All Concepts
Human Rights

Education as a Right

Why education is considered a basic human right, who is still missing out, what barriers keep children from school, and what fair education looks like.

Core Ideas
1 Learning is for everyone
2 Every child should be able to go to school
3 School helps us grow and understand the world
4 Reading opens doors
5 Everyone has something to learn and something to teach
Background for Teachers

Young children can understand that learning and school are important through their own experiences. Children do not need to discuss 'rights' formally. But they can understand that all children — boys and girls, rich and poor, from any country — should have the chance to go to school and learn. They can see that school is a special place where they grow, make friends, discover things, and prepare for the future. They can also understand that not every child gets this chance, and that is unfair. Building early enthusiasm for learning and a simple sense of fairness about education is the foundation for later understanding of why education is protected as one of the most important human rights. When children know that learning matters for everyone, they become the generation that helps extend it to all. No materials are needed.

Classroom Activities
Activity 1 — What we love about learning
PurposeChildren connect to their own positive experiences of learning and school.
How to run itAsk: what is something you love to learn about? What is your favourite thing to do at school? Collect answers. Usually: playing with friends, drawing, stories, numbers, the outside, music, helping. Celebrate each one. Now ask: what is something new you learned recently that made you feel proud? Discuss. Explain: learning is one of the best things humans do. Every day, you know a little more than yesterday. When you are older, you will be able to do amazing things — read any book, understand the world, help people. School is one of the main places where this happens. For many people around the world, going to school is a dream. It is worth remembering how lucky we are when we get to go.
💡 Low-resource tipDiscussion only. No materials needed.
Activity 2 — Every child should go to school
PurposeChildren understand the simple idea that all children deserve the chance to learn.
How to run itAsk: can you think of who should be allowed to go to school? Boys? Girls? Children from every country? Rich children? Poor children? Children with disabilities? Children who speak different languages? Discuss. The answer should be: everyone. Every child, in every country, should be able to go to school and learn. This is a basic idea of fairness. Explain gently that in some places in the world, some children cannot go to school. Sometimes their families are too poor. Sometimes there is no school nearby. Sometimes girls are not allowed to go. Sometimes there is war. Ask: how do you feel about this? Usually: sad, angry, unfair. Discuss: many people around the world are working to make sure every child can go to school. It is one of the most important jobs. Every child who learns to read and do maths has a better chance at a good life.
💡 Low-resource tipDiscussion only. Handle sensitively. No materials needed.
Activity 3 — Reading opens doors
PurposeChildren see why reading in particular is such a powerful gift.
How to run itAsk: can you imagine a day where you could not read any words? You would not be able to read signs, menus, notes, stories, messages. If you needed help in a new city, you could not read the map. If you were sick, you could not read the medicine bottle. If someone sent you a letter, you could not know what it said. Discuss: reading is one of the most powerful gifts anyone can have. It lets you go everywhere, learn everything, and talk to people across distance and time. Now tell the children that many grown-ups in the world cannot read. Not because they are not clever — but because they never got the chance to learn. Learning to read as a child is one of the most important things school gives us. Discuss: if you already know some letters, you are already building this gift for yourself. Every bit of reading you do is opening doors for your future.
💡 Low-resource tipDiscussion only. No materials needed.
Discussion Questions
  • Q1What is something you have learned that makes you proud?
  • Q2Why is it important that all children — boys and girls — can go to school?
  • Q3Can you imagine not knowing how to read? What would be difficult?
  • Q4What is one thing you would like to learn in the future?
  • Q5How can you help a friend who is finding something hard to learn?
Writing Tasks
Drawing task
Draw a picture of you at school doing something you love. Write or say: I love ___________ because ___________. Every child in the world should be able to ___________.
Skills: Connecting personal love of learning to universal rights
Sentence completion
Going to school is important because ___________. Every child should go to school because ___________.
Skills: Articulating the personal and universal value of education
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

Some children do not need school because they will not use it.

