Right to education
Education is a right. It’s the key to a better childhood, and a better future for children, their communities and their countries.
It is the responsibility of the state and a core element of any development policy committed to social justice. Yet for many children worldwide, the right to education remains unfulfilled.
While strides have been made to increase access to primary school for 29 million more children over the past decade, 67 millions of children, especially girls, remain out of school. The reality in most countries is that the quality of education continues to be poor.
Over the past 38 years ActionAid has been working to increase access to quality primary education globally. Our approach has evolved from delivering education services to adopting a rights based approach.
Our work currently focuses on 3 key priorities:
Key to achieving these goals is challenging and transforming the socio-economic and political factors keeping girls out of school, including violence, HIV and AIDS and poverty. More information to follow on our work on girls’ education violence in and around schools.
We work alongside children, parents, teachers, communities, teachers unions, researchers and education coalitions to undertake evidenced-based advocacy and campaigning, to inform innovative community-based interventions and research efforts. We connect to regional education networks – CLADE, ASPBAE and ANCEFA and the Global Campaign for Education as a founding and current board member.
In Sierra Leone, our Right to Education programmes have constructed easily accessible school buildings in poor communities and organized School Management Committees (SMCs) from the communities to oversee the day-to-day running of the schools, teacher conduct, issues of teacher remuneration and advocacy.
We also used the unique Regenerated Freirean Literacy through Empowering Community Techniques (REFLECT) as a major component of our interventions in reducing adult literacy.
Through this approach communities have deepened their understanding of nature, performed their own analysis and helped mobilise and organise education, linking excluded groups across communities.