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Page
09 Июнь 2021
Mitigating the impact of COVID-19 on children and families in the Western Balkans and Turkey
https://www.unicef.org/eca/mitigating-impact-covid-19-children-and-families-western-balkans-and-turkey
There is abundant evidence that children bear a heavy burden resulting from disrupted essential services, increased social isolation, and loss of family income. In pandemic times, parents and caregivers are more likely to feel overwhelmed with providing stimulation and care for their young children and delay seeking prompt medical attention for children. Childhood immunization and other basic services were often suspended. School closures can mean a year of lost learning and children become more susceptible to dropping out. Uncertainties have created family distress, which contributes to serious mental health issues, especially among children who are vulnerable to violence and abuse. The pandemic has deepened pre-existing vulnerabilities of children with disabilities and children living in poverty. In 2021, UNICEF and the European Commission Directorate-General for Neighbourhood and Enlargement Negotiations launched a two-year initiative to strengthen national health, education, early childhood development, and child protection systems to ensure continuity in the provision of core services for vulnerable children and their families in the immediate and the longer-term recovery response to COVID-19. The initiative is being implemented in Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo* [1] , Montenegro, North Macedonia, Serbia, and Turkey.  
Report
16 Январь 2022
The State of the Global Education Crisis
https://www.unicef.org/eca/reports/state-global-education-crisis
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY A JO INT UNESCO, UNICEF, AND WORLD BANK REPORT THE STATE OF THE GLOBAL EDUCATION CRISIS:A PATH TO RECOVERY Published in 2021 by the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank, UNESCO and UNICEF under CC-BY-SA 3.0 IGO license. The present license applies exclusively to the texts. 2021, International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank, UNESCO and UNICEF This Executive Summary is drawn from the publication: State of the Global Education Crisis: A Path to Recovery, published in 2021 by the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank, UNESCO and UNICEF The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed in this work do not necessarily reflect the views of The World Bank, its Board of Executive Directors, or the governments they represent, or those of UNESCO or UNICEF. The World Bank, UNESCO and UNICEF do not guarantee the accuracy, completeness, or currency of the data included in this work and do not assume responsibility for any errors, omissions, or discrepancies in the information, or liability with respect to the use of or failure to use the information, methods, processes, or conclusions set forth. The boundaries, colors, denominations, and other information shown on any map in this work do not imply any judgment on the part of The World Bank, UNESCO, or UNICEF concerning the legal status of any territory or the endorsement or acceptance of such boundaries. Nothing herein shall constitute or be construed or considered to be a limitation upon or waiver of the privileges and immunities of The World Bank, all of which are specifically reserved. UNICEF photographs are copyrighted and are not to be reproduced in any medium without obtaining prior written permission from UNICEF. Requests for permission to reproduce UNICEF photographs should be addressed to UNICEF, Division of Communication, 3 United Nations Plaza, New York 10017, USA (email: nyhqdoc.permit@unicef.org). All queries on rights and licenses, including subsidiary rights, should be addressed to World Bank Publications, The World Bank Group, 1818 H Street NW, Washington, DC 20433, USA; fax: 202-522-2625; e-mail: pubrights@worldbank.org. Cover photos (top to bottom, left to right): UNICEF/UN0517129/Panjwani; UNICEF/UN0360754/; UNICEF/UN0506301/Ijazah; UNICEF/UNI366076/Bos; UNICEF/UN0419388/Dejongh; UNICEF/UNI304636/Ma mailto:nyhqdoc.permit%40unicef.org?subject= mailto:pubrights%40worldbank.org?subject= EXECUTIVE SUMMARY THE STATE OF THE GLOBAL EDUCATION CRISIS: A PATH TO RECOVERY1 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The global disruption to education caused by the COVID-19 pandemic is without parallel, and its effects on learning have been severe. The crisis brought education systems across the world to a halt, with school closures affecting more than 1.6 billion learners. While nearly every country in the world offered remote learning opportunities for students, the quality and reach of such initiatives varied greatly, and they were at best partial substitutes for in-person learning. Now, 21 months later, schools remain closed for millions of children and youth, and millions more are at risk of never returning to education. Growing evidence on the impacts of school closures on childrens learning depicts a harrowing reality. Learning losses have been large and inequitable: recent learning assessments show that children in many countries have missed out on most or all of the academic learning they would ordinarily have acquired in school, with younger and more marginalized children often missing out the most. Students in So Paulo (Brazil) learned only 28 percent of what they would have in face-to-face classes and the risk of dropout increased more than threefold. In rural Karnataka (India), the share of grade three students in government schools able to perform simple subtraction fell from 24 percent in 2018 to only 16 percent in 2020. The global learning crisis has grown by even more than previously feared: this generation of students now risks losing $17 trillion in lifetime earnings in present value as a result of school closures, or the equivalent of 14 percent of todays global GDP, far more than the $10 trillion estimated in 2020. In low- and middle-income countries, the share of children living in Learning Povertyalready over 50 percent before the pandemicwill rise sharply, potentially up to 70 percent, given the long school closures and the varying quality and effectiveness of remote learning. U NIC EF /UN 05 27 67 2/S UJA N EXECUTIVE SUMMARY THE STATE OF THE GLOBAL EDUCATION CRISIS: A PATH TO RECOVERY2 The crisis exacerbated inequality in education. Globally, full and partial school closures lasted an average of 224 days. But in low- and middle-income countries, school closures often lasted longer than in high-income countries, and the response was typically less effective. Teachers in many low- and middle-income countries received limited professional development support to transition to remote learning, leaving them unprepared to engage with learners and caregivers. At home, households ability to respond to the shock varied by income level. Children from disadvantaged households were less likely to benefit from remote learning than their peers, often due to a lack of electricity, connectivity, devices, and caregiver support. The youngest students and students with disabilities were largely left out of countries policy responses, with remote learning rarely designed in a way that met their developmental needs. Girls faced compounding barriers to learning amidst school closures, as social norms, limited digital skills, and lack of access to devices constrained their ability to keep learning. Progress made for children and youth in other domains has stagnated or reversed. Schools ordinarily provide critical services that extend beyond learning and offer safe spaces for protection. During school closures, childrens health and safety was jeopardized, with domestic violence and child labor increasing. More than 370 million children globally missed out on school meals during school closures, losing what is for some children the only reliable source of food and daily nutrition. The mental health crisis among young people has reached unprecedented levels. Advances in gender equality are threatened, with school closures placing an estimated 10 million more girls at risk of early marriage in the next decade and at increased risk of dropping out of school. The COVID-19 crisis forced the global education community to learn some critical lessons, but also highlighted that transformation and innovation are possible. Despite the shortcomings of remote learning initiatives, there were bright spots and innovations. Remote and hybrid education, which became a necessity when the pandemic hit, has the potential to transform the future of learning if systems are strengthened and technology is better leveraged to complement skilled and well-supported teachers. Building on the close collaboration of UNESCO, UNICEF, and the World Bank under the Mission: Recovering Education, this report presents new evidence on the severity of the learning losses incurred during school closures and charts a path out of the global education crisis, towards more effective, equitable, and resilient education systems. Reopening schools should be countries highest priority. The cost of keeping schools closed is steep and threatens to hamper a generation of children and youth while widening pre-pandemic disparities. Reopening schools and keeping them open should therefore be the top priority for countries, as growing evidence indicates that with adequate measures, health risks to children and education staff can be minimized. Reopening is the single best measure countries can take to begin reversing learning losses. To tackle the learning crisis, countries must first address the learning data crisis, by assessing students learning levels. While substantial losses in reading and math have now been documented in several countries and show variations across countries, grades, subjects and students characteristics, evidence on learning loss generally remains scarce. It is critical for policymakers, school administrators, and teachers to have access to learning data that reflect their context, and for learning data to be disaggregated by various sub-groups of students, so that they can target instruction and accelerate students learning recovery. To prevent learning losses from accumulating once children are back in school, countries should adopt learning recovery programs consisting of evidence-based strategies. Evidence from past disruptions to education, such as the 2005 Pakistan earthquake, show that without remedial measures, learning losses may grow even after children return to school, if the curriculum and teaching do not adjust to meet students learning needs. Learning recovery programs can prevent this and make up the losses with a contextually appropriate mix of proven techniques for promoting foundational learning: consolidating the curriculum, extending instructional time, and making learning more efficient through targeted instruction, structured pedagogy, small-group tutoring, and self-guided learning programs. In addition to recovering lost learning, such measures can improve Reopening schools should be countries highest priority. The cost of keeping schools closed is steep and threatens to hamper a