Blog

[Hybrid event] Cambridge Educators for a Free Palestine

Date: 20 January 2024.

Time: 1-3pm GMT.

Location: Cambridge, CB3 9P and online.

The Centre for Lebanese Studies and the REAL Centre, in association with the National Education Union and the Cambridge University and College Union, invite educators and students to a hybrid event.

Issues to be discussed:

  • Life under occupation
  • Palestine and the curriculum
  • Working with Palestinian trade unionists and schools
  • A free Palestine – what has gone on before and what is to come
  • Anti-Zionism and anti-Semitism

Please register in advance.

Registration will close at 1pm on Friday, 19 January 2024.

Details of how to join online or in-person in Cambridge will be emailed on Friday 19 January 2024.

[Webinar] Protecting the Right to Education in Gaza, INEE

Date: 20 December 2023.

Time: 12:00 UTC.

Platform: Zoom.

This webinar aims to raise awareness and advocate for the protection of educational institutions and the right to education for Palestinian learners. It will shed light on the current challenges faced by educators and learners in Gaza. It is a call for international attention and support for the right to education in Gaza, along with recommendations for actionable steps to protect educational institutions, learners, and school personnel in conflict zones. Panelists will include representatives from UNRWA, the Palestine Education Cluster, the Global Coalition to Protect Education from Attack (GCPEA), teachers in Gaza, and others.

This web event will be conducted in Arabic and English with simultaneous interpretation between these languages.

Register for the webinar.

[Article] Teaching experience measured in more than just years

This article published on LinkedIn discusses how it is not just the number of years spent in a classroom that makes a teacher experienced in special and inclusive education. Their experience depends on constant learning, adaptability, problem-solving, critical thinking and innovation.

Read: Experience in Special and Inclusive Teaching: Beyond the Count of Years

Note: You may need to have a LinkedIn account to access this article.

[Report] Ensuring education for children with disabilities before, during, and after a crisis

Humanity & Inclusion’s new report illustrates how education systems need to become more inclusive for children and youth with disabilities and, at the same time, more resilient to cope with crises and ensure education in all settings and circumstances.

Read: Always Included: Uninterrupted education for children with disabilities before, during, and after a crisis in English and French.

[Report] Measuring school-related gender-based violence

School-related gender-based violence is a major obstacle to gender equity in education, manifesting in various ways, from biased language, to discriminatory gender roles, and even physical violence.

This brief by UN Girls’​ Education Initiative (UNGEI) shows the importance of considering gender in efforts to prevent and respond to school violence, exploring the use of existing measurement tools to estimate the extent and scope of gender-based violence in schools.

Read: School violence: Why gender matters and how to measure school-related gender-based violence.

[Report] Latest global report on school system vulnerability

For the third consecutive year, Save the Children has ranked 182 countries by the vulnerability of their school system to hazards that threaten children’s right to learn and against levels of preparedness for those hazards. This offers a holistic view of the risks to education and suggests which national education systems require increased resources from national governments and international actors to mitigate existing and prevent future crises.

Read: Build Forward Better 2023.

[Research] Disability data in schools in emergency and protracted crisis

Humanity & Inclusion implemented a research project funded by Education Cannot Wait (ECW) to identify a practical and reliable methodology to produce data on learners with disabilities in schools in emergencies and protracted crises.

The Child Functioning Module – Teacher Version (CFM-TV) was tested and assessed for programming and monitoring use in humanitarian response. The findings were used to develop an evidence-based operational package to explain to education field practitioners and stakeholders what the CFM-TV is, when and how to use it.

Read more about the research.

[Policy] Closing the funding gap on refugee education

For the world’s refugees, education is a source of opportunity and hope for a brighter future. Yet over half of all refugee children are out of school, and there is a real and present danger that a generation of refugee children will be deprived of the education they need to restore their future. Having already lost their homes, refugees are losing their education and their hopes for a brighter future. The 2023 Global Refugee Forum, the second of its kind, is an opportunity to unlock the action and funding required to educate the world’s refugees

For more information read: Closing the funding gap to ensure that refugee and host community learners can go to school. This is a joint briefing paper by the International Parliamentary Network on Education and Save the Children UK on refugee education financing.

[Report] Back to School 2023-2024: Report on education for children displaced by the conflict in Ukraine

The escalation of the conflict in February 2022 led to an unprecedented large-scale displacement of children and their families in Ukraine both in and abroad to countries in Europe. This World Vision Policy Brief discusses the critical role humanitarian organizations have in ensuring millions of children receive educational and mental health support critical to their development.

The brief argues that learning in a school setting is vital to children’s mental health, positive social development and academic achievement, so education must be fully funded in the humanitarian response. Barriers to in-person learning must be addressed by Ukraine and host governments to shift the degree of reliance on online learning.

Read: Back to School 2023-2024: Report on Education for children displaced by the conflict in Ukraine at the start of the second school year.