and the INEE AEWG and is funded through the Evidence for Education in Emergencies (E-Cubed) research envelope supported by Dubai Cares. In the first year of the project, researchers in Colombia, Uganda, Nigeria, Jordan, and Pakistan investigated the political economy of Accelerated Education (AE) education provision for out-of-school children and youth (OOSCY), with particular attention to the funding, provision and regulation of such programs.  

Particular attention was given to  identifying what it would take to achieve the type of systemic change necessary for OOSCY to have educational opportunities that are available, accessible, adaptable and acceptable. The research found that current approaches to funding, provisioning and regulating such programs is often insufficient if the aim is to ensure that all over-aged and out of school learners have access to quality AE programs.    In this webinar, members of the research team, alongside representatives from the AEWG, reflect on the implications of these findings on their efforts to date and moving forward.

Panelists:

  • Dr. Ritesh Shah, Principal Investigator for ACCESS, University of Auckland
  • Ana Maria Restrepo, Child Protection and Education Specialist and ACCESS Researcher for Colombia
  • Chima Egbujo, NIgeria Educational Research and Development Council and ACCESS Researcher for Nigeria
  • Martha Hewison, Coordinator of AEWG, INEE
  • Kathryn Cooper, Education and Learning Advisor, Save the Children
  • Rachel Cooper, Education Specialist, UNICEF
  • Emila Sorrentino, Education in Emergencies Advisor, PLAN

If you have any questions about the web event, contact sonja.anderson@inee.org.