generation of children and youth while widening pre-pandemic disparities. https://blogs.worldbank.org/education/mission-recovering-education-2021 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY THE STATE OF THE GLOBAL EDUCATION CRISIS: A PATH TO RECOVERY3 learning outcomes in the long run, by improving systems responsiveness to students learning needs. But countries must act now to make that happen, taking advantage of the opportunity to improve their systems before the learning losses become permanent. Beyond addressing learning losses, addressing children's socioeomotional losses is essential. School closures not only disrupted education, but also affected the delivery of essential services, including school feeding, protection and psychosocial support, impacting the overall wellbeing and mental health of children. Reopening schools and supporting them to provide comprehensive services promoting wellbeing and psychosocial support is a priority. This will happen only if teachers are adequately equipped and trained to support the holistic needs of children. All teachers should be supported and prepared for remedial education, mental health and psychosocial support, and remote learning. Building back better requires countries to measure how effective their policy responses are at mitigating learning loss and to analyze their impact on equityand then to use what they learn to keep improving. Improving systems to generate timely and reliable data is critical to evaluate policy responses and generate lessons learned for the next disruption to education. The implementation gap between policy and improved student learning requires more research to understand what works and how to scale what works to the system level. Countries have an opportunity to accelerate learning and make schools more efficient, equitable, and resilient by building on investments made and lessons learned during the crisis. Now is the time to shift from crisis to recoveryand beyond recovery, to resilient and transformative education systems that truly deliver learning and wellbeing for all children and youth. U NIC EF /UN 04 95 42 7/P OU GE T EXECUTIVE SUMMARY A JO INT UNESCO, UNICEF, AND WORLD BANK REPORT THE STATE OF THE GLOBAL EDUCATION CRISIS:A PATH TO RECOVERY Published in 2021 by the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank, UNESCO and UNICEF under CC-BY-SA 3.0 IGO license. The present license applies exclusively to the texts. 2021, International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank, UNESCO and UNICEF This Executive Summary is drawn from the publication: State of the Global Education Crisis: A Path to Recovery, published in 2021 by the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank, UNESCO and UNICEF The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed in this work do not necessarily reflect the views of The World Bank, its Board of Executive Directors, or the governments they represent, or those of UNESCO or UNICEF. The World Bank, UNESCO and UNICEF do not guarantee the accuracy, completeness, or currency of the data included in this work and do not assume responsibility for any errors, omissions, or discrepancies in the information, or liability with respect to the use of or failure to use the information, methods, processes, or conclusions set forth. The boundaries, colors, denominations, and other information shown on any map in this work do not imply any judgment on the part of The World Bank, UNESCO, or UNICEF concerning the legal status of any territory or the endorsement or acceptance of such boundaries. Nothing herein shall constitute or be construed or considered to be a limitation upon or waiver of the privileges and immunities of The World Bank, all of which are specifically reserved. UNICEF photographs are copyrighted and are not to be reproduced in any medium without obtaining prior written permission from UNICEF. Requests for permission to reproduce UNICEF photographs should be addressed to UNICEF, Division of Communication, 3 United Nations Plaza, New York 10017, USA (email: nyhqdoc.permit@unicef.org). All queries on rights and licenses, including subsidiary rights, should be addressed to World Bank Publications, The World Bank Group, 1818 H Street NW, Washington, DC 20433, USA; fax: 202-522-2625; e-mail: pubrights@worldbank.org. Cover photos (top to bottom, left to right): UNICEF/UN0517129/Panjwani; UNICEF/UN0360754/; UNICEF/UN0506301/Ijazah; UNICEF/UNI366076/Bos; UNICEF/UN0419388/Dejongh; UNICEF/UNI304636/Ma mailto:nyhqdoc.permit%40unicef.org?subject= mailto:pubrights%40worldbank.org?subject= EXECUTIVE SUMMARY THE STATE OF THE GLOBAL EDUCATION CRISIS: A PATH TO RECOVERY1 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The global disruption to education caused by the COVID-19 pandemic is without parallel, and its effects on learning have been severe. The crisis brought education systems across the world to a halt, with school closures affecting more than 1.6 billion learners. While nearly every country in the world offered remote learning opportunities for students, the quality and reach of such initiatives varied greatly, and they were at best partial substitutes for in-person learning. Now, 21 months later, schools remain closed for millions of children and youth, and millions more are at risk of never returning to education. Growing evidence on the impacts of school closures on childrens learning depicts a harrowing reality. Learning losses have been large and inequitable: recent learning assessments show that children in many countries have missed out on most or all of the academic learning they would ordinarily have acquired in school, with younger and more marginalized children often missing out the most. Students in So Paulo (Brazil) learned only 28 percent of what they would have in face-to-face classes and the risk of dropout increased more than threefold. In rural Karnataka (India), the share of grade three students in government schools able to perform simple subtraction fell from 24 percent in 2018 to only 16 percent in 2020. The global learning crisis has grown by even more than previously feared: this generation of students now risks losing $17 trillion in lifetime earnings in present value as a result of school closures, or the equivalent of 14 percent of todays global GDP, far more than the $10 trillion estimated in 2020. In low- and middle-income countries, the share of children living in Learning Povertyalready over 50 percent before the pandemicwill rise sharply, potentially up to 70 percent, given the long school closures and the varying quality and effectiveness of remote learning. U NIC EF /UN 05 27 67 2/S UJA N EXECUTIVE SUMMARY THE STATE OF THE GLOBAL EDUCATION CRISIS: A PATH TO RECOVERY2 The crisis exacerbated inequality in education. Globally, full and partial school closures lasted an average of 224 days. But in low- and middle-income countries, school closures often lasted longer than in high-income countries, and the response was typically less effective. Teachers in many low- and middle-income countries received limited professional development support to transition to remote learning, leaving them unprepared to engage with learners and caregivers. At home, households ability to respond to the shock varied by income level. Children from disadvantaged households were less likely to benefit from remote learning than their peers, often due to a lack of electricity, connectivity, devices, and caregiver support. The youngest students and students with disabilities were largely left out of countries policy responses, with remote learning rarely designed in a way that met their developmental needs. Girls faced compounding barriers to learning amidst school closures, as social norms, limited digital skills, and lack of access to devices constrained their ability to keep learning. Progress made for children and youth in other domains has stagnated or reversed. Schools ordinarily provide critical services that extend beyond learning and offer safe spaces for protection. During school closures, childrens health and safety was jeopardized, with domestic violence and child labor increasing. More than 370 million children globally missed out on school meals during school closures, losing what is for some children the only reliable source of food and daily nutrition. The mental health crisis among young people has reached unprecedented levels. Advances in gender equality are threatened, with school closures placing an estimated 10 million more girls at risk of early marriage in the next decade and at increased risk of dropping out of school. The COVID-19 crisis forced the global education community to learn some critical lessons, but also highlighted that transformation and innovation are possible. Despite the shortcomings of remote learning initiatives, there were bright spots and innovations. Remote and hybrid education, which became a necessity when the pandemic hit, has the potential to transform the future of learning if systems are strengthened and technology is better leveraged to complement skilled and well-supported teachers. Building on the close collaboration of UNESCO, UNICEF, and the World Bank under the Mission: Recovering Education, this report presents new evidence on the severity of the learning losses incurred during school closures and charts a path out of the global education crisis, towards more effective, equitable, and resilient education systems. Reopening schools should be countries highest priority. The cost of keeping schools closed is steep and threatens to hamper a generation of children and youth while widening pre-pandemic disparities. Reopening schools and keeping them open should therefore be the top priority for countries, as growing evidence indicates that with adequate measures, health risks to children and education staff can be minimized. Reopening is the single best measure countries can take to begin reversing learning losses. To tackle the learning crisis, countries must first address the learning data crisis, by assessing students learning levels. While substantial losses in reading and math have now been documented in several countries and show variations across countries, grades, subjects and students characteristics, evidence on learning loss generally remains scarce. It is critical for policymakers, school administrators, and teachers to have access to learning data that reflect their context, and for learning data to be disaggregated by various sub-groups of students, so that they can target instruction and accelerate students learning recovery. To prevent learning losses from accumulating once children are back in school, countries should adopt learning recovery programs consisting of evidence-based strategies. Evidence from past disruptions to education, such as the 2005 Pakistan earthquake, show that without remedial measures, learning losses may grow even after children return to school, if the curriculum and teaching do not adjust to meet students learning needs. Learning recovery programs can prevent this and make up the losses with a contextually appropriate mix of proven techniques for promoting foundational learning: consolidating the curriculum, extending