Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 2

UNESCO report cites migration’s positive effect on family’s

education
17
SHARES
Share it!
Published December 3, 2018, 5:33 PM

By Roy Mabasa

Filipino migration positively affects the education of those they left behind,
according to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
(UNESCO)’s 2019 Global Education Monitoring (GEM) Report.

(AFP|MANILA BULLETIN)

Entitled, “Bridging Bridges not Walls: Migration, Displacement, and Education,” the
2019 GEM Report presented implications of different types of migration and
displacement on education systems, as well as the impact of reforming education
curricula and approaches to training and teacher preparation.

“On migration, it is found out that migration affects the education of those left
behind.” In the case of the Philippines, it has affected the country positively, the
UNESCO report said.

With 1.5 to 3 million children who have at least one international migrant parent abroad, the
Philippines showed an increase in school attendance and reduced child labor due to the rise in
international remittances from the migrant workers.

On displacement, the UNESCO report mentioned that “education for the displaced lags in access
and quality” and “tracking education trajectories of the internally displaced is difficult.”

It noted that in the presence of natural calamities such as typhoons, volcanic eruptions,
earthquakes, and landslides, the Philippines’ “disaster risk reduction measures and the
availability of typhoon-resistant schools equipped with instructional resources has led to an
average increase of 0.3 years of education.”

While the report pointed out that “loss of talent can be detrimental for poorer countries,” the case
of the Philippines, however, was cited for being one of the few Asian countries that are seeing
more citizens return with valuable skills.
It also mentioned that the Philippines has instated policies for returnees and linked them to
recognition services and prospective employers.

In her foreword, GEM Report Advisory Board Chair Helen Clark said the Report “shows us in
the form of so many uplifting examples from Canada, Chad, Colombia, Ireland, Lebanon, the
Philippines, Turkey and Uganda, education can also be a bridge.”

“It can bring out the best in people, and lead to stereotypes, prejudices, and discrimination being
discarded for critical thinking, solidarity and openness. It can offer a helping hand to those who
have suffered and a springboard to those who desperately need opportunity.”

Accordingly, the GEM Report calls on the government to take actions with regard to the
inclusion of the migrants and refugees to their educational system.

It listed recommendations that include the protection of the right to education of migrants and
displaced people, the inclusion of the migrants and displaced people in the national educational
system, understanding and planning for the education needs of migrants and displaced people,
and preparation of teachers of migrants and refugees to address diversity and hardship.

Furthermore, it suggested that governments should harness the potential of migrants and
displaced people.

GEM Report is an annual publication that assesses progress towards Sustainable Development
Goal 4 on education, as well as other related education targets in the 2030 Agenda for
Sustainable Development.

You might also like