Commonwealth highlights students’ contribution to transforming education on International Youth Day 2019

Commonwealth highlights students’ contribution to transforming education on International Youth Day 2019

The Commonwealth has developed a new education programme to strengthen learning systems in member countries.

The ‘Learning for Life’ project focuses on the following areas:

  • Learners’ empowerment for active and responsible citizenship;
  • Competent and well-qualified educators using learner-centered approaches and active pedagogies that engage learners;
  • Educators trained in transformative school leadership and management for equity and inclusion;
  • Harnessing new technologies that provide disadvantaged groups including youth with disabilities, access to quality learning;
  • Partnerships and collaborative processes to create innovative solutions.

The UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs says the theme of International Youth Day 2019, ‘Transforming education’, was designed to highlight efforts to make education more relevant, equitable and inclusive for all young people.

The Commonwealth’s 53 member countries have a combined population of more than two billion people, of which more than 60 percent are aged under 30. Yet millions of school-aged children and adolescents are out-of-school, while millions of young people and adults are unemployed due to a mismatch of skills in the labour market, indicating the existing education system is ineffective as it fails to prepare youth for life and unlock growth in the economy by preparing young people for the job market.

Commonwealth head of social policy, Layne Robinson, said: “Student leadership and engagement must be at the heart of the education system as we seek to transform education to make it more relevant for the future.”

The Commonwealth Students Association (CSA) functions as the bridge between student voices and high-level international education meetings. Their primary goal is to build the capacity of student leadership and empower them to be a significant part of the education policy formulation, implementation and review.

Original source: The Commonwealth 
Published on 13 August 2019