instructional time, and making learning more efficient through targeted instruction, structured pedagogy, small-group tutoring, and self-guided learning programs. In addition to recovering lost learning, such measures can improve Reopening schools should be countries highest priority. The cost of keeping schools closed is steep and threatens to hamper a generation of children and youth while widening pre-pandemic disparities. https://blogs.worldbank.org/education/mission-recovering-education-2021 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY THE STATE OF THE GLOBAL EDUCATION CRISIS: A PATH TO RECOVERY3 learning outcomes in the long run, by improving systems responsiveness to students learning needs. But countries must act now to make that happen, taking advantage of the opportunity to improve their systems before the learning losses become permanent. Beyond addressing learning losses, addressing children's socioeomotional losses is essential. School closures not only disrupted education, but also affected the delivery of essential services, including school feeding, protection and psychosocial support, impacting the overall wellbeing and mental health of children. Reopening schools and supporting them to provide comprehensive services promoting wellbeing and psychosocial support is a priority. This will happen only if teachers are adequately equipped and trained to support the holistic needs of children. All teachers should be supported and prepared for remedial education, mental health and psychosocial support, and remote learning. Building back better requires countries to measure how effective their policy responses are at mitigating learning loss and to analyze their impact on equityand then to use what they learn to keep improving. Improving systems to generate timely and reliable data is critical to evaluate policy responses and generate lessons learned for the next disruption to education. The implementation gap between policy and improved student learning requires more research to understand what works and how to scale what works to the system level. Countries have an opportunity to accelerate learning and make schools more efficient, equitable, and resilient by building on investments made and lessons learned during the crisis. Now is the time to shift from crisis to recoveryand beyond recovery, to resilient and transformative education systems that truly deliver learning and wellbeing for all children and youth. U NIC EF /UN 04 95 42 7/P OU GE T
Report
05 Октябрь 2021
Public health and social measures' considerations for educational authorities
https://www.unicef.org/eca/reports/public-health-and-social-measures-considerations-educational-authorities
CONSIDERATIONS FOR HEALTH AND EDUCATIONAL AUTHORITIES ON THE PUBLIC HEALTH AND SOCIAL MEASURES TO REOPEN SCHOOLS AS SAFELY AS POSSIBLE SCHOOLING IN TIME OF COVID-19 2 Considerations for health and educational authorities on the public health and social measures to reopen schools as safely as possible Developed by: This document was developed by Kalpana Vincent (Social and Behaviour Change Consultant, UNICEF Regional Office for Europe and Central Asia), Viviane Bianco (Social and Behaviour Change Specialist), Sarah Fuller (Education Consultant, UNICEF Regional Office for Europe and Central Asia), Jessica Katherine Brown (Early Childhood Development Specialist, UNICEF Regional Office for Europe and Central Asia), Cristiana Salvi (Regional Advisor, Risk Communication and Community Engagement, WHO Regional Office for Europe) and Olha Izhyk (Risk Communication and Community Engagement Consultant, WHO Regional Office for Europe,) Photo credits Front cover: UNICEF/UN0362379/Pancic Contents: UNICEF/UN0469726/Djemidzic Page 4: UNICEF/UN0419787/Margaryan UNICEF Regional Office for Europe and Central Asia WHO Regional Office for Europe October 2021 United Nations Childrens Fund (UNICEF), 2021. 3 CONTENTS Introduction .. 4 COVID-19 transmission in the school setting. 4 COVID-19 transmission in children . 5 Considerations to ensure the reopening of schools as safely as possible....... 6 Maintain physical distance Ventilation and air-condition use Hand hygiene Promote vaccination of teachers and other school staff Usage of masks Testing 4 INTRODUCTION Education is too important to keep all-remote. The loss of an unprecedented amount of classroom time has resulted in social, developmental, learning and emotional setbacks that negatively impacted students physical and mental health and well-beingi for yearsii. It has widened inequalitiesiii and disproportionately affecting children from less- advantaged backgroundsiv. Given the adverse effects of school closures on the health and well-being of students, the interruption of face- to-face learning should be considered only as a measure of last resort. There are huge costs to such interruption. It is long past time to stop making children pay that price. The return to face-to-face learning helps children return to a sense of normality, although different normality as prevention and control measures have likely altered school and classroom routines. Attending the school also opens up the opportunities to interact with teachers and peers and receive psychological support. Importantly, a return to the classroom delivery of education means children can get back to learning with adequate support to recover what they have missed over the course of the past 18 months. 5 COVID-19 TRANSMISSION IN THE SCHOOL SETTING The majority of studies indicate that in-school transmission was generally lowv when schools layered several kinds of safety measures such as usage of masks, symptom screening, physical distancing, improved ventilation and rate of vaccinated population of teachers and other school staff. Though transmission can occur within school settings and clusters have been reported by countries in preschool, primary and secondary schools, it is influenced by the local levels of community transmission. It has also been identified that COVID-19 transmission in the school setting was not a primary determinant of community transmission in the earlier phase of the pandemicvi-vii-viii. A global study that tracked school closures and subsequent re-openings data in 191 countries showed no association between school status and COVID-19 infection rates in the community in the earlier phase of the pandemicix. It is of paramount importance to understand the transmission of COVID-19 in schools and communities. During the first and second waves of the pandemic, there has been a limited spread of COVID-19 in schools. The cases reported most often in teachers and other staffx and showed that the risk of adult to adult transmission is higher than the child to child or child to adult transmission. With the emergence of new variants, the susceptibility and infectiousness of children, adolescents and educational staff are currently higher and thus the likelihood of transmission in the school setting is also higher.xi COVID-19 TRANSMISSION IN CHILDREN Children figure amongst the unvaccinated populations in countries with the subsequent vaccine roll-out and as a result, more COVID- 19 transmission is expected to occur in the school setting, particularly when community activity levels are highxii. Transmission in school settings can be limited if effective mitigation and prevention measures are in placexiii. Worldwide, relatively few children have been reported with symptomatic COVID-19. Children become less seriously ill compared to older persons and rarely need to be hospitalisedxiv. During the winter of 2021, the infection rates have increased sharply in children aged 5-14 years of age in other age groups. Most children with COVID-19 are symptomatic or have mild symptoms and a very low risk of deathxv. Although very rare, some children develop significant respiratory disease and require hospital admissionxvi. Those children who do require hospitalisation or who have more severe outcomes often have underlying chronic conditions. There is no evidence of a difference by age or sex in the risk of severe outcomes among children. 6 It is important that schools should have a risk-mitigation strategy in place. Countries should ensure these strategies carefully balance the likely benefits for, and harms to, younger and older age groups of children when making decisions about implementing infection prevention and control measures. Any measure needs to be balanced with the even worse alternative of schools being closed and Any measure introduced by schools should follow standard protocols for implementation. CONSIDERATIONS TO ENSURE THE REOPENING OF SCHOOLS AS SAFELY AS POSSIBLE Maintain physical distance WHO advises that schools should consider maintaining at least one-metre distance between everyone present at school. Increase spacing between students desks or spots on a bench at a minimum of the one-metre between desks. If the classroom is small, consider splitting students into two classrooms. Teachers can rotate across classes if necessary. Different subjects can be taught if teachers for the same subjects arent available at the same time. Moving classes outdoors or to spacious rooms such as auditoriums or cafeterias would help facilitate distancing. Teachers should consider maintaining the distance between themselves and their students whenever possible and during instruction. Markings on the floor and benches (with paint, tape or stickers) might be advised to help students and teachers recognise the distance. Keeping students in small groups help in keeping the proximity between them and aid in contact tracing when an infected individual at the school has been identified. School days can be staggered to vary the start and end times according to the grades, hall passing periods and mealtimes. It helps to avoid having all the students and teachers together at once. Ventilation and air-condition use WHO recommends improving air quality (ventilation) naturally by opening windows when it is safe and possible to bring fresh air from outdoors. The larger the number of 7 people in the indoor setting, the greater the need for ventilation with outdoor air. Consider moving unmasked activities such as eating or activities that release high amounts of respiratory droplets like singing, recitation, sports or exercise to outdoors. Ensure adequate ventilation and increase total airflow supply to classrooms and communally shared spaces when it is occupied. If heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC) systems are used, regularly inspect, maintain and clean them. Promote hand hygiene Hand cleaning is one of the most important measures to avoid the transmission of germs and prevent the spread of COVID-19. Encourage students to wash hands at key times with soap and water for at least 40 seconds or hand rub using an alcohol-based hand sanitiser with 60% to 80% of alcohol for at least 20 seconds. Supervise young children when they use hand rub to prevent them from swallowing alcohol. Increase access to maintenance of handwashing facilities with running water and reliable supplies stations or facilities such as sinks, portable handwashing stations and hand rub dispensers. Consider making hand rub available for teachers, students and other educational staff where soap and water arent readily available (e.g. classrooms and gyms) and near frequently touched surfaces (e.g. doors and shared equipment such as musical instruments, sports gear etc.,). Regularly clean and disinfect frequently touched surfaces to kill germs. Ensure that all cleaning materials are kept out of reach of children. Promote vaccination of adolescents, teachers and other school staff WHO recommends (relates to use of Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine) adolescents from 12-17 years with severe chronic comorbidities and those who are in contact with vulnerable individuals including the teachers and other school staff should be considered as part of priority population groupsxvii-xviii in the national vaccination plans while first ensuring vaccination of older adults, vulnerable populations and people with underlying health conditions, who are at higher risk of severe COVID-19 infection. There is substantial evidence that schools can reopen safely without vaccinating children, particularly in the presence of other risk mitigation strategiesxix. However, encouraging vaccination of teachers and school staff vaccination is critical to their risk of infection and further transmission in schools. 