What to teach instead

Every child benefits from school, whatever they grow up to do. Reading, writing, counting, and understanding the world help in almost every part of life — in work, in family, in making decisions. A child who does not go to school loses many chances that cannot easily be made up later. Every child deserves the opportunity to learn.

Common misconception

If you do not like one thing at school, school is not for you.

What to teach instead

School has many different parts. You might love reading but find maths hard. You might love art but not sport. You might love being with friends but find some lessons boring. That is normal. Very few people love every part of school. The important thing is that you keep showing up, keep trying, and find the parts you love. Over time, even the hard parts get easier.

Core Ideas
1 Education as a human right
2 How many children are out of school
3 Barriers to education — poverty, gender, disability, war
4 The power of education for individuals and societies
5 Quality, not just access
6 What fair education looks like
Background for Teachers

Education is protected as a human right by Article 26 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948): 'Everyone has the right to education. Education shall be free, at least in the elementary and fundamental stages. Elementary education shall be compulsory.' The same right is in Article 13 of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (1966) and Article 28 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child (1989). Most countries have legal protection for education in their constitutions. Despite these protections, many children still miss out. According to UNESCO, around 250 million children, adolescents, and youth are out of school worldwide. The problem is worst in sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia, and areas affected by conflict. Even among those in school, many are not learning adequately — the 'learning crisis' means hundreds of millions of children cannot read a simple sentence after several years of school.

Main barriers include

Poverty — families cannot afford school fees, uniforms, or books; children must work to contribute to family income. Gender — in many countries, girls face extra barriers including early marriage, pregnancy, lack of facilities for menstrual hygiene, and cultural pressure. About 129 million girls are out of school globally. Disability — children with disabilities are often excluded because schools are not accessible or teachers not trained. War and displacement — conflicts have destroyed schools, displaced millions of children, and caused long interruptions. About 25-30 million children are out of school because of conflict. Distance — in rural areas, schools may be far away. Language — children who speak minority languages may struggle in classes taught in another language. Health — malnutrition, illness, and lack of safe drinking water all affect learning. The power of education is enormous. Educated people earn more, live longer, have healthier children, are more likely to participate in democracy, and are less likely to experience violence. Girls' education has particularly strong effects — it reduces child marriage, infant mortality, and poverty. At a society level, educated populations drive economic growth, innovation, and democratic development.

Quality, not just access

Getting children into school is not enough.

Schools must actually teach

Good teachers, reasonable class sizes, appropriate materials, safe environments, and relevant curricula all matter. The 'learning crisis' shows what happens when access expands without quality improving — millions of children in school but not learning. The UN Sustainable Development Goal 4 (agreed 2015) aims for 'inclusive and equitable quality education' for all by 2030. Progress has been made but the goal will not be met at current rates.

Teaching note

This is a topic where students can connect the principles to their own lives and see the privilege of being in school. Handle conversations about barriers with sensitivity, especially if students come from backgrounds where access was difficult.

