缅北禁地

An unprecedented coalition launches 鈥淓arth School,鈥 providing free, high-quality educational content to help students, parents and teachers who are currently at home.

Half of the total number of learners 鈥 some 826 million students 鈥 are kept out of the classroom by the COVID-19 pandemic for not having access to a household computer. Even so, digitally based distance learning is used to ensure educational continuity. The , launched by , includes , in seeking to facilitate inclusive learning opportunities for children and youth during this period of sudden and unprecedented educational disruption.

partner, Ocean Agency, invites parents and children to experience the ocean and its astounding life forms from their homes. Remote diving is the new remote working.

Access to a quality education

As school closures impact more than 80% of the world鈥檚 student population, UNESCO convened an online meeting of education ministers, to share information on measures deployed to support teachers, parents and students in coping with home learning. They also pointed to emerging challenges that require global cooperation. UNESCO is launching a to support countries in scaling up their best distance learning practices and reaching children and youth who are most at risk.

Schools Resume as Displaced Return to聽Gunyoro in聽Eastern聽Equatoria

launches an education coalition to help countries deploy remote learning to minimize disruptions and maintain social contact with learners. As an immediate response to massive school closures, UNESCO established a COVID-19 task force to provide advice and technical assistance to governments working to provide education to students out of school. The Organization holds regular virtual meetings with education ministers from all over the world to assess priority needs.

 

Meet some students from Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine who are currently taking part in the scholarship programme administered by .

UNRWA Inaugurates New School in Dera鈥檃 Refugee Camp

鈥淭hese are our children鈥

UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador Muzoon Almellehan speaks to a girl attending a center for survivors of sexual and gender-based violence in Bamako, Mali.

Muzoon Almellehan is an education activist and . Muzoon has been campaigning for children鈥檚 education in emergencies since she was forced to flee Syria in 2013 with her family. In this article in the 缅北禁地Chronicle for the International Day of Education, she shares her personal story and her motivation for the work she does. "Education is the key to peace and prosperity, and the foundation of equality," she says.

 Students at the 鈥25 de Junho鈥 School, located in Beira, Mozambique.

The International Day of Education, 24 January, this year highlights the integrated nature of education, its humanistic aims, as well as its centrality to our collective development ambitions. The will reaffirm the role of education as a fundamental right and a public good. It will frame 鈥榠nclusive and equitable quality education and lifelong learning for all鈥 as a goal in and of itself, as well as a necessary means to accelerate progress to meet the targets of all 17 Sustainable Development Goals.

students reading in class

International Mother Language Day - hero

Some 700 outstanding young students from 25 countries are meeting in Geneva (8-10 January) to discuss how the power of technology can change the world. Hosted and co-organized by the International Telecommunication Union () and FerMUN, the  focuses on how technologies can be harnessed for progress towards the SDGs. Model United Nations () simulations are a popular way to learn about the UN. More than 400,000 students worldwide participate every year in M缅北禁地at all educational levels 鈥 from primary school to university.

This tells the stories of some of the world鈥檚 7.1 million refugee children of school age under 鈥檚 mandate.