8 Provide updates about COVID-19 vaccination through regular informational and educational sessions. Usage of masks WHO advises that people always consult and abide by national and local authorities on recommended practices in their area. WHO and UNICEF recommend the following: Children aged five years and under are not required to wear masks. For children between six and 11 years of age, a risk-based approach is encouraged, consider: o The intensity of transmission in the area where the child is and evidence on the risk of infection and transmission in this age group. o The childs capacity to comply with the correct use of masks and availability of adult supervision. o The potential impact of mask- wearing on learning and development. Children and adolescents 12 years or older should follow the national mask guidelines for adults. Teachers and support staff are required to refer national guidance to wear masks. Students should not wear a mask when playing sports or doing physical activities such as running, jumping or on the playground. Students of any age with developmental disorders, disabilities or other specific health conditions should be assessed on a case by case basis by their parents/caregivers, educators or medical providers for the usage of masks. Students with severe cognitive or respiratory impairments with difficulties tolerating a mask should not be required to wear masks. Testing Robust testing can help promptly identify and isolate cases and quarantine those who may have been exposed to COVID-19 to interrupt the chains of transmission. This helps to reduce the risk of students, teachers and educational staff being infected. In response to the school outbreak, schools administrators can work with local public health authorities and request a temporary testing location. If a confirmed case is identified in the school setting, activate contract- tracing protocols to find where the source of infection may have occurred schools, households and other relevant settings. 9 i United Nations (2020). Policy Brief: The impact of COVID-19 on children. ii Kuhfeld, Megan, and Beth Tarasawa. The COVID-19 slide: What summer learning loss can tell us about the potential impact of school closures on student academic achievement. NWEA white paper, 2020. iii United Nations (2020). Policy Brief: Education during COVID-19 and beyond. iv European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (2020). COVID-19 in children and the role of school settings in COVID-19 transmission. v European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (2021). COVID-19 in children and the role of school settings in COVID-19 transmission; 2021. Second update. vi World Health Organisation (2021). Schooling During COVID-19. Recommendations from the European Technical Advisory Group for schooling during COVID-19. vii European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (2020). Questions and answers on COVID-19: Children aged 1-18 years and the role of school settings. viii UNICEF (2020). In-person schooling and covid-19 transmission: A review of evidence. f ix Insights for Education, 2020. x What settings have been linked to SARS-CoV-transmission clusters? (2020). xi European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control. COVID-19 in children and the role of school settings in COVID-19 transmission; 2021. Second update. xii European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control. COVID-19 in children and the role of school settings in COVID-19 transmission; 2021. Second update. xiii Schooling during COVID (2021). Recommendations from the European Technical Advisory Group for schooling during COVID-19. xiv European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (2020). COVID-19 in children and the role of school settings in COVID-19 transmission xv Bhopal, S., Bagaria, J., Olabi, B and Bhopal, J. Children and young people remain at low risk of COVID-19 mortality (2021). xvi Preston, L., Chevinsky, J., Kompaniyets, L., Characteristics and Disease Severity of US Children and Adolescents Diagnosed with COVID-19 xvii World Health Organization (2021). WHO SAGE Roadmap for prioritising uses of COVID-19 vaccines in the context of limited supply. xviii World Health Organization (2021). European Technical Advisory Group of Experts on Immunization (ETAGE) interim recommendations. Inclusion of adolescents aged 12-15 years in national COVID-19 vaccination programmes. xix World Health Organization (2021). WHO SAGE Roadmap for prioritising uses of COVID-19 vaccines in the context of limited supply.
Article
31 Май 2021
Making the European Child Guarantee a Reality. Insights from testing the European Child Guarantee
https://www.unicef.org/eca/stories/making-european-child-guarantee-reality-insights-testing-european-child-guarantee
MARGARETA MADERIC State Secretary, Ministry of Labour, the Pension System, the Family and Social Policy European Union Margareta Mađerić was born on 2 July 1977 in Zagreb. After finishing high school, she enrolled in Zagreb School of Business where she obtained her bachelor’s degree in Marketing and Communication and worked as a marketing and communications manager before entering into politics. In 2005, as a member of Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ), Mađerić was elected to the Zagreb City Assembly, where she served three consecutive terms and served as president of the Deputy Club of the Croatian Democratic Union. In the 2013 local elections in Zagreb, she ran as the HDZ candidate for mayor, and in the 2015 Croatian parliamentary elections, Mađerić ran as a candidate for the Patriotic Coalition, led by the HDZ. She was a member of the Croatian Parliament and was named president of the Parliamentary committee for mandates and immunity, before she assumed the position of State Secretary in the Ministry for Demography, Family, Youth and Social policy. Following the 2020 parliamentary elections she continued to serve as State Secretary in the new Ministry of Labour, Pension system, Family and Social Policy. SAILA RUUTH Personal archive
Report
25 Ноябрь 2021
Deep Dive into the European Child Guarantee – Lithuania
https://www.unicef.org/eca/reports/deep-dive-european-child-guarantee-lithuania
Basis for a European Child Guarantee Action Plan in Lithuania PH OTO : DA NIJ EL SO LDO iBasis for a European Child Guarantee Action Plan in Lithuania When citing this report, please use the following wording: UNICEF, Basis for a European Child Guarantee Action Plan in Lithuania, UNICEF Europe and Central Asia Regional Office (ECARO), 2022. Authors: This policy brief has been prepared by a team led by Alina Makareviien, Project Manager and Lead Expert at PPMI. Haroldas Broaitis, PPMI Research Director, contributed to the report as a scientific advisor. The following experts have provided content on their areas of expertise: Greta Skubiejt (early childhood education and care and education), Agn Zakaraviit (health and housing), Aist Vaitkeviit (nutrition, material child poverty and social exclusion), Loes van der Graaf (administrative coordinator). Project management: Daniel Molinuevo, together with Kristina Stepanova (European Child Guarantee National Coordinator in Lithuania) and the rest of the Steering Committee of the third preparatory phase of the European Child Guarantee in Lithuania. Acknowledgements: Thanks are also due to James Nixon, language editor at PPMI, and many other experts who have shared their knowledge. UNICEF, 2022 The information and views set out are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official opinion of the European Commission and the Commission cannot be held responsible for any use which may be made of the information contained therein. More information on the European Union is available at www.europa.eu. The material in this policy brief was commissioned by UNICEF ECARO in collaboration with the Lithuanian National Committee for UNICEF. UNICEF accepts no responsibility for errors. The findings, interpretations, opinions and views expressed in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the policies or views of UNICEF. Contents 1. Introduction 01 2. Free and effective access to ECEC 03 3. Free and effective access to education 07 4. Free and effective access to health care 11 5. Effective access to healthy nutrition 15 6. Effective accesss to adequate housing 18 7. Social services and benefits in cash 21 iiBasis for a European Child Guarantee Action Plan in Lithuania PH OTO CR ED IT: U NIC EF, SA MIR KA RA HO DA 1. Introduction Child poverty has an immediate and long-term effects on both individuals and society. Due to particular needs of children, and the limited coping capabilities tied to their specific life stage, children are impacted more acutely by poverty, particularly at an early age. Poverty and deprivation during childhood impact an individuals health, educational attainment, employability and social connections, and increase the risk of future behavioural problems. Thus, poverty and social exclusion at a young age often extend into later stages of life, perpetuating intergenerational poverty and inequalities. Childrens experiences of poverty and social exclusion depend not only on the extent of income poverty and material deprivation, but are also highly influenced by their immediate caregiving environment (e.g., family composition, foster care) and the characteristics of the local community (e.g. the level of access to public services). This policy brief contributes to the drafting of the Lithuanian National Action Plan on reducing child poverty and identifies the key challenges to achieving the goals of the European Child Guarantee in Lithuania. It provides an overview of the policies currently in place and provides recommendations ranging from improving access to free early childhood education and care (ECEC), to education, health care, healthy nutrition, , and adequate housing. This policy brief is based on the findings and recommendations identified in the deep-dive analysis and consists of five parts, each covering a different policy area. Each part comprises three sections, dealing with the main access barriers to access, policy responses and recommendations for ECEC, education, health care, nutrition and housing services for children. 