Key Vocabulary
Right to education
The protected right of every person to learn, set out in Article 26 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and in many other international and national laws.
Literacy
The ability to read and write. Basic literacy is one of the main goals of primary education.
Primary education
The first stage of school, usually from age 5 or 6 to about 11. Protected as compulsory and free by international human rights law.
Secondary education
The stage of school that follows primary, usually from about age 11 to 18. Not yet universal worldwide but an expanding priority.
Out of school
Children and young people who should be in school but are not — because of poverty, conflict, distance, discrimination, or other barriers.
Learning crisis
The global problem that many children in school are not learning basic reading and maths — access has grown, but quality has not always followed.
Inclusive education
Schools that welcome all children, including those with disabilities, from minority groups, and from different backgrounds — with the support they need to learn.
SDG 4
Sustainable Development Goal 4, adopted by the UN in 2015: to ensure inclusive, equitable, quality education and lifelong learning opportunities for all by 2030.
Classroom Activities
Activity 1 — Why education matters
PurposeStudents understand the many ways education changes individual and collective lives.
How to run itAsk: what does education do for a person? Collect ideas. Build a list: helps you get a job; helps you earn more money; lets you understand the world; lets you participate in decisions; helps you stay healthier; gives you more choices in life. Walk through specific effects. (1) Income: on average, each extra year of school increases future earnings significantly. (2) Health: educated people are less likely to die young and more likely to have healthy families. (3) Democracy: educated citizens are more likely to vote, participate, and hold governments to account. (4) Safety: educated people are less likely to be victims of violence or discrimination. (5) Freedom: education gives the tools to understand, question, and choose. Now think about societies. Ask: what happens when a whole country's population is well-educated? Usually: faster economic growth, stronger democracies, more innovation, healthier people, more equal opportunities. Countries that invested heavily in education — South Korea, Singapore, Finland — have transformed themselves in a generation. Ask: is education a private benefit (for the individual) or a public benefit (for everyone)? It is both. You gain personally, but others benefit too. This is why most countries pay for education through taxes rather than just letting individuals decide.
💡 Low-resource tipTeacher presents effects verbally. Students discuss. No materials needed.
Activity 2 — Who is out of school, and why?
PurposeStudents understand who misses out on education and the main reasons why.
How to run itPresent the basic facts. About 250 million children worldwide are out of school. The problem is worst in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. Present the main reasons. (1) Poverty. School may be officially free, but families still need to pay for uniforms, books, or transport. Some children must work to help their families survive — tending animals, helping in fields, caring for siblings. (2) Gender. About 129 million girls are out of school. Reasons include early marriage, pregnancy, lack of safe toilets, long distances to school, and cultural attitudes that value boys' education more. (3) Disability. Children with physical or learning disabilities are often excluded from mainstream schools. Schools may not be accessible, teachers may not be trained, and families may be afraid or ashamed. (4) Conflict and displacement. Wars destroy schools and force families to flee. About 25-30 million children are out of school because of conflict. Syrian, Afghan, Ukrainian, and many other children have missed years of school. (5) Distance. In rural areas, the nearest school may be hours away. Walking long distances is tiring and sometimes dangerous. (6) Language. Children who speak minority languages may struggle in schools teaching in a different language. (7) Health and hunger. Children who are ill, hungry, or lack safe drinking water cannot learn well. Ask: which of these barriers can be removed? All of them, at least partly. Free meals at school; scholarships; safe transport; accessible buildings; trained teachers; protecting schools in conflict; teaching in mother tongue early on; health programmes. Every child out of school is a loss — for them and for the world.
💡 Low-resource tipTeacher presents facts verbally. Handle sensitively. No materials needed.
Activity 3 — What makes a good school?
PurposeStudents think about quality, not just access.
How to run itImagine a school that is free, open to everyone, and fully attended. But the children are not really learning. What could be wrong? Collect ideas. Present elements of quality. (1) Good teachers who know their subjects, care about their students, and have enough training and support. (2) Manageable class sizes. A teacher with 100 students cannot give individual attention. (3) Appropriate materials. Books, paper, basic equipment. Many schools lack even these. (4) Safe environment. Children cannot learn if they are afraid of bullying, violence, or unsafe buildings. (5) Relevant curriculum. Lessons that connect to students' lives, future work, and broader understanding. (6) Teaching in a language children understand. Especially in early years. (7) Good school leadership. Head teachers who support staff and care about outcomes. (8) Health and nutrition. Hungry or sick children cannot learn. (9) Inclusive practices. Every child welcomed and supported. (10) Accountability. Someone checking that schools actually teach. Ask: which of these matter most? All of them interact. Missing one can make the others much less effective. Discuss the learning crisis: hundreds of millions of children in school but not learning to read a simple sentence after 3-4 years. This is a moral and practical failure. Access without quality is a hollow promise. Ask: what could be done differently? Pay teachers better. Train them more. Reduce class sizes. Provide basic materials. Support struggling children early. Hold systems accountable. Real improvement takes sustained investment and political will.
💡 Low-resource tipTeacher presents elements verbally. Students discuss. No materials needed.
Discussion Questions
  • Q1What is something you have learned at school that has made a real difference to your life?
  • Q2Why do you think girls in some parts of the world have a harder time going to school than boys?
  • Q3If you had to choose between more children in school or better quality for those already there, which would you choose? Why?
  • Q4What makes a teacher good? What makes a school a good place to learn?
  • Q5If you could change one thing about schools in your country, what would it be?
  • Q6Why does education help a whole country, not just the person being educated?
Writing Tasks
Task 1 — Explain and give an example
Explain why education is considered a human right and give ONE example of a barrier that keeps children from school. Write 4 to 6 sentences.
Skills: Explaining a concept, using examples
Task 2 — Short argument
Explain why getting children into school is not enough — why quality matters too. Write 4 to 6 sentences.
Skills: Reasoning about access vs quality
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

