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ADEA BIENNALE (Libreville, Gabon, 28

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UNESCO Institute for Education www.unesco.org/education/uie ... ADEA BIENNALE (Libreville, Gabon, 28 31 March ... Persisting relapse into illiteracy (30-80 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ADEA BIENNALE (Libreville, Gabon, 28


1
ADEA BIENNALE (Libreville, Gabon, 28 31 March
2006)Changes and trends new representations
of literacy
  • Adama Ouane
  • Director
  • UNESCO Institute for Education

2
1. Present State and Prospects of Literacy
Policies Programmes in Africa Critical Review
Innovative Approaches
  • What is the reality revealing to us?
  • Illiteracy is high, even growing (140 million)
  • 18 out of 25 countries with more than 50
    illiteracy rate are in Africa
  • Growing dichotomies and disparities
  • Literacy rate between 30 and 90
  • Female literacy rate between 20 and 90
  • Drop-out rate between 15 and 80
  • Youth/Adults
  • Urban/Rural

3
1. Present State and Prospects of Literacy
Policies Programmes in Africa Critical Review
Innovative Approaches
  • How many are really literate? -- Overall low
    educational achievements and school life
    expectancy (10 to 75)?
  • Persisting relapse into illiteracy (30-80)
  • Lack of literacy practices and conducive
    environment

4
1. Present State and Prospects of Literacy
Policies Programmes in Africa Critical Review
Innovative Approaches
  • Yet there are achievements in literacy in Africa
  • The overall literacy rates have doubled since
    1970
  • Gender parity index has risen from 0,45 to 0,75
  • Growing demands for literacy
  • High population countries have all literacy rates
    over 60
  • New requirements for another literacy / growing
    changing demand for literacies
  • Challenges of globalisation, knowledge economy
    and ICT

5
2. The Ruptures, Conditions Factors for
Effective Literacy Programmes
  • 2.1 Main Challenge in Literacy Policies
  • Lifelong learning for sustainable development
  • Democratization
  • Gender Perspective
  • HIV/AIDS Challenge
  • Conflicts Prevention
  • Linguistic Cultural Policies
  • Decentralization

6
2. The Ruptures, Conditions Factors for
Effective Literacy Programmes
  • 2.2 Trends Factors affecting Grassroots
    Programmes
  • Orientation on Demands
  • Responding to Demands
  • Focus on Capabilities
  • Outsourcing
  • Recognition and Validation of different Learning
  • Inter-sectoral Coordination

7
2. The Ruptures, Conditions Factors for
Effective Literacy Programmes
  • 2.3 Conducive Literate Environment
  • Fruitful Interaction between Literacy,
    Development and Democracy
  • Language Cultural Policies
  • Linkages between Formal and NFE
  • Inter-Sectoral Approaches Collaboration

8
2. The Ruptures, Conditions Factors for
Effective Literacy Programmes
  • 2.4 Institution Building
  • Capacity-Building Programmes
  • Capitalisation
  • Resourcing
  • Funding
  • Partnership Mobilization
  • Cost-Effective Strategies

9
3. Some Innovative Approaches
  • REFLECT Learning for empowerment, participation
    and community ownership
  • ABET Life skills, professionalisation, income
    generation, access to world of work, etc.
  • FAIRE-FAIRE Outsourcing Strategies New
    distribution of roles, new partnerships,
    expression of new demands
  • ARED Identity affirmation, making of literate
    communities, emergence of new demands needing
    literacy transactions

10
3. Some Innovative Approaches
  • PEDAGOGY OF THE TEXT Critical approach and
    transformative learning for greater access to
    power and claim for self reliance
  • ABEP/ACED (Botswana, Namibia) Focus on
    continuing learning strategies and articulation
    and compelementarity between formal and non
    formal education and training systems
  • NQF (National Qualifications Framework)
    Mechanism for recognition, validation and
    accreditation of different kinds of learning

11
4. New trends
  • Diversification of supply and demand
  • Priority to women and gender (from women and
    development to women in development and gender
    perspective)
  • Focus on adolescent and young people bridging
    with formal and non formal learning and training
    systems
  • Targeting groups with special needs
  • Linkages between learning programmes and social
    and productive sectors
  • Participatory methods
  • Competence based curricula and modular approaches
    (Botswana, Namibia)
  • Conducive learning environment

12
5. Positive Effects
  • Community participation and support
  • Adaptation of programmes to local levels and
    needs
  • Greater potential for expansion
  • Close monitoring and supervision

13
6. Conditions needed for success
  • Operational tools for empowerment and
    accountability involving community participation
  • National qualifications framework with key
    competencies and skills with equivalency and
    bridges between formal, non formal and informal
  • Effective monitoring and evaluation methods

14
7. Challenges Prospects
  • Understanding Literacies
  • For what?
  • For whom?
  • Literacy as a foundational skill for lifelong
    learning
  • Literacy/Schooling/Languages
  • Learning from good practices and failures

15
7. Challenges Prospects
  • Mainstreaming literacy in International Agendas
    (MDG, FTI, NEPAD, etc.)
  • How to get out of the ghetto?
  • How to make literacy attractive to
  • Learners
  • Communities/Municipalities
  • Private Providers/Operators
  • Governments
  • Bilateral and Multilateral Agencies
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