1 2Basis for a European Child Guarantee Action Plan in Lithuania Key messages Effective access to quality ECEC services is one of the most important factors in ensuring equality in childrens further development and academic achievements, as well as to ensuring childrens safety. Meanwhile, in Lithuania, access to ECEC remains one of the biggest challenges especially for the youngest children. Not enough places are available in public centres, and private for-profit services are very expensive. In addition, hidden costs (such as meals and transport) exist even in the public sector, thereby rendering access to ECEC especially problematic for the most vulnerable children, such as children from low-income families and families at social risk. Due to the large group sizes in public ECEC centres and a lack of learning support specialists, there is also a lack of inclusion with regard to children with SEN (Special Education Needs), disabilities, and children from minority groups. Effective access to education, first and foremost, requires equality among schools and regions within the country, which is currently lacking in Lithuania. Vulnerable children, such as children from low-income families, children from families at social risk, children in rural areas, and children from national minorities within Lithuania, receive a lower quality of education. The reason for this is that schools in rural areas and in certain parts of cities, as well as schools for national minorities, lack qualified teachers, necessary learning equipment, up-to-date books and methodologies. The issue of hidden costs also applies, particularly in relation to access to non-formal education. Meanwhile, children with SEN and disabilities do not receive quality education due to teachers lack of knowledge about working with such children, as well as a lack of adapted methodology, and a lack of learning support specialists. To reduce these barriers, all schools should be equipped with laboratories, IT equipment, highly qualified teachers, all necessary learning support specialists, up-to-date books, and adapted methodologies. Schools should also provide children with universal benefits and represent cultural diversity. Meanwhile, with regard to non-formal education, children must be provided with a wide range of activities that correspond to their individual needs and capacities, and transport should be provided for children with SEN and disabilities as well as children living in distant areas. Socio-economic disadvantages negatively influence childrens access to the healthcare system in Lithuania due to families inability to afford treatments, long waiting lists, long travel times or no means of transport, a lack of time due to parents working commitments, etc. Effective access to free healthcare requires improved access to healthcare services for the most disadvantaged groups such as children in low-income families and precarious family situations; a greater focus on children with disabilities and special needs, as well as Roma and migrant children; the development of mental health services and the improvement of after-school opportunities for childrens physical activity. A lack of effective access to healthy nutrition during infancy contributes to a range of poor health outcomes in future life, as well as impacting physical and mental well-being and cognitive functioning, and contributing to lower learning outcomes. The most vulnerable children in Lithuania are those from low-income families, families at social risk, and children living in remote rural areas. Parents with low incomes cannot afford healthy foods as these are often more expensive than less healthy alternatives. In addition, parents at social risk may lack knowledge regarding the importance of nutrition, and parents raising children in remote areas may face additional barriers of access due to a lack of transport or its cost. The most vulnerable period for children is during infancy, when they should be breastfed, and their nutrition relies on mothers awareness as well as their eating habits. Tackling barriers to access such as the affordability of healthy foods, as well as addressing unhealthy eating habits by promoting and enabling healthy eating and ensuring that all children have at least one full healthy, balanced meal per day, are therefore particularly important in tackling food insecurity for AROPE children. Housing deprivation is a much bigger issue for children living in low-income families compared with other income groups of children in Lithuania. Effective access must be ensured to adequate housing and access to housing support services needs to be improved for the most disadvantaged groups in Lithuania: children in low-income households, children of single parents, children from large families, children with disabilities, Roma and migrant children. A greater focus should be placed on improving the income situation of families in Lithuania. Social services and benefits in cash significantly improve access to ECEC, education, health care, nutrition and housing. In Lithuania, some of these benefits include universal child benefits, social benefits, the family card, and one-time COVID-19 benefit and benefits for pregnant women. Other important programmes to improve the overall situation of the most vulnerable children include the action plan for complex services for families, the child well-being programme, case management and the policy of deinstitutionalization. 3Basis for a European Child Guarantee Action Plan in LithuaniaP HO TO C RE DIT : UN ICE F 2. Free and effective access to ECEC Main challenges experienced by children regarding ECEC in LithuaniaAccess to ECEC services remains a challenge in Lithuania. As in most post-Soviet countries where policies have been shaped to support stay-at-home mothering and nuclear families, and where a clear division of gender roles exists between men and women, insufficient attention has been paid to expanding the ECEC system. Policy in Lithuania has traditionally focused on supporting the aforementioned gender roles, and inattention towards developing the ECEC system has led to a lack of available ECEC services and a lack of flexibility in those services that do exist (both in terms of working hours and the types of ECEC providers), particularly with regard to children aged 0 to 3 years old. In addition, there is insufficient inclusion and access to ECEC services for children with Special Educational Needs (SEN) and disabilities, children with migrant backgrounds and children living in families at social risk, especially when such children live in rural areas. Due to a lack of public services, parents have to rely on private for-profit services, which are very expensive. Most vulnerable families, such as single-parent families, cannot afford them. For single-parent families, the situation is extremely complicated: they may face long waiting lists for enrolment into ECEC, as most municipalities in Lithuania give priority in enrolment into ECEC to families in which both parents are registered in the same area. On top of this, even in public ECEC centres, hidden costs constitute a great burden for low-income families. Meanwhile, in many cases, families with children living in rural areas cannot afford transport to and from ECEC services. Inequality between children in the education system is therefore present from a very early age. 3 4Basis for a European Child Guarantee Action Plan in Lithuania Table 1 . Number of children requiring free and effective access to ecec Vulnerable group Estimated size of the group Data source and year Children in low-income families 21.6% (38, 000) of children up to 6 years old are at risk of poverty Eurostat, 2020 Children living in families at social risk 17,430 (children of all ages) Official Statistics Portal, 2018 Children living in rural areas 50,232 Education Management Information System, 2020-2021 Children with special needs and disabilities 24,962 Education Management Information System, 2020-2021 Children with migrant backgrounds Returnee children: 976Immigrant children: 1,007 Ministry of Education and Science, 2018Official Statistics Portal, 2020 The policy responses to improve access to ECEC To improve the availability of ECEC services, the Lithuanian government has established mandatory pre-primary education. Other tools include recognizing different forms of ECEC provision, providing children with transport, free meals and more. The National Education Development Programme 2021-2030 foresees that by 2030, 95% of children between ages of 3 and the age of compulsory primary education will attend ECEC services, while 75% of children from families at social risk will attend ECEC. It is also foreseen to improve the inclusion of children with SEN. The main tools to achieve these goals include the creation of new ECEC sites (including modular kindergartens and family kindergartens), and the improvement of teachers competences via various courses and peer learning. Modular system kindergartens are flexible spaces, generally made from light construction modules, which can be easily remodelled if necessary. Family kindergartens, meanwhile, are formed when a child-raising parent takes care of other children for a certain fee, using the facilities of his or her own home. Nevertheless, while the goals of current policies are promising, there is a lack of concrete steps that need to be taken, together with a lack of financial distribution. In the current situation, access to ECEC among the most vulnerable children remains a challenge, as priorities regarding enrolment into ECEC remain based on the strengths of families, rather than their vulnerabilities, such as raising children alone, and there is a lack of transport, learning support specialists and other resources. The Description of the Requirements for Teachers qualifications foresees that at least one teacher in the childrens group should have a BA qualification; all teachers should have attended courses of at least 40 hours on working with children with SEN, disabilities, and other vulnerable backgrounds, and at least 40 hours of courses on teaching the Lithuanian language. Nevertheless, there is still a shortage of workforce in ECEC due to the professions lack of attractiveness and the lack of financing in this area. Although salaries for pre-primary teachers have been raised, ECEC teachers and learning support specialists remain among the lowest-paid professionals. To help ensure the quality of services, all ECEC centres are also provided with methodological recommendations. These recommendations include topics such as identifying childrens individual needs and improving childrens academic, artistic and social skills. Moreover, they provide information on how to approach and work with children with SEN, disabilities, migrant backgrounds, as well as children from low-income families and other vulnerable