G LO B A L E D U C AT I O N M O N I TO R I N G R E P O R T 2 0 1 6
SUMMARY
Foreword
In May 2015, the World Education Forum in Incheon (Republic of Korea), brought together 1,600 participants from 160
countries with a single goal in mind: how to ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and lifelong learning for
all by 2030?
The Incheon Declaration for Education 2030 has been instrumental to shape the Sustainable Development Goal on
Education to “Ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all”.
It entrusts UNESCO with the leadership, coordination and monitoring of the Education 2030 agenda. It also calls upon
the Global Education Monitoring (GEM) Report to provide independent monitoring and reporting of the Sustainable
Development Goal on education (SDG 4), and on education in the other SDGs, for the next fifteen years.
The ultimate goal of this agenda is to leave no one behind. This calls for robust data and sound monitoring. The 2016 edition
of the GEM Report provides valuable insight for governments and policy makers to monitor and accelerate progress
towards SDG 4, building on the indicators and targets we have, with equity and inclusion as measures of overall success.
This Report makes three messages starkly clear.
Firstly, the urgent need for new approaches. On current trends only 70% of children in low income countries will
complete primary school in 2030, a goal that should have been achieved in 2015. We need the political will, the policies,
the innovation and the resources to buck this trend.
Secondly, if we are serious about SDG 4, we must act with a sense of heightened urgency, and with long-term
commitment. Failure to do so will not only adversely affect education but will hamper progress towards each and
every development goal: poverty reduction, hunger eradication, improved health, gender equality and women’s
empowerment, sustainable production and consumption, resilient cities, and more equal and inclusive societies.
Lastly, we must fundamentally change the way we think about education and its role in human well-being and global
development. Now, more than ever, education has a responsibility to foster the right type of skills, attitudes and
behavior that will lead to sustainable and inclusive growth.
The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development calls on us to develop holistic and integrated responses to the many
social, economic and environmental challenges we face. This means reaching out beyond traditional boundaries and
creating effective, cross-sectoral partnerships.
A sustainable future for all is about human dignity, social inclusion and environmental protection. It is a future where
economic growth does not exacerbate inequalities but builds prosperity for all; where urban areas and labour markets
are designed to empower everyone and economic activities, communal and corporate, are green-oriented. Sustainable
development is a belief that human development cannot happen without a healthy planet. Embarking upon the new
SDG agenda requires all of us to reflect upon the ultimate purpose of learning throughout life. Because, if done right,
education has the power like none else to nurture empowered, reflective, engaged and skilled citizens who can chart
the way towards a safer, greener and fairer planet for all. This new report provides relevant evidence to enrich these
discussions and craft the policies needed to make it a reality for all.
Irina Bokova
Director-General of UNESCO
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