Tuesday, December 5, 2017

Lack of accountability risks jeopardizing progress, says
UNESCO
New Delhi, 4 December On the 4
th
December 2017, UNESCO New Delhi hosted the
National Launch of UNESCO’s 2017/8 Global Education Monitoring (GEM) Report:
Accountability in education: meeting our commitments, followed by a Panel discussion. Mr.
Shigeru Aoyagi, Director and UNESCO Representative
 gave the welcome address and Mr. Shailendra Sigdel UIS Statistical Advisor
moderated the Panel discussion, while Ms Satoko Yano, Chief of Education, shared the
highlights of the GEM report findings. The imminent panelists included Ms Avani Kapur,
Director, Accountability Initiative, Centre for Policy Research and Dr Shamika Ravi of
Brookings India. The media Q&A session was moderated by Mr Rajiv Chandran, UNIC
Officer-in-Charge.
The event was attended by over 100 participants, which included experts, academicians,
researchers, teachers, media, NGOs, as also other UNESCO partners working in the field of
education.
UNESCO’s 2017/8 Global Education Monitoring (GEM) Report highlights the
responsibility of all education stakeholders primarily government to provide universal
quality education and stresses that accountability is indispensable in achieving the goal of
Sustainable Development on Education. The Report, warns that disproportionate blame on
any one actor for systemic educational problems can have serious negative side effects,
widening inequality and damaging learning.
“With millions of children still not going to school, and many not achieving minimum
proficiency levels at school, indicates that education systems are not on track,” says Mr
Shigeru Aoyagi, Director and UNESCO Representative. “The 2017/18 GEM Report shows
the entire array of approaches to accountability in education and provides clear evidence on
those accountability tools that are working and those that are not.
Accountability in education: meeting our commitments he second in the GEM Report
series, which monitors progress towards the internationally agreed Sustainable Development
Goal for Education (SDG4), looks at the different ways people and institutions can be held
accountable for reaching that goal, including regulations, testing, monitoring, audits, media
scrutiny, and grass root movements.
“Education is a shared responsibility between us all– governments, schools, teachers,
parents and private actors,” said former UNESCO Director-General Irina Bokova.
“Accountability for these responsibilities defines the way teachers teach, students learn, and
governments act. It must be designed with care and with the principles of equity, inclusion
and quality in mind.”
Whereas transparency would help identify problems, only one in six governments publish
annual education monitoring reports globally. Strong independent bodies such as
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