backgrounds. Meanwhile, mandatory pre-primary education for all children, and mandatory ECEC education for children from families at social risk, as well as a minimum of 5 hours mandatory provision of Lithuanian language courses for migrant children of all ages while attending ECEC, seek 5Basis for a European Child Guarantee Action Plan in Lithuania to ensure childrens safety and equality. The aim of these measures is to provide children with an equal starting point when they attend primary school; however, such measures are not always carried out due to a shortage of workforce and the competences of teachers, as well as the large sizes of childrens groups. Other tools include the provision of transport, increasing the number of ECEC centres, and assessment tools for children. In addition, children from families at social risk are also provided with free meals, learning equipment, family monitoring by The Child Welfare Commission, and counselling parents regarding the benefits of ECEC. Recommendations for improving access to ECEC Make ECEC universal for children from 0 years old to the age of compulsory primary education, with priority being given to children from disadvantaged backgrounds. The current goal is to achieve universal ECEC for all children between the ages of 2 and primary education by 2025. Progressive universalism could help to reach these goals. Progressive universalism means that children from vulnerable backgrounds are given priority in terms of access to ECEC. Financial allocations could also be raised to help children from vulnerable backgrounds to access ECEC. More attention to parents and their needs. It is important to inform parents about the benefits of ECEC via families social workers and health care specialists. Outreach mechanisms could provide significant benefits in terms of involving children from vulnerable backgrounds. It is also crucial to help parents with bureaucratic processes, and to simplify these processes as much as possible. Improve the inclusion of children with SEN. Although quality ECEC has a dramatic impact on the development of children with SEN, currently only around 20% of such children attend general ECEC in Lithuania. Improving the inclusion of children with SEN requires extended training for the ECEC workforce, both during their initial studies and while working in ECEC. There is currently a lack of teacher training in this area, mainly due to a lack of financing. This should be improved. In addition, it is important to reduce the sizes of childrens groups, and to determine the number of children per teacher. Where teachers work with groups including children with SEN, those groups should contain a smaller number of children. Address issues of gender inequality and reconciliation of work and family life. ECEC services are important for removing obstacles to the employment of women, particularly single mothers, and for single parents in general. Access to ECEC contributes to gender equality by allowing greater flexibility to manage family and work-life balance for both mothers and fathers. It is important that more flexible ECEC services are made available, with different working hours, and that single parents are given priority with regard to enrolment in ECEC. Address geographical disparities. Lithuania is currently unable to ensure equal enrolment into ECEC across the country. First and foremost, increasing access to ECEC, means developing infrastructure and increasing the number of teachers. The level of provision is lower in rural areas than in urban areas, and in urban areas, fewer high-quality ECEC resources are available in poorer neighbourhoods. Clear guidelines regarding structural quality and financing must be set at national level, to avoid children suffering inequalities in conditions depending on where they are born. It is also necessary to ensure equality among ECEC providers regarding the quality of services provided to children with SEN and disabilities, and to ensure that these children receive high-quality services close to their homes. Support the ECEC workforce. As previously mentioned, more time and money should be invested into the continuous professional development of working teachers as well as teachers training. The strong connections with teacher training institutions for ECEC could be further expanded to include on-site training or mentoring for working teachers. Moreover, professional development should be embedded into the process of quality monitoring, creating a system that focuses on measuring quality, reflecting on the results, and supporting teachers in making improvements. Every teacher should receive continuous professional development training continuous training and supervision in class, as well as training on special education, psychology, and IT; teachers should be able to attend qualification courses abroad and to receive video 6Basis for a European Child Guarantee Action Plan in Lithuania feedback. More attention should be focused on improving teachers salaries and the status of the teaching profession, as well as increasing diversity among teachers in ECEC centres. Set clear requirements for curriculum. Curricula need to be planned within an open framework that acknowledges and addresses the diverse interests and needs of children holistically. This should include addressing differences between boys and girls; children with SEN; children from national minorities; and children from families at social risk. While planning curricula, it is important to take into account global challenges, technological advancement, topics relating to everyday life challenges, and the identities of various ethnic minorities. Children, especially those from families at social risk, should be provided with facilities to meet their hygiene requirements, and centres should pay extra attention to the nutrition and health of such children. With regard to children with SEN and disabilities, recommendations provided by doctors and other services should be followed carefully at all times. It is also important to involve children and their parents in the process of creating curricula. Ensure that policy goals are oriented towards improving access to and the quality of ECEC. Strong public policy commitment to ECEC is important, and must be backed by a bold vision, strong plans and adequate funds. Promoting ECEC as a central priority in national education strategies and plans including clear targets, indicators and ministerial leadership can make a significant difference in terms of the political and financial importance given to the sector. Robust governance and accountability mechanisms across decentralized levels are also important in ensuring the efficient allocation and use of ECEC resources. Develop comprehensive quality monitoring. To ensure success, the monitoring and assessment framework should cover structural aspects of quality (child-staff ratio, qualification levels of staff); process quality (e.g., interaction with children, the content of activities); and outcome quality (looking at the benefits for children, families, communities and society). Monitoring needs to include assessments of the accessibility of ECEC for children living in rural areas, children from low-income and single parent families, for families at social risk, and for children from ethnically non-Lithuanian families. Furthermore, the quality of staff, price of services, curricula, governance and funding should also be monitored. General quality criteria need to be set at the highest possible levels, but should also encompass regional and local levels, and should ideally align with the EU ECEC Quality Framework. The ECEC workforce, the children themselves and their parents should all be empowered and included into the quality monitoring process. Information from both self-assessment and external evaluations regarding the quality of the ECEC system should be used as the basis for improvement. Information about the quality of the ECEC system should also be made available to the public. PH OTO CR ED IT: U NIC EF 3. Free and effective access to education Main challenges experienced by children in Lithuania in relation to education Although education is free and universal for all children in Lithuania, many barriers to access and other challenges still remain. First and foremost, great inequality exists between schools in terms of the quality of services, with the greatest disadvantage evident in schools in rural areas, certain areas of cities and in minority language schools. Such inequality exposes children living in rural areas and less well-off urban areas, as well as the children of non-Lithuanian ethnic groups, to low-quality education. Many of the schools attended by these children suffer a lack of laboratories, IT equipment, learning support specialists, up-to-date books and methodologies and highly qualified teachers, and a lack of transport to and from non-formal education activities as well as a lack of choice in such activities. The lack of learning support specialists and lack of choice in free-of-charge non-formal education activities, especially among children with SEN and disabilities, is major and prevent problem in all schools. Moreover, although education is considered free of charge for all children, hidden costs remain a great issue. Despite school tuition being free, the families of school students have to pay for certain school materials, activity books, transport, food and various extra courses and activities that contribute to their learning. This can be extremely problematic for low-income families, especially those living in remote areas, where hidden costs limit access to both formal and non-formal education. Immigrant children, returnee children and children of migrant origin are also insufficiently included in the educational system. There is a lack of teachers from different cultural backgrounds in schools, Lithuanian language is not sufficiently well taught to non-native-speaking children, and teachers lack the skills to work with children with different languages and cultures. A lack of learning support specialists is also a major problem in this context. 