Resource A Proof-of-Concept Study of Can’t Wait to Learn: A Digital Game-Based Learning Program for Out-of-School Children in Lebanon Reflecting on the feasibility of ed tech solutions for out-of-school children, authors Jasmine S. Turner, Karine Taha, Nisreen Ibrahim, Koen I. Neijenhuijs, Eyad Hallak, Kate Radford, Hester Stubbé-Alberts, Thomas de Hoop, Mark J.D. Jordans, and Felicity L. Brown report significant effects on numeracy and self-esteem among 390 children in Lebanon who took part in a digital game-based intervention.
Resource The Role of Technical and Vocational Education in Social Reintegration: Insights from Colombian Ex-Combatants Authors Maria Paulina Arango-Fernández and Stephanie Simmons Zuilkowski share insights from 20 Colombian ex-combatants engaged in TVET. They find that some forms of TVET may support social cohesion while other forms reinforce exclusion, but few TVET experiences addressed ex-combatants’ feelings of stigmatization. They recommend pairing TVET with economic support to encourage reintegration.
Resource Landscape Analysis of Early Childhood Development and Education in Emergencies Authors Liliana Angélica Ponguta, Kathryn Moore, Divina Varghese, Sascha Hein, Angela Ng, Aseel Fawaz Alzaghoul, Maria Angélica Benavides Camacho, Karishma Sethi, and Majd Al-Soleiti uncover root causes behind low ECD access in EiE settings: low prioritization across sectors, little systematic mapping of the institutional and programmatic landscape, and limited consensus on strategic advocacy.
Resource Beyond Numbers: The Use and Usefulness of Data for Education in Emergencies Authors Elizabeth Buckner, Daniel Shephard, and Anne Smiley examine how EiE professionals use data and what makes data “useful” to them. While global-level actors emphasized strategic data uses and local-level actors, operational uses, respondents at all levels elaborated on nontechnical factors (e.g., the politics of data) that influence the availability and perceived usefulness of EiE data.
Blog الإعلان عن نشر مجلة التّعليم في حالات الطوارئ ، المجلد 8 ، العدد 1 يقدّم هذا العدد من مجلة التعليم في حالات الطوارئ (JEiE) مراجعة لمجموعة واسعة من المعضلات التي تواجه مجال التعليم في حالات الطوارئ (EiE). يوفر بيانات قابلة للتّنفيذ جنبًا إلى جنب مع رؤى لتحسين الرفاهية ونتاجات التّعلم بين الأطفال في حالات الصّراع والأزمات
Blog Announcing JEiE Volume 8, Number 1! This issue of the Journal on Education in Emergencies (JEiE) offers a review of a broad range of dilemmas facing the field of education in emergencies (EiE). It provides actionable data along with insights for improving wellbeing and learning outcomes among children in conflict and crisis settings.
Blog ¡Anunciamos el Volumen 8, Número 1, de la JEiE! Este número del Journal on Education in Emergencies (JEiE) ofrece una revisión de una amplia gama de dilemas a los que se enfrenta la educación en situaciones de emergencia (JEiE). Proporciona datos útiles junto con ideas para mejorar el bienestar y los resultados del aprendizaje entre los niños, niñas y adolescentes en situaciones de crisis y conflicto.
Blog Anúncio da Revista sobre EeE Volume 8, Número 1! Esta edição da Revista sobre Educação em Situações de Emergência (JEiE, na sigla em inglês) oferece análises de uma vasta gama de dilemas enfrentados na área da educação em situações de emergência (EeE). A publicação oferece dados acionáveis juntamente com insights para melhorar o bem-estar e os resultados da aprendizagem entre as crianças em situações de conflito e crise.
Resource Editorial Note: Journal on Education in Emergencies Volume 8, Number 1 In this editorial note, JEiE Editor-in-Chief Dana Burde and Senior Managing Editor Heddy Lahmann introduce the key themes, trends, and novel contributions to evidence on education in emergencies offered in JEiE Volume 8, Number 1.
Blog Disruptions to schooling: Lessons from refugee experience in Lebanon NYU-TIES researchers have found that Syrian refugee children who were older than expected for their grade level had poorer executive functioning, behavioral regulation, literacy, and numeracy skills than children who were a typical age for their grade. How to tackle this problem? TIES researchers have recommendations for policymakers, practitioners and researchers.