Le Centre International UNESCO-UNEVOC: Qui nous sommes | Ce que nous faisons | Nous rejoindre | Nous contacter
Le Réseau UNEVOC: En savoir plus sur le Réseau | Répertoire du Réseau UNEVOC
Espace Membres: Tableau de bord du Centre UNEVOC
Domaines thématiques: Inclusion et jeunes | Innovation et avenir de l'EFTP | Engagement du secteur privé | Les ODD et l'écologisation de l'EFTP
Nos programmes et projets clés: BILT: Connecter innovation et apprentissage | Renforcer la résilience de l’EFTP | Programme pour le leadership en EFTP | Journée mondiale des compétences des jeunes
Activités passées: Réponse COVID-19 | i-hubs: Former des pôles d'innovation | Forums mondiaux de l'EFTP | Conférences virtuelles | YEM Portail de connaissances
Nos services et ressources: Publications | Forum TVET | Profils nationaux d'EFTP | Glossaire TVETipedia | Pratiques prometteuses | Toolkits for TVET Providers | Formation à l’entrepreneuriat | Open Educational Resources
Journal et événements: Grandes Manifestations EFTP | Journal UNEVOC
The report examines the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on learning and skills development, focusing primarily at the informal sector in low-income and middle-income economies. It reviews the available evidence beginning mid-2022 with a focus on informal households. Not only has there been a decline in learning outcomes in schools since 2019 and an increase in student dropout rates, but there has been a disproportionate impact on students from disadvantaged households and schools – and this is true even in high-income countries. The effects of the pandemic call for urgent measures to recover the loss in school-based learning for would-be workers and the decrease in skills development among workers which followed the decline in economic activity and a reduction in post-employment training. The policy question is not whether to spend more on education but what the losses from not doing so will be on current and future generations.