Children who do not do well at school must not be trying hard enough.

What to teach instead

Many factors beyond effort shape how well a child does at school — hunger, stress at home, language barriers, learning difficulties, poor teaching, and lack of materials. A child who works hard in a class with 80 other children and no books may still fall behind. A hungry child cannot concentrate, no matter how hard they try. Blaming children for struggles that are caused by their circumstances is unfair and unhelpful. Better support — not more blame — helps children succeed.

Common misconception

Girls' education is only important for girls.

What to teach instead

Girls' education benefits everyone. Educated girls grow into educated mothers, who raise healthier children and invest more in their families' learning. Countries that educate girls well see faster economic growth, stronger democracies, and less violence. They also see lower rates of early marriage and child mortality. Girls' education is one of the most powerful investments a society can make — its effects reach far beyond the individual girls themselves.

Common misconception

Once a country provides schools, the right to education is fulfilled.

What to teach instead

Providing school buildings is just one part of the right to education. The right also includes: the school must be accessible (close enough, affordable, welcoming to all); the quality must be good enough for real learning; teaching must be inclusive and respectful; there must be no discrimination; and the education must actually prepare children for meaningful life and work. A country with schools but widespread learning failure is not really fulfilling the right — just going through the motions.

Core Ideas
1 The right to education in international law
2 The global picture — progress and gaps
3 The learning crisis
4 Girls' education as a global priority
5 Inclusive education — disability, language, minority groups
6 Education and economic development
7 Education in conflict and crisis
8 Private vs public education — debates
Background for Teachers

Education is one of the most widely recognised and studied human rights, with complex contemporary challenges. Understanding its legal foundations, current status, and ongoing debates is essential at secondary level.

International law

Article 26 of the UDHR (1948) established education as a right. Article 13 of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (1966) made it binding in international law, with specific provisions: primary education must be free and compulsory; secondary and higher education should be progressively accessible; parents have rights to choose their children's schools; all education should aim at the full development of human personality and respect for human rights. Article 28 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child (1989) reinforces these commitments with specific attention to children. The UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, in its General Comment 13 (1999), developed the '4 As' framework: availability (schools must exist); accessibility (physically, economically, non-discriminatorily); acceptability (appropriate quality and relevance); adaptability (responsive to changing needs).

Global picture

UNESCO estimates about 250 million children, adolescents, and youth are out of school as of 2023. Sub-Saharan Africa alone accounts for about 98 million out-of-school children and young people. Progress since 2000 has been substantial — primary school completion rates have risen significantly in many countries — but the pace has slowed and in some cases reversed. COVID-19 caused major disruption, with an estimated 24 million additional children at risk of not returning to school. Conflict has increased out-of-school numbers in Ukraine, Sudan, Yemen, and elsewhere. The UN Sustainable Development Goal 4 (universal primary and secondary education by 2030) will not be met at current rates. The learning crisis: The World Bank and UNESCO documented this crisis most clearly around 2017-2018. Even among children in school, many are not learning adequately. In many low- and middle-income countries, more than 50% of 10-year-olds cannot read and understand a simple story (this has been called 'learning poverty'). The reasons include underpaid and undertrained teachers, lack of materials, inadequate class sizes, poor school leadership, and mismatched curricula. COVID-19 made this significantly worse. The distinction between access (children in school) and learning (children actually learning) has become central to modern education debates.

