In the journey of evolving our Centre of Excellence on gender and social inclusion, Children Believe’s India team is moving forward in its agenda, digging deep for lasting solutions to COVID-19’s challenges. Our focus in breaking barriers to education through partnerships has shaped our trajectory.
What did education in 2021 look like for the most marginalized in India?
A prolonged school closure kept children out of schools completely for the pandemic, compounding learning challenges — such as child marriage, child labour and poverty — that existed before the pandemic.
A World Bank study estimates large-scale school closures and the economic recession caused by COVID-19 are likely to increase the loss of learning by 63 percent, with an estimated additional 72-million primary school-age children falling into this category. The study affirms almost 1.2-billion schoolchildren are affected by school closures.
What’s more, many education sector experts say the pandemic has reversed gains to the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals, a global strategy to create a better world for everyone. Many fear we may not regain lost time to meet these goals by the 2030 target.
But, the world knows this is no time to give up.
To address this unprecedented challenge, governments and key stakeholders are shifting their priorities to ensure remote education programs keep children learning.
That’s harder than it seems.
UNICEF research estimates 31 percent of schoolchildren globally (or 463 million) cannot access broadcast- and Internet-based remote learning, due to the digital divide. More specifically, the three out of four students globally who can’t reach remote learning come from rural areas, and/or belong to poor households.
Evidence-based research confirms education innovation is essential
With this in mind, Children Believe released a research study addressing the impact of COVID-19 school closures on learning among children from marginalized communities in two southern states of India. Our goal was to drive change using evidence-based research.
Our results confirmed children, particularly the poor and marginalized, are most affected by the pandemic. Here’s what we learned about children from these communities:
- 85 percent lacked access to digital technology
- 82 percent lacked a conducive home environment for studying
- 77 percent of girls supported their parents in household chores, impeding learning
- 50 percent of girls faced protection issues and abuse
These findings led Children Believe’s India team to dig deeper. It led to the background information for two policy briefs — one on the need for a learning-loss assessment and the second on promoting a literate environment at home and in communities.
We were compelled to share these learnings with a larger stakeholders group through a webinar on the impact of COVID-19 on learning among children. Nearly 200 delegates from 12 countries, representing 86 organizations participated and many echoed the need to recover and reshape learning from the lens of gender and inclusion.
So, we didn’t stop there. We shared the findings of our study through the United Nations ECOSOC Partnership Forum’s online consultation for a larger discussion. Research was gathered from key stakeholders globally for potential use in their consultation report about building back better after the pandemic. Children Believe was one of the 240+ submissions used for this comprehensive report.