7 8Basis for a European Child Guarantee Action Plan in Lithuania Table 2. Number of children in need of free and effective access to education Vulnerable group Estimated size of the group Data source and year Children in low-income families 24.8% (100, 000) of children between ages of 6 and 19 are at risk of poverty Eurostat, 2020 Roma children 1,036 (children of all ages) Overview of Roma situation in Lithuania, 2016 Migrant and returnee children Returnee-children: 412 Immigrant children: 3,303 Ministry of Education and Science, 2018OSP, 2020 Children from non-Lithuanian ethnic backgrounds 31,502 Education management information system, 2020-2021 Children living in rural areas 53,510 Education management information system, 2020-2021 Children with special needs and disabilities 4,873 Education management information system, 2020-2021 Policy responses to improve access to educationThe Lithuanian government recognizes the issue of low academic achievements among Lithuanian children and its link to the lack of quality of education in Lithuanian. The government recognizes issues such as inequalities between schools and the lack of inclusion of the most vulnerable children such as children with SEN and disabilities and children of migrant origin. To reduce these inequalities, it proposes to equip all schools equally with highly qualified teachers, learning support specialists, laboratories, IT equipment and the necessary methodologies. The National Education Development Programme 2021-2030 foresees that by 2030, 97% of children with SEN and 75% of children with disabilities will attend general education schools; 75% of all children will attend non-formal education; 50% of children with SEN will attend non-formal education; 65% of teachers will be employed in schools after graduation; and 40% of teachers will have MA degree. In addition, it is expected to improve pupils PISA results to reach 16th place among all participating countries by the year 2025. To achieve these goals, the government has allocated a budget of EUR 550 million. The Strategic Action Plan of the Ministry of Education, Science and Sport for the year 2021-2023 seeks to improve teachers qualifications; implement the monitoring and assessment of students, schools and education as a whole; develop infrastructure for inclusive education; and to integrate formal and non-formal education. Tools to achieve these goals include courses to improve teachers competencies; increases in teachers salaries; online self-assessment programmes for schools; monitoring indicators for education; purchasing additional school buses and laboratory equipment; modernizing school infrastructure; modernizing non-formal education facilities; increasing support to Lithuanian schools abroad; providing coordinated support to immigrated and returnee children and their families; expanding the number of all-day schools; and increasing funding for student benefits. Nevertheless, teaching remains among the lowest-paid professions, and teachers do not receive any of the financial and educational support necessary to motivate them when working with children with SEN and disabilities, or with children from minority backgrounds. The Political Programme of the XVIII Government of Lithuania also sets similar goals. In addition, it foresees the establishment of national education quality standards and improvements in the quality of education in minority schools. Although most of these goals are similar to those set in previously mentioned documents, the Political Programme of the XVIII Government of Lithuania foresees the use of different tools to achieve these goals. These include modernizing the curricula (including a multilingual reading and maths programme, as well as updated history programmes that recognize the importance of minorities in Lithuanian culture), reduced class 9Basis for a European Child Guarantee Action Plan in Lithuania sizes, additional financing for learning support specialists, more up-to-date books in minority languages, and the digitalization of minority schools. According to data from interviews, the issue of schools lack of autonomy still remains, as they are not given the power to make their own decisions regarding financial allocations and various aspects of curricula, despite the schools themselves being best placed to know what is missing, and what is necessary for their children. Educational tools of the largest scale will include mobile school staff teams and millennial schools. Mobile school staff teams will consist of teams of teachers and other learning specialists that will go to schools facing issues and work there temporarily to improve the situation. Millennial schools will be located in different regions in Lithuania and will benefit from better teachers and STE(A)M laboratories, and modern curricula for formal and non-formal education. All children from the surrounding region will be able to use the facilities and courses provided at these schools. These schools are intended to reduce inequalities between regions, and to provide equal opportunities for all children irrespective of their living place, as well as to improve overall academic achievements. Nevertheless, some of the experts interviewed as part of this research expressed concern that these schools might even worsen equality among regions and children, as millennial schools would absorb all of the best resources in the area and become elite institutions. Children learning in other schools in the area would thereby receive an even lower quality education, as not all of them would have access to these elite schools. The inequalities between schools and regions with regard to quality therefore remains an issue. More detailed, focused tools and more integrated solutions are required to break the cycle of poverty by providing every child with the highest-quality education at all educational levels. Meanwhile, the Law Amending the Law on Education of the Republic of Lithuania and The Description of the Procedures for Organizing the Education for Pupils with SEN, seek to improve the inclusion of children with SEN, those with disabilities and those from other vulnerable backgrounds (migrants, at social risk, from low-income families etc.), as well as to reduce the number of school dropouts. The tools provided include continuously working with childrens parents, pupil self-care plans (provided for children who have various health issues), and individual learning plans. Other tools include the provision of special classes, transport, school meals, school supplies, and improved inter-institutional cooperation. Municipal administrations are encouraged to work more effectively to ensure the well-being of the child, to remove interdepartmental barriers between educational assistance, municipalities, state institutions and establishments, organizations and non-governmental actors, to ensure inter-institutional co-operation. Improved inter-institutional attention to vulnerable children and their parents should reduce social exclusion, dropouts from schools, as well as improve parents skills and involvement in their childrens education, in addition to improving childrens psycho-emotional well-being while attending educational institutions. Inter-institutional co-operation means that all of a childs needs must be identified and dealt with through cooperation between all of the necessary services and support providers. Nevertheless, the inclusion of children with SEN and disabilities, in general, remains a great challenge due to the aforementioned lack of competencies and motivation among teachers, as well as a lack of learning support specialists and the physical appropriateness of schools buildings. Other smaller-scale programmes also exist, such as quality baskets, all-day schools, day care centres and financial baskets for non-formal education. Quality baskets seek to improve pupils academic achievements. EUR 30,324,2001 were allocated to this programme across 270 schools. The programme includes the evaluation of schools, provision of improvement plans to the schools and the monitoring of their success. Meanwhile, financial baskets for non-formal education seek to improve childrens attendance in non-formal education by providing every child with a monthly allowance to purchase non-formal education activities. All-day schools are settings in which children are provided with educational activities after official school hours. The main goals of these schools are to improve the inclusion of children from vulnerable backgrounds and to reduce conflicts between parents family life and work commitments. Day care centres are social care settings in which children from the most vulnerable backgrounds (such as families at social risk) gather after school and receive help with their homework, participate in various educational and cultural activities, and receive free meals. These centres also seek to work with childrens parents to improve their parenting skills and to ensure that children receive all the support they need. Despite improved financial allocations and more attention being given to the parents, the hidden costs of education remain, and there is a lack of universal provision of school supplies and other necessary materials. 10Basis for a European Child Guarantee Action Plan in Lithuania Recommendations for improving access to education There should be universal and inclusive education for all children: geographical and socio-economic disparities should be addressed, as well as differences in levels of inclusion and quality among schools. Universality and equality in the education system would reduce inequality between children from families of different socio-economic status. It would also improve academic achievement and decrease school dropouts. It is necessary to provide all children with school supplies, transport and meals to reduce hidden costs and bullying in schools. It is also important to address such differences as the unequal distribution of learning support specialists, laboratories, IT infrastructure and high-quality teaching staff among schools, and to reduce differences between elite and rural as well as minority schools. Reducing inequalities between schools would also improve the inclusion of children with SEN and children with migrant backgrounds. Targeted interventions should also take place to improve boys academic achievements. Update curricula and provide greater flexibility in the selection and design of programmes. It is crucial to enrich learning experiences while supporting the effective use of digital technologies and encouraging activities that link learning with real-life experience. It is also necessary to improve the curricula in vocational schools so that they effectively combine strong basic and job-related skills. Regions, cities and schools should be allowed to choose from a list of validated activities and programmes that best meet the needs of their children. Greater investment in measures that reduce early school leaving. Interdisciplinary communication is crucial to ensure that children who are not well included in schools are identified and worked with, to reduce the risk of dropouts. It is also necessary to improve communication with childrens parents, to ensure that they receive all the necessary information and that their individual needs and those of their children are met. Preventive and tailored interventions that involve multiple actors (such as families, schools, and so on) are identified as being more likely to succeed. Developing early warning systems for pupils at risk could help to ensure effective measures are taken before problems become manifest. The availability of various routes back into mainstream education and training is also important. Expand all-day schools and non-formal education opportunities across Lithuania. The lack of teachers and other staff, as well as additional transport costs, learning supplies, additional school meals and the necessity to adapt methodologies, are all concerns that must be addressed in order to ensure the expansion and quality of all-day schools and non-formal education across Lithuania. It is also important to address the issue of access to non-formal education for children living in rural areas, as well as for children with SEN