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Tuesday, May 13, 2025

Urgent action needed to address enormous education crisis in Latin America and the Caribbean—World Bank

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1517 days ago
20210317
Image courtesy the World Bank.

Image courtesy the World Bank.

WASH­ING­TON, March 17, 2021 — In the wake of the COVID-19 pan­dem­ic, the Latin Amer­i­can and Caribbean re­gion is ex­pe­ri­enc­ing an un­prece­dent­ed ed­u­ca­tion cri­sis that re­quires im­me­di­ate ac­tion to mit­i­gate and re­verse learn­ing loss­es, ac­cord­ing to a new World Bank re­port.

Fol­low­ing the mas­sive school clo­sures, as of Feb­ru­ary 2021, about 120 mil­lion school-age chil­dren had al­ready lost or were at risk of los­ing a full aca­d­e­m­ic year of pre­sen­tial ed­u­ca­tion, with se­ri­ous ed­u­ca­tion­al im­pacts, ac­cord­ing to the re­port, Act­ing now to pro­tect the hu­man cap­i­tal of our chil­dren: The costs of and re­sponse to the COVID-19 pan­dem­ic im­pact on the ed­u­ca­tion sec­tor in Latin Amer­i­ca and the Caribbean.

Learn­ing pover­ty, de­fined as the per­cent­age of 10-year-olds un­able to read and un­der­stand a sim­ple text, may have grown by more than 20 per­cent, from 51 per­cent to 62.5 per­cent. This could be equiv­a­lent to rough­ly 7.6 mil­lion ad­di­tion­al “learn­ing poor” pri­ma­ry ed­u­ca­tion school-age chil­dren in the re­gion. 

The re­port urges gov­ern­ments to act im­me­di­ate­ly to re­verse the sit­u­a­tion. Coun­tries must pre­pare for the safe and ef­fec­tive re­open­ing of schools na­tion­wide, with the nec­es­sary fund­ing and tools to en­sure that they can open with­out dif­fi­cul­ties.

"This is the worst ed­u­ca­tion­al cri­sis ever seen in the re­gion, and we are wor­ried that there could be se­ri­ous and last­ing con­se­quences for a whole gen­er­a­tion, es­pe­cial­ly for the most vul­ner­a­ble sec­tors," said Car­los Fe­lipe Jaramil­lo, World Bank Vice Pres­i­dent for Latin Amer­i­ca and the Caribbean. “Gov­ern­ments must take ur­gent ac­tions to re­cov­er the lost ground and seize this op­por­tu­ni­ty to im­prove ed­u­ca­tion sys­tems by tak­ing ad­van­tage of new tech­nolo­gies.”

Poli­cies should fo­cus on guar­an­tee­ing that all school-age chil­dren have ac­cess to re­opened schools and cre­at­ing the con­di­tions for ef­fec­tive blend­ed learn­ing (the com­bi­na­tion of face-to-face and re­mote learn­ing in the same schools), which will be­come the new nor­mal in the com­ing months. At the re­gion­al lev­el, few­er than 43 per­cent of pri­ma­ry schools and few­er than 62 per­cent of sec­ondary schools have ac­cess to the In­ter­net for ed­u­ca­tion­al pur­pos­es. 

"An ef­fec­tive re­open­ing re­quires key ad­min­is­tra­tive and ped­a­gog­i­cal de­ci­sions,” said Emanuela Di Gro­pel­lo, one of the lead au­thors of the re­port and World Bank Prac­tice Leader for Ed­u­ca­tion in Latin Amer­i­ca and the Caribbean. “It is cru­cial to quick­ly close the dig­i­tal di­vides that per­sists and to take ad­van­tage of the cur­rent cri­sis to pro­mote changes that were need­ed even be­fore the pan­dem­ic." 

In the longer term, the goal is to build ed­u­ca­tion sys­tems that are more in­clu­sive, ef­fec­tive and re­silient. Sev­er­al ex­am­ples of ef­fec­tive pro­grams ex­ist that could be in­sti­tu­tion­al­ized and repli­cat­ed in the re­gion. These in­clude ear­ly warn­ing sys­tems that help iden­ti­fy stu­dents who are at risk of drop­ping out im­ple­ment­ed in Pe­ru, Guatemala and Chile. Like­wise, ed­u­ca­tion man­age­ment and in­for­ma­tion sys­tems are pro­duc­ing suc­cess­ful re­sults in Colom­bia and Uruguay. The adap­tive learn­ing tech­nolo­gies used in Ecuador and the Do­mini­can Re­pub­lic have helped to pro­vide in­struc­tion at the right lev­el.

Ac­cord­ing to the re­port, af­ter 10 months of school clo­sure (the en­tire aca­d­e­m­ic year), 71 per­cent of low­er sec­ondary ed­u­ca­tion stu­dents may not be able to un­der­stand a text of mod­er­ate length. Be­fore the pan­dem­ic, the fig­ure was 55 per­cent. That per­cent­age could rise to 77 per­cent if schools re­main closed for an ad­di­tion­al three months. These loss­es are not the same for all sec­tors -- they main­ly af­fect the low­est in­come quin­tile - which could have widened the al­ready high so­cio-eco­nom­ic ed­u­ca­tion achieve­ment gap by 12 per­cent.

In the fu­ture, the enor­mous loss­es in learn­ing, hu­man cap­i­tal and pro­duc­tiv­i­ty may trans­late in­to a de­cline in po­ten­tial ag­gre­gate earn­ings for the re­gion of US$1.7 tril­lion, or ap­prox­i­mate­ly 10 per­cent of to­tal base­line earn­ings.  

Added to these neg­a­tive im­pacts is the pos­si­bil­i­ty that school dropouts could in­crease by at least 15 per­cent due to the pan­dem­ic, as well as the in­ter­rup­tion of ser­vices that many chil­dren re­ceived in schools, in­clud­ing meals for 10 mil­lion stu­dents in the re­gion. These are clear ex­am­ples of the dra­mat­ic im­pact of school clo­sures on stu­dents’ phys­i­cal, men­tal and emo­tion­al health.


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