Girls' education

Despite major progress, gaps remain. About 129 million girls are out of school globally. In some countries (particularly in the Sahel, South Asia, Afghanistan under the Taliban), the gap is severe. The Taliban's ban on secondary and higher education for girls since 2021 is one of the most serious reversals in decades.

Barriers include

Early marriage (12 million girls under 18 married each year); pregnancy and child-rearing; lack of safe school facilities including toilets; long and unsafe journeys to school; cultural attitudes; gender-based violence. The Malala Fund and many other organisations focus on this issue. Evidence shows girls' education has transformative effects — lower fertility, better child health, higher family income, greater political participation.

Inclusive education

Children with disabilities remain disproportionately excluded. UNESCO estimates about 240 million children globally live with disabilities; many do not attend school, and many who do receive inadequate support. Article 24 of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (2006) requires inclusive education. Good practice involves accessible buildings, trained teachers, appropriate materials, and integration with peers. Similar concerns apply to children from linguistic minorities, indigenous children, and children from socially marginalised groups.

Education and development

Economists have long argued that education drives economic growth. Robert Solow's growth models incorporated 'human capital'; Paul Romer's endogenous growth theory made it central. Empirical studies (Eric Hanushek and Ludger Woessmann's work) find that the quality of education — not just years completed — strongly predicts economic outcomes at the country level. Countries that made sustained education investments (South Korea, Singapore, Finland, Vietnam) have seen dramatic transformation. The Asian Tigers' growth story is inseparable from their education strategy.

Education in conflict and crisis

Armed conflicts destroy schools, displace teachers and students, and disrupt learning for years or decades. The Global Coalition to Protect Education from Attack documents attacks on schools worldwide — over 6,000 attacks on education between 2020-2021. Refugee children face particular challenges — about half of refugee children receive primary education, far fewer secondary. Education in emergencies is now a recognised humanitarian priority, though still under-funded.

Private vs public education

Debates continue about the role of private schooling. Proponents argue private schools can deliver better quality, give parents choice, and innovate faster. Critics argue private education entrenches inequality, undermines public systems, and reduces democratic accountability. Low-fee private schools have expanded rapidly in many developing countries (India, Pakistan, Kenya, Nigeria) — with mixed evidence on quality and equity effects. The OECD's PISA tests allow international comparison; some countries with strong public systems (Finland, South Korea, Japan) outperform much of the world, suggesting that strong public systems are entirely compatible with high quality.

Contemporary challenges

Technology in education (including debates about AI's role); climate change and its educational impacts; migration and education of migrant children; education for sustainable development; teaching critical thinking in the age of misinformation; the place of civic education.

Teaching note

Education is a topic where students can feel empowered — they are themselves beneficiaries and can advocate for better education. Present the global challenges honestly while allowing students to see how their own education connects to larger issues.

