

One innovative approach to providing enriching learning opportunities beyond school walls that address the inequities in our current systems is Playful Learning Landscapes (PLL)-installations and programming that promote children and families’ learning through play in the public realm. Moreover, the cascading effects of the pandemic are disproportionally affecting families living in communities challenged by decades of discrimination and disinvestment-and are very likely to widen already existing educational inequities in worrisome ways. But while the pandemic forced an abrupt slowdown in modern life, it also provided an opportunity to reexamine how we can prioritize learning and healthy development both in and out of school. At the Center for Universal Education, we will be following these innovations closely and look forward to the insights that they will bring to the education sector.Īs we look ahead to 2022, one continued challenge for many families is navigating the uncharted territory of supporting children’s learning with a growing number of school closures. The Education Outcomes Fund organization is slated to launch programs in Ghana and Sierra Leone, and we also expect to see the launch of country-specific outcomes funds for education such as OFFER (Outcome Fund For Education Results) in Colombia, the Back-to-School Outcomes Fund in India, and another fund in Chile.

This year, pooled funding through outcomes funds-a scaled version of impact bonds-should make a particularly big splash.
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One way we are seeing these areas strengthened is through innovative financing for education, such as impact bonds, which require data to operate at full potential. Additionally, high-quality program cost data are needed for decisionmakers to plan, budget, and choose the most cost-effective interventions. We have seen a renewed focus on different forms of data that are critical to enhanced education outcomes, such as real-time performance data, which allow teachers and other decisionmakers to course-adjust to the needs of learners to better support their educational journeys. More than ever, in 2022 it will be critical to focus on strengthening the fabric of our global education system in order to achieve positive outcomes-particularly through an increased focus on data-informed decisionmaking.

In the Center for Universal Education, our scholars take stock of the trends, policies, practices, and research that they’ll be closely keeping an eye on this year and likely in the many to come. The key question is whether 2022 and the years ahead will lead to education transformation or will students, teachers, and families suffer long-lasting setbacks? At the same time, not all of the sudden changes precipitated by the pandemic have been bad-with some promising new innovations, allies, and increased attention on the field of global education emerging over the past three years. Around the world, education systems have had to contend with sporadic closures, inequitable access to education technology and other distance learning tools, and deep challenges in maintaining both students’ and teachers’ physical and emotional health. As the third calendar year of the pandemic begins, 2022 promises to be an important one-especially for education.
