Publication

Education in Africa. Placing equity at the heart of policy. Continental report

The report, jointly conducted by UNESCO and the African Union, is the first in what will become a regular stocktaking of education in Africa. It analyses progress made towards achieving the goals sets out in the Continental Education Strategy for Africa 2016-2025 and Sustainable Development Goal 4, and also outlines ongoing efforts and remaining challenges in the sector.
Education in Africa: placing equity at the heart of policy; continental report
UNESCO Office Dakar and Regional Bureau for Education in Africa
African Union
2023
UNESCO
0000384479

Learning to read and write, and do simple maths, is a basic requirement to be able to navigate in today’s increasingly globalized and competitive world. Providing children with quality education opens the door for them to a lifetime of better opportunities. These translate not only in terms of the jobs that they will be able to have and how much they will earn, but it also has an impact on their physical and mental health.

Although many countries in Africa are taking significant steps to ensure quality education for all, too many children are still being left behind. One in five primary school age children are not in the classroom. And almost six in ten adolescents are out of school. This is due to several interlinking factors such as geographical location, gender, extreme poverty, disability, crises, conflict, and displacement.

In this comprehensive new analysis, UNESCO explores how these factors impact a child’s access to quality learning. It highlights the importance of addressing barriers to inclusion through actions such as making secondary education compulsory, building more schools, developing adapted curricula, improving the quality of teachers, and providing financial and academic assistance to children. The report aims to provide African governments with guidelines and advice as they try to overcome these challenges.

Education in Africa report - graph