Title: Global Education Initiative
1Global Education Initiative GK3 Partnerships i
n Education A Step Forward 13 December 2007
Kuala Lumpur
2World Economic Forum
Working to improve the state of the world by
engaging leaders in partnerships to shape
the global, regional, and industry agenda
Objective of the Global Education Initiative
Raise awareness and support the implementation of
relevant, sustainable, and scalable national
education sector plans on global level through
catalysing Multi-Stakeholder Partnerships, in
particular, through increased engagement of the
private sector
3GEI Approach
The GEI mission will be achieved by building
country multi-stakeholder education partnership
(MSPE) models, socializing on a global platform,
and facilitating the adoption MSPE approaches on
a global scale.
Build
Socialize
Scale
Country initiatives in Jordan (2003), Palestine
(2005 on hold), Rajasthan (2005), Egypt (2006),
to develop multi-stakeholder partnership models
in education (MSPE) in a variety of working
environments
1
2
Partnerships for Education (with UNESCO) to scan,
synthesize, advocate and propagate MSPE best
practices on a global scale
Current GEI Workstreams
Global Alliance to mobilize senior political
leadership through the development of
relationships between key education bilateral
donors (Fast Track Initiative) and private
sector, with potential launch of pilot in FTI
country
3
Special research/though leadership on relevant
education related topics (e.g. entrepreneurship
and education, education competitiveness index,
etc)
4
2007
2008
2003
4Birth of the Global Education Initiative
Country initiatives have been launched in Jordan,
Rajasthan, and Egypt to develop working models of
multi-stakeholder partnerships in education.
Additional project launched in the Palestinian
Territories (June 2005) currently on hold
5Country Partnership ModelProgram Management and
Governance
The Country Partnership model ensures that local
government, private sector, and civil society
take ownership of the overall programme and
implementation.
Executive Board
Steering Board
Advisory Board
Program Management Office (PMO)
Track 1
Track 2
Track 3
Track 4
- Key PMO roles include overall coordination of
- Work planning processes
- Communication processes
- Change management
- Monitoring and evaluation
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9GEI Country Model (1/4)Overall Framework
Result of Tom Cassidy assessment of the GEI
model
10GEI Model (2/4)Overall Framework
11GEI Model (3/4) Lessons Learned
- Multi-stakeholder partnerships initiatives can be
very effective in supporting ongoing education
reforms and in adding value to the activities and
public images of participating partners. - To be successful, multi-partner initiatives must
be very well and systemically managed.
- To be successful, leadership and management teams
must include a balanced representation of
educators, ICT experts and representatives of all
types of partners. - Changing what goes on in schools, and
particularly changing teaching practices in
classrooms, is a much more complex and
challenging undertaking that is going to take
more time than partners often believe. It is
critically important to give such initiatives
sufficient opportunity to achieve their results. - Teachers and principals are at the heart of the
change process and must be involved actively in
their design and implementation.
- Sustained partner involvement, particularly of
the many private sector partners and some donor
and lending agency partners, should not be taken
for granted. There needs to be active management
of the partnership arrangements if these
initiatives are to be successful. - Monitoring and evaluation, and considerations of
scaling-up and sustaining current initiatives
must be given much greater attention in all such
initiatives
12GEI Model (4/4) Promising Practices
- High level championing of the initiative from a
senior figure within each country or state has
been an essential element of its success,
ensuring that there is appropriate buy-in at all
levels, and that the initiatives have been given
the necessary publicity to contribute to their
acceptance and success. - An important feature of the GEI model is the role
of the Project Management Office/Unit in managing
and directing the initiatives. Although
different in form in each of the initiatives, an
effective management unit has been an essential
ingredient of their success. - A state or national steering committee, working
independently, but in concert with an
international steering committee, has been seen
to provide more timely decision support to the
local initiative management team than might
otherwise have been possible - The organization of initiative activities into
tracks, as is the case in all three initiatives,
has proven to be a very effective way to organize
the various activities involved in the delivery
the educational change program. - A careful plan including an outline of the
resources required successfully to implement it
can contribute to effective identification,
recruitment and participation of initiative
partners. - The establishment of an Initiative Trust Fund,
giving management a degree of discretionary
control over how some resources are allocated, is
a valuable mechanism to ensure that timely
interventions are possible. - Activities that provide public sector employees
with opportunities to work in private sector
settings can contribute to shifts in
organizational culture, notably work ethics and
habits.
13Partnerships for Education (PfE)
- Achievements and Objectives
- New partnerships
- Agreement signed with UNESCO January 2007
- The lead agency for delivering the Education for
All goals
- Technical Advisory Groups (TAGs) launched to
provide expert oversight and guidance on all PfE
workstreams
- Meta-review and portal/database for knowledge
sharing on MSPEs
- Models and toolkits of good practice and
delivery
- With new partner groups
- To be launched at Davos 2008
- Supporting scaleable implementation
- Working with partners to help implement global
educational agendas in 2008/2009
14PfE Timeline
15Global Alliance
Achievements and Objectives
- Joint press release issued by World Economic
Forum and UNESCO on May 2 on the occasion of
Keeping Our Promises in Education conference
announcing development of a new alliance
including private sector (AMD, Cisco, Intel,
Microsoft, HP, Goldman Sachs) and the Fast Track
Initiative secretariat to develop a new
coordinated approach for international
collaboration in education reform within the Fast
Track Initiative (FTI) framework - Key bi-lateral donors engaged to date Canada,
European Commission, Germany, Netherlands,
Norway, UK, USA
- Intent is to announce this new coordinated
multi-stakeholder approach in a set of FTI pilots
in 2008
16Going Forward
- Engage GKP into the PfE Technical Advisory Group
on MSPE Capacity Building/Global Coordination
(Outputs 5 and 6)
17Going Forward
- Engage GKP into the PfE Technical Advisory Group
on MSPE Capacity Building/Global Coordination
(Outputs 5 and 6)
- Explore the possibility of engaging GKP members
as a contributor (and more?) to the PfE database
on MSPEs
18Going Forward
- Engage GKP into the PfE Technical Advisory Group
on MSPE Capacity Building/Global Coordination
(Outputs 5 and 6)
- Explore the possibility of engaging GKP members
as a contributor (and more?) to the PfE database
on MSPEs
- Explore the possibility of engaging civil society
into the Global Alliance Fast Track Initiative
pilots
19Going Forward
- Engage GKP into the PfE Technical Advisory Group
on MSPE Capacity Building/Global Coordination
(Outputs 5 and 6)
- Explore the possibility of engaging GKP members
as a contributor (and more?) to the PfE database
on MSPEs
- Explore the possibility of engaging civil society
into the Global Alliance Fast Track Initiative
pilots
- Explore with the GKP secretariat the possibility
of holding a joint Forum/Unesco/GKP/? workshop on
MSPEs in 2008