and disabilities. Also important is the need to ensure that a variety of after school activities options are available for these children. Strengthen the teaching workforce. It is important to attract teachers with different backgrounds, genders and ages. All teachers should have a BA degree and at least some should have a Masters degree. Initial teacher education also needs to be improved, and greater flexibility should be provided in terms of the ways in which people can acquire a teaching degree. It is important to ensure that new teachers can work in a well-supported environment and receive frequent feedback and mentoring during the early years of their careers. In addition, all teachers should be provided with qualification courses, and teachers opportunities to network and exchange knowledge and experiences at school should be strengthened and improved. There should be a more coherent career pathway for teachers that rewards teaching excellence. The methods used to recruit teachers should be improved, and salaries should be raised. Set national quality standards and implement monitoring. It is important to prioritize education at policy level as part of the overall solution to social exclusion and poverty throughout the integration process. Any strategy should therefore provide clear timelines, targets, baselines and indicators to monitor progress, as well as adequate financial, material and human resources. External evaluation must be carried out, as well as the provision of methodology and tools for internal evaluation by schools. General quality criteria need to be set as high as possible, while minimum quality thresholds are also required to avoid a lack of balance between regions and avoid a situation in which the quality of a childs education depends on the region in which they are born. Funding on a larger scale should also ensure consistency between richer and poorer regions, to avoid a situation in which municipalities with a higher prevalence of low-income families lack the means to serve the needs of those families. The possibility should be considered of assigning higher weights in the funding formula to socio-economically disadvantaged students. More attention should be devoted to improving efficiency in the allocation and use of school maintenance budgets. PH OTO CR ED IT: U NIC EF - VA KH TAN G K HET AG UR I 4. Free and effective access to healthcare Main challenges experienced by children in Lithuania in relation to healthcare Socio-economic disadvantages negatively influence childrens access to the healthcare system in Lithuania. Childrens medical and dental needs may remain unmet due to various reasons, such as families inability to afford treatment, long waiting lists, long travel times, or no means of transport, as well as a lack of time due to parents work or their responsibility to care for other family members. Children in low-income or single-parent families, Roma families and children living in precarious family situations are at a high risk of not receiving necessary health treatments due to travel costs, lack of time to take children to the doctor, and also due to some necessary and continuous treatments not being entirely free of charge and, in the case of and Roma families families in precarious situations, due to a lack of education and interest in childrens health on the part of parents. One of the most obvious issues is the insufficient level of vaccinations. Vaccination rate among children in Lithuania are lower than the 95 per cent recommended by the WHO, and the issue of non-vaccination is particularly common among Roma children. Another important issue relating to healthcare is a lack of physical activity by children, often determined by the absence of interest by parents and financial reasons. The children who experience the highest risk of low physical activity are those from low-income families, families at social risk, single-parent families and Roma families, as the main reasons for low levels of physical activity include the inability to afford after-school sports activities and/or transportation, lack of time to take children to these activities or to supervise childrens activities on a daily basis, as well as the previously mentioned lack of parents education and interest in their childrens health in the cases of families at social risk and Roma families. These same groups of children do not always have access to mental health services when needed, due to long waiting lists and parents lack of time or transport to take children to consultations, especially when they live in remote rural areas, far away from clinics. The lack of availability of psychological counselling is especially problematic for children from low-income and single-parent families, as their parents often cannot afford private consultations and are even more time-poor than wealthier families. Families raising children with disabilities or special needs report having limited access to certain treatments their children need, as well as a lack of specialists, long waiting periods, and so on. Migrant and refugee children may experience limited access to free healthcare. 11 12Basis for a European Child Guarantee Action Plan in Lithuania Table 3. Number of children in need of free and effective access to healthcare Vulnerable group Estimated size of the group Data source and year Children in low-income families 24% (138,000) of children between birth and the age of 19 are at risk of poverty Eurostat, 2021 Roma children 1,036 Overview of the Roma situation in Lithuania, 2016 Children living in precarious family situations 17,430 Official Statistics Portal, 2018 Migrant and returnee children 4,310 Ministry of Education and Science, 2018OSP, 2020 Children with disabilities 14,289 NGO Confederation for Children, 2017 Children with mental illness 701.05 per 10,000 children The Institute of Hygiene, 2018 Children in single-parent families 26% of all families150,000 children Eurostat, 2017Lithuanian Population and Housing Census, 2011 Policy responses to improve access to healthcareEnsuring childrens health and social well-being is an important part of the national health system in Lithuania. Access to, and the quality of, healthcare services, health literacy, mental and physical health and sex education are at the heart of the National Progress Programme 2021-2030, the Programme of the XVIII Government of the Republic of Lithuania, and the Public Healthcare Development Programme for 2016-2023. Physical activities and mental health services are not currently accessible for all children and their families in Lithuania; thus, the national focus is on spreading awareness of the importance of mental and physical health, increasing access to sporting activities, and improving childrens health monitoring. The National Progress Programme 2021-2030 strategically aims to increase social well-being inclusion within Lithuanias population, and strengthen its health. To achieve this goal, the following measures are planned: improved adaptation of the environment for people with disabilities, including children (e.g. transport, infrastructure, services, information); increased attention to childrens psychological state and access to mental health services; improved access to physical activities for children; high-quality health care services; improved health literacy; an efficient health system with focus on stronger primary care; and improved access to outpatient care. Moreover, issues such as long waiting lists to receive treatment, the high cost of drugs and high levels of corruption are also addressed. However, some healthcare programmes such as continuous rehabilitation services and treatments for certain developmental disorders, as well as transport services, remain among the biggest barriers to accessing healthcare provision for the most vulnerable children in Lithuania. The Programme of the XVIII Government of the Republic of Lithuania plans to improve access to sporting activities and mental health services. The main tools to achieve this include promoting more equal distribution of qualified sports specialists across the country; introducing up to three physical education lessons per week in all general education schools; updating the physical education curriculum; providing swimming lessons to all children in primary schools; improving sex education; and improving access to mental health services. The National Public Healthcare Development Programme for 2016-2023 also seeks to promote physical and mental health, as well as encouraging a healthy lifestyle and culture, by promoting health literacy and ensuring the sustainability of the public health care system. To achieve these goals, awareness will be raised with regard to physical and mental health, with an emphasis on the prevention of illnesses in schools; updating sports 13Basis for a European Child Guarantee Action Plan in Lithuania equipment and facilities in schools; monitoring physical activity and childrens mental state; increasing the availability of high-quality public health care services and improving the management of the public health care system overall. The key mechanism currently used ensure childrens health needs are met is preventive annual health inspections and the National Immunization Programme 2019-2023. The latter provides that all recommended vaccinations included in the national immunization scheme are free of charge. The Programme aims to ensure at least 90 per cent of children are vaccinated (in the case of measles and rubella, not less than 95 per cent) across the country and in each municipality. Meanwhile, preventive annual health examinations at health care institutions include consultations with family doctors and dentists, and are compulsory for all children attending pre-primary and general education. However, a lack of attention is paid to the health of children who fall outside formal care and education systems. Attending to the medical needs of these children depends solely on their parents who, as previously mentioned, may lack interest or knowledge about their childrens health. A grey area also exists with regard to refugee children, who have different rights to the nationals in terms of access to healthcare. Meanwhile, children with disabilities receive financial assistance and various free services. These include a social assistance pension; targeted compensation for assistance costs for children with disabilities; and universal and free early rehabilitation for children with developmental disorders. The mechanism for integrated family services includes the provision of positive parenting training, psychological counselling, ECEC services, transport and more. Nevertheless, many issues still remain for children with SEN and disabilities, who face additional challenges in addressing everyday medical needs such as dental treatment. They also lack access to special, targeted treatments and integrated assistance that could help to meet all of their needs and reduce the burden on their families. Recommendations for improving access to healthcare Consistent coordination between central and local institutions is necessary in order to ensure

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