Decades of conflict and underinvestment in Iraq have destroyed what used to be the best education system in the region and severely curtailed Iraqi children’s access to quality learning. Today, there are close to 3.2 million school-aged Iraqi children out of school.
The situation is especially concerning in conflict-affected governorates, such as Anbar, Salah al-Din, Diyala and Nineveh, where more than 90% of school-age children are left out of the education system. Almost half of all school-age displaced children—approximately 355,000 children—are not in school. The situation is worse for girls, who are underrepresented in both primary and secondary schools.
Out-of-school children are more vulnerable to exploitation and abuse, including child labour, recruitment by armed actors and early marriage.
Children and teachers have experienced the trauma of conflict, displacement and the losses of loved ones. Such trauma has a long-lasting psychological impact, which may affect teaching and learning processes and abilities.
Iraq’s infrastructure is in ruins in many parts of the country; one in every two schools is damaged and needs rehabilitation. A number of schools operate in multiple shifts in an attempt to accommodate as many students as possible, squeezing the little learning time that children have.
Evidence shows there are significant differences in the success rates of the primary education certificate exam by type of schools and whether the school runs multiple shifts. The pass rate of students attending the morning shift is 92%, as compared to a 72% passing rate for the evening shift.
Moreover, with recent growth in the total number of teachers, the number and share of qualified teachers in Iraq has decreased at all educational levels, with the exception of preschool.
Iraq’s national budget has in the past years allocated less than 6% of its national budget to the education sector, placing Iraq at the bottom rank of Middle East countries.
Years of conflict have weakened the capacity of the Iraqi government to deliver quality education services for all. Violence, damage to infrastructure and mass displacement of children and families have disrupted the provision of education services.
The Government of Iraq has given priority to the decentralisation of service delivery, including education. The capacity of education departments at the governorate level need to be boosted in order for them to oversee the implementation of education policies and plans, the recruitment and management of human resources, the supervision of schools, and the management of educational infrastructure.
By 2025 children and adolescents, especially the most vulnerable, benefit from equitable access to quality and inclusive education. Main bottlenecks to be addressed include inequitable financing; insufficient education infrastructure, especially schools in rural and crisis-affected areas; lack of critical education supplies limiting effective learning; lack of adequate and conducive WASH facilities for boys and girls; and inequitable distribution of qualified teachers, particularly in the most crisis-affected areas. The programme will emphasize curricula revision, development of child-centred teaching and learning materials and development of unified national standards for quality education.
The principal interventions will focus on strengthening the capacity of the Ministry of Education to effectively plan, budget, implement and monitor equitable delivery of quality education services, especially at governorate levels. Special attention will be on collect and analyse data through better use of the Education Management Information System and to develop and implement decentralized governorate education sector plans in support of the school-based management approach, promoting a culture of effective school leadership and community participation in school management. Continuous teacher development focusing on monitoring learners’ achievements and integration of Life Skills and Citizenship Education in classroom practices will be a major element of change. Psychosocial support will be integrated in teacher training to help children to cope with conflict and displacement.
Capitalizing on the previous country programme cycle, this programme will prioritize multiple pathways to learning to ensure that the most vulnerable children and adolescents, especially those out-of-school, including internally displaced and refugee children, can develop to their full potential and acquire life skills. The programme will expand access to secondary education for adolescent girls in rural and poor communities to facilitate transition from primary to secondary education.
Integrated programming in early childhood and adolescence will bring the education programme together with other sectors. Pre-schools will be used as the entry point for early identification of disabilities and developing parental skills, while schools will involve adolescents actively in their learning and community-based engagement.
EVERY CHILD SHOULD LEARN FROM A QUALITY BASIC EDUCATION
Every child deserves the opportunity to learn
The Aghsan Foundation works to reach those children who are missing out most on learning and education.
We ensure that no child’s learning stops because they are caught up in crisis.
EVERY CHILD SHOULD LEARN FROM A QUALITY BASIC EDUCATION
Every child deserves the opportunity to learn
By 2025, children and adolescents, especially the most vulnerable, will benefit from equitable access to quality and inclusive education. We work to ensure all children get the support and care they need before they start school, and that they are able to read and write. We also work to ensure that schools are places where all children are safe and happy.