Más que 30 education experts from Creative Associates International will share case studies on delivering quality education in complex environments from Afghanistan, Mozambique, Nigeria and Zambia, entre otros países, at the annual Sociedad de Educación Comparada e Internacional (CIES) conference in Mexico City.
The March 25 a 29 CIES conference will bring together thousands of educators, policymakers and practitioners in international education to exchange ideas and present on the latest research and experiences from the field.
El 2018 conference theme “Re-Mapping Global Education: South-North Dialogue” aims to emphasize the importance of global South-North dialogue and South-South collaboration.
Earl Gast, Senior Vice President of Education for Development and Economic Growth at Creative, says that by sharing best practices from language mapping in conflict-affected, multilingual settings like Afghanistan to shaping early grade reading policies in northern Nigeria, Creative’s education experts can offer lessons that may help address education challenges in other regions.
“This year’s CIES theme speaks to the importance of capturing knowledge and experiences from a wide geographical area," dice Gast. “To transform learning in complex and challenging environments, collaboration among education experts from the global North and South is needed.”
Gast says Creative’s experts will focus on approaches, innovations and measuring results.
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For regular updates from CIES 2018, visit Creative’s Special Report page, as well as live updates via Twitter: @1977Creativo y #CIES2018.
Para consultar la programación completa del CIES de Creative 2018 paneles, incluyendo panelistas, horarios y lugares, hacer clicaquí. Además de las sesiones de panel, pasar por el stand 54 interactuar con expertos en educación y aprender más sobre los proyectos globales de Creative.
Understanding the multilingual context
From Mozambique to Afghanistan, Creative’s education experts will share their expertise at CIES in supporting local and national efforts to implement effective multilingual education programs.
Creative’s Senior Associate forSistemas de instrucción y gobernanza, Corrie Blankenbeckler, along with nine panelists from American Institutes for Research, OSC Education, Educación Mundial, University of Cambridge, Planet Aid and ADPP Mozambique, will present on the panel “Mythbusters: Aspirations vs. Reality for Language of Instruction in Mozambique.” It is scheduled for March 26 de 8 a 9:30 soy.
Blankenbeckler says being able to read and interact with text in local languages is significant for young learners, especially in the Mozambique multilingual context.
“In the classroom setting, Los niños necesitan comprender completamente lo que les comunica su maestro., especialmente en los primeros grados,"dice Blankenbeckler. “In Mozambique, students lack literacy skills because there’s a disconnect between the language of students speak at home and in the community, y el idioma de instrucción, Portuguese.”
El programa financiado por USAID leamos! (leamos! en portugues) supports the Mozambican government to improve the reading and writing skills of children in first, segundo y tercer grado a través de materiales de alfabetización en idiomas locales. El programa apoya simultáneamente las habilidades del lenguaje oral en portugués para preparar a los estudiantes para la transición de sus idiomas locales al idioma nacional en el grado. 4.
Creative’s Chief of Party for the Los niños afganos leen proyecto, Mamdouh Fadil; USAID Contracting Officer, Alim Ghafary; and Afghanistan Ministry of Education representative, Attaullah Wahidyar, will present on the CIES conference panel: “Four Sides of the Same Coin: Facets of Early Grade Reading Material Development and Delivery in Afghanistan.» It is scheduled for March 27 de 6:45 to p.m.
El programa financiado por USAID Los niños afganos leen project works to ensure quality education service delivery through an evidence-based early grade reading program in four provinces throughout Afghanistan.
In collaboration with the Ministry of Education, the multilingual education project has distributed more than 314,070 teaching and learning materials in Pashto and Dari languages, providing some 188,500 early grade students in Afghanistan the opportunity to improve their reading skills.
Improving education in complex environments
Along with highlighting a multilingual education approach, Creative’s education experts will share lessons learned in delivering basic education to conflict-affected countries.
Más que 30 percent of school-aged children in northern Nigeria do not have access to basic education. This is attributed to a combination of factors, including cultural attitudes, lack of educational facilities and insecurity as a result of the Boko Haram insurgency.
de USAID Proyecto Iniciativa de Educación del Norte Plus aims to address these challenges by improving access and quality of education for more than 2 million school-aged children and youth in two northern state: Bauchi and Sokoto.
Creative’s Senior Reading Specialist, Alegría del Plessis, will join five Creative colleagues and USAID representatives on the panel called “Pre-service, In-Service, and Policy Reform: A Three-legged Stool for Improved and Sustained Early Grade Reading Outcomes.” The panel will examine case studies from the Northern Education Initiative Plus project. It is scheduled for March 27 de 1:15 a 2:45 p.m.
Joining du Plessis on the panel will be Creative staff: Northern Education Initiative Plus Chief of Party, James Estatman; Director of Reading Campaigns in Federal Ministry of Education, Chinyere Nwokerie; Education Policy Expert, Garba Ibrahim, Doctor en Filosofía.; Academic Expert in National Commission for Colleges of Education, Abdul Otunuyi, Doctor en Filosofía.; Education Expert Nura Ibrahim.
USAID’s Senior Education Advisor, Sandy Olesky-Ojikutu, and Education Program Manager, Wale Samuel, y, Adrienne Barnes, Doctor en Filosofía., Reading and Literary Specialist with Florida State University, will also join the education policy panel.
The panel will take a closer look at early grade education policy reform and how to work closely with government partners to close the learning gap in complex environments.
In an effort to shares lessons learned and continue to improve the delivery of education in conflict settings, Creative’s Education Technical Manager, Jake Thomsen, and Business Development and Operations Associate, Vamos Oladini, with join the panel: «A Non-Formal Education Model and Approach for Community-Based Education in Northeast Nigeria; Replicability of the Respuesta a la crisis educativa en Nigeria model, and lessons learned during implementation.”
Creative’s Jake Thomsen reflects on Nigeria Education Crisis Response’s unique and collaborative approach to delivering quality education to vulnerable students.
“The project was deeply embedded in communities,” says Thomsen. “We forged close partnerships with local civil society organizations and traditional and religious leaders to mobilize to communities in support of alternative education opportunities.»
Thomsen says Nigeria Education Crisis Response also emphasized Social Emotional Learning, in addition to literacy and numeracy. This approach to learning in the classroom “increased learners’ resiliency and wellbeing," él dice.
USAID’s Director of Education in Nigeria, Croshelle Harris-Hussein, will chair the panel discussion on implementing an education project in conflict-affected countries. Rena Deitz, Senior Education Specialist at International Rescue Committee, will also join the conversation with USAID and Creative. It is scheduled for March 28 de 8 a 9:30 soy.
en tres años, the USAID-supported Proyecto de respuesta a la crisis educativa provided more than 80,000 Niños y jóvenes desplazados o no escolarizados con habilidades básicas de alfabetización y aritmética y apoyo psicosocial en entornos seguros y de apoyo., llamados centros de aprendizaje no formal.