How The New Education Establishment Betrayed The World's Poorest Children: Broken Promises, Broken Schools
This book tells the real story of education in low-income countries and shows why ordinary people are making extreme sacrifices to reject free public schools in favor of low quality private schools, both legal and illegal. Based on the author's experience of working in the UN system, for a child rights NGO in New Delhi; and working on aid projects and with private foundations in Africa and South Asia, Joanna Harma reveals how public education systems got to their current state of dysfunction. She argues that the international aid community and United Nations bodies such as UNESCO and UNICEF have facilitated the decline in public education and argues that young children are being let down by education systems and policy from the local to the international. Harma looks at this issue from the perspectives of various stakeholders including international human rights workers, parents, the companies who set up the schools, policy makers and NGO workers. The book includes a preface from Ben Phillips, Director of Communications at The Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS).
1145671141
How The New Education Establishment Betrayed The World's Poorest Children: Broken Promises, Broken Schools
This book tells the real story of education in low-income countries and shows why ordinary people are making extreme sacrifices to reject free public schools in favor of low quality private schools, both legal and illegal. Based on the author's experience of working in the UN system, for a child rights NGO in New Delhi; and working on aid projects and with private foundations in Africa and South Asia, Joanna Harma reveals how public education systems got to their current state of dysfunction. She argues that the international aid community and United Nations bodies such as UNESCO and UNICEF have facilitated the decline in public education and argues that young children are being let down by education systems and policy from the local to the international. Harma looks at this issue from the perspectives of various stakeholders including international human rights workers, parents, the companies who set up the schools, policy makers and NGO workers. The book includes a preface from Ben Phillips, Director of Communications at The Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS).
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How The New Education Establishment Betrayed The World's Poorest Children: Broken Promises, Broken Schools

How The New Education Establishment Betrayed The World's Poorest Children: Broken Promises, Broken Schools

by Joanna Härmä
How The New Education Establishment Betrayed The World's Poorest Children: Broken Promises, Broken Schools

How The New Education Establishment Betrayed The World's Poorest Children: Broken Promises, Broken Schools

by Joanna Härmä

Paperback

$34.95 
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Overview

This book tells the real story of education in low-income countries and shows why ordinary people are making extreme sacrifices to reject free public schools in favor of low quality private schools, both legal and illegal. Based on the author's experience of working in the UN system, for a child rights NGO in New Delhi; and working on aid projects and with private foundations in Africa and South Asia, Joanna Harma reveals how public education systems got to their current state of dysfunction. She argues that the international aid community and United Nations bodies such as UNESCO and UNICEF have facilitated the decline in public education and argues that young children are being let down by education systems and policy from the local to the international. Harma looks at this issue from the perspectives of various stakeholders including international human rights workers, parents, the companies who set up the schools, policy makers and NGO workers. The book includes a preface from Ben Phillips, Director of Communications at The Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS).

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781350469211
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 02/20/2025
Pages: 240
Product dimensions: 6.20(w) x 9.20(h) x 0.75(d)

About the Author

Joanna Härmä is Visiting Research Fellow at the Centre for International Education, University of Sussex, UK; Honorary Fellow at the Centre of African Studies, and Teaching Fellow at Moray House School of Education and Sport, University of Edinburgh, UK.

Table of Contents

Preface, Ben Phillips (UNAIDS)
Introduction
1. School's in, but No-One is Learning
2. How UN Efforts Meant Education Quality Would Die and Private Schools Would Flourish
3. The Real Issue of Neglected Early Childhood Development
4. The Crisis Response: Cheap Private Schools
5. Damage and Loss: What Empire Did to Education in India
6. Well-Intentioned (?) Blundering in 'Advising' National Governments
7. Bad Advice Regarding the Regulation of Cheap Private Schools
8. Thinking About Education the Way Starbucks Thinks About Coffee
9. Seeking Billions From the Bottom Billions: Capitalising on Aid Spending Through Northern 'Partnership' Policies
10. Searching for Solutions That Don't Exist
11. Thousands of Tiny Lights in The Darkness: In Defence Of Small Endeavours
Conclusion
References
Index

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