<
 
 
 
 
×
>
You are viewing an archived web page, collected at the request of United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) using Archive-It. This page was captured on 01:10:34 Nov 19, 2019, and is part of the UNESCO collection. The information on this web page may be out of date. See All versions of this archived page.
Loading media information hide

Global Education Monitoring Report

Target 4.2: Early childhood

By 2030, ensure that all girls and boys have access to quality early childhood development, care and pre-primary education so that they are ready for primary education

Chapter 9 PDF

CREDIT: Refugee Trauma Initiative. Baytna brings children together at NRC community centre, Thessaloniki, Greece, 2018.

  • Globally, 69% of children attend organized learning one year before the official primary entry age, a rate that is slowly but steadily growing.
  • The robustness of UNICEF’s Early Childhood Development Index is being reviewed. Data from the two latest rounds of surveys in seven countries show that improvement among 3- to 4-year-olds in literacy-numeracy, one of the four domains measured, was generally small.
  • Relatively few countries show interest in assessing early childhood development in cross-national surveys. But low and middle income countries also struggle to develop national monitoring of school readiness: Only 8 of 34 countries reviewed had collected data on all four domains crucial to this target: cognitive, linguistic, physical and social-emotional.
  • Globally, over one-sixth of the forcibly displaced are children under age 5, for whom the lack of adequate interventions and protective relationships can lead to long-term mental health, social and economic problems. Best practices for refugee children under the age of five should focus on families and caregivers, and adopt a multi-sectoral approach.
  • A review of 26 active humanitarian and refugee response plans revealed that nearly half made no mention of learning or education for children under 5 and less than one-third specifically mentioned pre-primary education.

Early childhood education and care are crucial for cognitive and social-emotional development and serve a particularly important protective function in traumatic crisis settings.

The global indicator on participation in organized learning one year before the official primary entry age ranges from around 42% in low income to 93% in high income countries, with a world average of 69%, continuing a slowly but steadily increasing trend. By contrast, the pre-primary gross enrolment ratio, defined for an education level that lasts as little as one year in some countries and as many as four in others, reached 50% in 2017 (Figure 8).

Figure 8: Seven out of ten children attend pre-school the year before entering primary education

The other global indicator on early childhood development draws on the UNICEF Early Childhood Development Index (ECDI), which is calculated using mainly UNICEF Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS) data, although UNICEF is reviewing the ECDI methodology to address weaknesses, a process expected to finish by late 2018. Results from countries taking part in two rounds of the MICS over five years suggest that the share of children aged 3 to 4 on track in the literacy–numeracy domain grew by less than one percentage point per year on average. However, being ‘ready’ for school and ‘developmentally on track’ are elusive concepts, viewed differently around the world. Countries may need more discretion to use measures that serve their needs and are compatible with institutional structures and cultural characteristics.

Yet national systems to monitor school readiness are rare. More commonly, countries have national frameworks and procedures for monitoring staffing, training, facilities and curricula standards among providers (e.g. India’s 2013 National Early Childhood Care and Education Policy) or evaluating programme impact (e.g. the National Reporting System component of the US Head Start pre-school programme). In the early childhood development module of the World Bank Systems Approach for Better Education Results, just 8 out of 34 low and middle income countries collected data on children in all four domains covered (cognitive, linguistic, physical and social‑emotional development).

South Africa’s 2014 National Curriculum Framework envisages informal, observational and ongoing assessment based on six Early Learning and Development Areas, ascribing no marks or percentages but recording readiness for primary reception grade. Since 2014, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia has maintained child development portfolios for all children enrolled in ECEC centres.

Previous year’s Target 4.2