Education
International Third World Congress
25-29 July 2001
Jomtien, Thailand
Education International
revisited Jomtien to illuminate the role of teachers as partners in achieving
Education for All
In continuing efforts to
promote the status, interests, and right of teachers and education employees
and achieve education for all, El hosted the largest international meeting
of teachers at its Third World Congress: Educating in a Global Economy.
More than 1,100 delegates, observers and guests from some 155 countries attended.
Educating in a Global Economy
The Congress theme, 'Educating in a Global Economy' guided discussions
on the role of teachers. Delegates identified ways of helping educators and
their organisations meet their future challenges of defending public education,
providing quality education, fighting child labour, securing education rights
of indigenous peoples, etc. They created policy to shape the international voice
of education personnel, and allocated a multi-million dollar budget for the
next three years.
11 years ago, government
representatives at the 1990 World Conference on Education for All in Jomtien,
Thailand pledged to provide primary education for all children and massively
reduce adult illiteracy by the end of the decade. They failed the first time,
but will not again. El outlined Partnerships to Achieve Education for All
as one of the three sub themes for the World Congress. Delegates reviewed viable
options for achieving education for all and examined how partnerships among
the shakeholders will help make the new goal of 2015 a reality. Then through
policy development and resource allocation, delegates created El's strategy
to help put every child in school.
Globalisatian and the
Rights and Employment Conditions of Teachers sub theme focused on how the
globalisation process has brought education 'reform' that has deteriorated the
working conditions, employment rights and pay of education personnel. Delegates
discussed ways to influence current international debates and policies so that
the approach to globalisation places people first. Challenging the WTO's General
Agreement on Trade in Services, debt relief, and the lack of transparency and
democratic procedures of some international agencies were hot topics on the
congressional floor.
The third sub theme topic
Education and Information Technology could not be left out of any discussion
regarding the future of education. Information and communication technology
brings new challenges and opportunities that may be decisive for the future
of public education. Debates concerning the super-concentration of the eLearning
industry, how to increase educator involvement in educational software development,
and the new role for governments in the information age broke new policy grounds
for El.
The Jamaica Teachers' Association
was represented by a delegation of 17 headed by the then President, Judith Spencer
Jarrett.
For more information, go
to the EI site - e-i.i-e.org
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