Key Vocabulary
Right to education
The protected human right to learn, set out in Article 26 UDHR, Article 13 ICESCR, and Article 28 CRC. Includes access, quality, and non-discrimination.
The '4 As' framework
UN framework for the right to education: availability (schools exist), accessibility (physically, economically, non-discriminatorily), acceptability (quality), adaptability (responsive to learners).
Learning crisis
The global problem that many children in school are not learning basic literacy and numeracy. Documented by the World Bank, UNESCO, and others from around 2017.
Learning poverty
World Bank indicator: the share of 10-year-olds who cannot read and understand a simple story. Exceeds 50% in many low- and middle-income countries.
Human capital
Economic term for the knowledge, skills, and health that people acquire through education and experience. Seen as a key driver of economic growth.
Inclusive education
Education that welcomes all learners, including those with disabilities, from linguistic and ethnic minorities, and from marginalised backgrounds — with appropriate support.
Education in emergencies
Provision of education during and after conflicts, natural disasters, and displacement. A recognised humanitarian sector, though still underfunded.
SDG 4
UN Sustainable Development Goal 4 (2015): 'Ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all' by 2030.
Private vs public education
Debate over the role of privately-run vs publicly-provided schools. Raises questions about quality, equity, accountability, and parental choice.
Pedagogy
The method and practice of teaching. Different pedagogical approaches produce different learning outcomes; research on effective teaching is a major field.
Classroom Activities
Activity 1 — The '4 As' of the right to education
PurposeStudents apply the UN framework for the right to education to evaluate real situations.
How to run itSet out the framework. The UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (General Comment 13, 1999) identified four essential features of the right to education. Availability: there must be enough functioning schools. Buildings, teachers, materials — the basic infrastructure must exist. Accessibility: schools must be physically reachable, economically affordable, and open to all without discrimination. Acceptability: the form and substance of education, including curricula and teaching methods, must be of good quality and relevant. Adaptability: education should be flexible enough to adapt to changing societies and the needs of diverse learners. Apply the framework to real situations. Situation 1: A country has enough school buildings but only 40% of teachers have full qualifications, 50% of 10-year-olds cannot read at grade level, and textbooks are scarce. Analysis: availability partly met, but acceptability seriously deficient. Situation 2: Free public schools exist but are overcrowded and of poor quality; parents who can afford it send children to private schools. Analysis: nominal availability and accessibility but profound equity issues; the system effectively discriminates by economic status. Situation 3: A conflict has destroyed schools in a region; children are taught in tents without adequate materials. Analysis: availability and accessibility severely compromised; special measures for education in emergencies needed. Situation 4: A country legally requires all children to attend school but does not accommodate children with disabilities, Deaf children, or children who speak minority languages. Analysis: availability met formally but accessibility and adaptability failing. Situation 5: A country's schools use only the dominant language; children from language minorities fall behind. Analysis: a form of indirect discrimination; adaptability failing. Ask: is any country currently meeting all four As fully? Very few. Even wealthy systems have gaps. The framework helps identify what needs to improve rather than providing a complete score. Discuss: who is responsible for fulfilling each A? Governments have primary obligations under international law. Communities, families, civil society, and international organisations have supporting roles. Private actors can contribute but cannot replace state responsibility.
💡 Low-resource tipTeacher presents framework and situations verbally. Students analyse. No materials needed.
Activity 2 — Girls' education as global priority
PurposeStudents engage with the evidence, challenges, and solutions regarding girls' education globally.
How to run itSet out the evidence. Global data consistently shows that educating girls produces exceptional returns — for individuals, families, communities, and countries. Evidence: each additional year of girls' schooling increases their future earnings by approximately 10-20%. Educated women have fewer children and have them later, reducing maternal and infant mortality. Educated mothers are more likely to have educated children, creating a generational effect. Countries that educate girls have stronger economies, healthier populations, and more stable democracies. Despite the evidence, about 129 million girls are out of school globally. The reasons vary by context. South Asia: Afghanistan has banned secondary and higher education for girls since 2021 under the Taliban — one of the most serious reversals of girls' education anywhere. Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, and Nepal have made substantial progress but still face challenges of child marriage, dropouts during adolescence, and quality gaps. Sub-Saharan Africa: many countries have near-parity in primary enrolment but gaps widen at secondary level. Child marriage, pregnancy, long distances, and lack of secondary schools are major factors. Sahel: conflict has disrupted many schools; gender gaps are large. Gulf and parts of Middle East: progress varies significantly. Walk through key interventions with evidence of effectiveness. (1) Cash transfers to families conditional on girls' school attendance (Mexico, Brazil, Bangladesh) — robust evidence of success. (2) Safe school facilities including separate toilets — modest cost, significant effect on attendance. (3) Menstrual hygiene programmes — address a specific barrier. (4) Female teachers — particularly important in contexts where families hesitate to send girls to male teachers. (5) Laws against child marriage — necessary but not sufficient without enforcement and social change. (6) Secondary school access close to home — reduces safety concerns for older girls. (7) Girls' clubs and mentoring — support retention and aspirations. (8) Tackling gender-based violence at and on the way to school. (9) Challenging cultural attitudes through community engagement and education of boys. (10) Investment in early childhood to free older girls from sibling-care duties. Discuss. What works depends on the specific barriers in a specific context. Solutions cannot be copied mechanically. But the overall evidence for prioritising girls' education is overwhelming — no single investment produces comparable returns. Ask: what can students do? Awareness, supporting relevant organisations, amplifying girls' voices. The global movement for girls' education has produced real change; it still has far to go.
💡 Low-resource tipTeacher presents evidence and cases verbally. Students discuss. Handle sensitively. No materials needed.
Activity 3 — The learning crisis and what it tells us
PurposeStudents engage with the challenge of improving learning, not just access.
How to run itSet out the crisis. The World Bank's 2018 World Development Report documented the learning crisis: despite dramatic increases in school enrolment globally, many children are not learning. In many low- and middle-income countries, over half of 10-year-olds cannot read and understand a simple story. This is the World Bank's 'learning poverty' indicator. COVID-19 worsened this significantly — estimates suggest an additional 100+ million children pushed into learning poverty. The crisis is not restricted to the poorest countries; it affects middle-income countries and pockets of disadvantage in rich ones. Present explanations. (1) Teacher quality: many teachers in low-income countries have weak subject knowledge and lack effective teaching training. Some studies show teacher absenteeism rates of 15-25% in some countries. (2) Class sizes: very large classes (60-100 students per teacher) make effective teaching almost impossible. (3) Materials: many schools lack basic textbooks, writing materials, or libraries. (4) Curricula: mismatched curricula can move too fast for students who fell behind early and do not catch up. (5) Language: teaching in a language children do not speak well at home undermines learning, especially early on. (6) Nutrition and health: hungry or sick children cannot learn. (7) Family support: children whose parents are illiterate or cannot help with schoolwork face extra challenges. (8) Accountability: if no one checks whether schools are teaching, quality suffers. Work through some evidence on what works. Teaching at the Right Level (Pratham in India) — teach children at their actual level rather than the curriculum year level. Structured teacher support programmes (sometimes with scripted lessons initially) can significantly raise learning. Early grade reading programmes show strong results. Targeted remediation for children falling behind. Reducing class sizes (within limits) and increasing teacher time. Data-driven management — measuring learning and using the data to improve. Mother-tongue instruction in early grades. Discuss. The crisis shows that access and quality are separate problems. Many countries succeeded at getting children into schools while the schools themselves failed to provide effective education. Fixing quality requires sustained investment, professional respect for teachers, and willingness to measure outcomes honestly. The 'right to education' properly understood must include real learning, not just attendance.
💡 Low-resource tipTeacher presents crisis and solutions verbally. Students discuss. No materials needed.
Discussion Questions
  • Q1Article 26 of the UDHR protects the right to education. What does it mean in practice for this right to be 'realised' — and who is responsible for making that happen?
  • Q2The 'learning crisis' shows that many children are in school without actually learning. Does this change what 'the right to education' should mean? Should it be redefined?
  • Q3Girls' education has exceptional returns for societies. Does this mean girls' education should be prioritised over boys' where resources are limited, or should investment be equal by principle?
  • Q4Some countries have rapidly expanding low-fee private schools, especially where public systems are weak. Are these a solution to educational failure, or a sign of it?
  • Q5Finland, South Korea, Singapore, and Vietnam have very different education systems but consistently strong outcomes. What can be learned from these cases, and what cannot be transferred?
  • Q6Refugee children have significantly lower school attendance than the general population. What obligations do host countries and the international community have, and are these being met?
  • Q7Technology, including AI, is increasingly used in education. What are the promises and risks? Could it help address the learning crisis, or deepen inequality?
Writing Tasks
Task 1 — Extended essay
'The right to education means nothing if children are in school but not actually learning.' To what extent do you agree? Write 400 to 600 words.
Skills: Thesis-driven argument, engaging with access vs quality, using evidence
Task 2 — Analytical response
Explain why educating girls has particular effects on societies, and why large numbers of girls remain out of school despite the evidence. Write 200 to 300 words.
Skills: Explaining evidence, analysing barriers
Common Misconceptions
Common misconception

The right to education is primarily about building enough schools.

What to teach instead

The UN framework makes clear that the right to education has multiple dimensions — availability, accessibility, acceptability (quality), and adaptability (responsiveness to learners). A country with enough schools but poor quality, unequal access, or unsuitable curricula is not fully honouring the right. The learning crisis shows this clearly: many systems have expanded access dramatically while the education being provided remains inadequate. Fulfilling the right requires attention to what happens in school, not just whether children are there.

Common misconception

Private education is always higher quality than public education.

What to teach instead

Evidence on this is mixed. Some private schools outperform similar public schools, but much of the difference reflects the students served rather than the education provided. Studies that control for student background often find smaller differences. Meanwhile, the strongest education systems in the world (Finland, South Korea, Japan, Estonia) are primarily public. Private education can be effective but is not inherently superior. Where private education expands significantly alongside weak public systems, it typically entrenches rather than reduces inequality.

Common misconception

Educating girls creates tensions with cultural values and should be pursued carefully.

What to teach instead

This framing has been used to delay action on girls' education in ways that harm millions. Every major world religion, interpreted seriously, supports learning — including for women and girls. Cultural traditions evolve in every society, often faster than outside observers expect. 'Cultural sensitivity' about girls' education has too often meant accepting the status quo that denies girls their rights. Genuine engagement with communities, led by local advocates, has successfully expanded girls' education in contexts often labelled as resistant. Treating girls' education as culturally optional rather than as a universal right gets both the ethics and the politics wrong.

Common misconception

Technology will solve the learning crisis.

What to teach instead

Technology can support learning, but it has not substituted for fundamental inputs like good teachers and effective schools. Many large-scale EdTech interventions have produced disappointing results — one laptop per child initiatives, MOOCs for the global poor, and various tablet programmes. Some applications show real promise (targeted literacy software, teacher support tools). But the learning crisis is primarily a problem of systems — teachers, schools, curricula, accountability — not a problem that technology alone can fix. Technology is a tool within better systems, not a shortcut around them.

Further Information

Key texts for students: Amartya Sen, 'Development as Freedom' (1999) on education as central to human development. Malala Yousafzai, 'I Am Malala' (2013) — accessible, moving account of the fight for girls' education. Martha Nussbaum, 'Creating Capabilities' (2011) on education and human flourishing. World Bank, 'World Development Report 2018: Learning to Realize Education's Promise' — landmark treatment of the learning crisis. UNESCO, 'Global Education Monitoring Report' (annual) — authoritative global picture. Eric Hanushek and Ludger Woessmann, 'The Knowledge Capital of Nations' (2015) on education and growth. John Hattie, 'Visible Learning' (2008 and updates) on what works in classrooms. For historical perspective: Eileen Power and later historians on medieval literacy; Lawrence Stone on the educational revolutions; Peter Linebaugh on access to education in industrial societies. For critical perspectives: Paulo Freire, 'Pedagogy of the Oppressed' (1968). International bodies: UNESCO (unesco.org); UNICEF; the Global Partnership for Education; Education Cannot Wait (for emergencies); the Malala Fund. Data sources: UNESCO Institute for Statistics; World Bank EdStats; OECD PISA; ASER (Annual Status of Education Report) in India and partner countries; Uwezo in East Africa.