Brunei Darussalam Country Paper SEAMEO CONSULTATION AND WORKSHOP Post Education Scenarios and Post-EFA Education Agenda in Southeast Asia CHIENGMAI, THAILAND.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
UNESCO’s understanding of education quality
Advertisements

ECOSOC High-Level Segment: Special Policy Dialogue on Education Challenges in Africa and LDCs H Dansinghani, Ministry of Education & HR, Mauritius.
EAC HIGHER EDUCATION POLICY
TVET Development in Sri Lanka T.A.Piyasiri Vice Chancellor University of Vocational Technology 1 UNESCO – UNEVOC Seminar, Sydney 2014.
Operationalising Strategic Development Plan for Effective Results Presentation by the Government of Timor-Leste Education Sector presented by Bendito dos.
AME Education Sector Profile
SOME QUESTIONS ABOUT EDUCATION AND TRAINING CONCERNING THE LABOUR MARKET IN VIETNAM Dr. Nguyen Ba Can Deputy General Director Department of Facilitates.
Quality Systems for Quality Teachers:
Indonesian Achievements of EFA 1 By HAMID MUHAMMAD Deputy Minister of Secondary Education Ninth E-9 Ministerial Review Meeting New Delhi, India 8-10 November.
Presented by, Team-Hay No Vacante! Country- INDIA.
National Employment Strategy as a response to the challenges of the Polish labour market Budapest, 20 October 2005.
SKILLS FOR WORK, GROWTH AND POVERTY REDUCTION Robert Palmer and Kenneth King 30th May 2008, University of Nottingham Challenges and Opportunities in the.
Thailand’s Experience in Addressing the Challenges of Secondary Education Development By Khunying Kasama Varavarn Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Education,
Skills for Employment CIDA Policy context and Programming guidelines ACCC Forum–Edmonton, June c.
Sub-regional Workshop for the Gulf Countries to Launch the Education for All National Assessments Sharjah, June, 2013 National EFA 2015 Review Concept.
E 9 meeting on Teacher Development for inclusive relevant Quality Education.
OECD Skills Strategy Translating better skills into better economic and social outcomes Israel Accession Seminar November 2011 Deborah Roseveare.
1 Note: Google translate based translation The Millennium Development Goals in the Republic of Moldova.
Timor-Leste AME EDUCATION SECTOR PROFILE. Education Structure Timor-Leste Source: UNESCO Institute for Statistics, World Bank EdStats Education System.
Strengthening the Crossroads: Education, Gender Equality and Economic Development Putu M. Kamayana Country Director, Cambodia Resident Mission Asian Development.
Bill Ratteree ILO EDUCATION INTERNATIONAL EUROPEAN REGION Vocational Education and Training Round Table October 2009, Budapest.
Objective III of the Draft Program of Action: Education Comments by Diane Richler President, Inclusion International.
Matching Education Outputs with Labor Market Needs Experts’ Meeting 9th Conference of Arab Ministers of Education Tunisia, May 27, 2014.
Presentation of Seychelles.  Providing for the diversity of educational needs and national development priorities  1.1Reform the Structure and Curriculum.
Goal 4 Target by target response to the Education 2030 Agenda
Addressing the Challenge of Youth Unemployment in Africa.
M&E progress in EFA Goals Prepared by Nyi Nyi THAUNG, UIS (Bangkok) Capacity Building Workshop on Monitoring and Evaluating Progress in Education in the.
Trade Union Training on Youth Employment for Leaders of Youth Committees in Asia and the Pacific region Bangkok May 13, 2004 Sara Spant Associate Expert.
Teachers and the Quality Imperative for EFA International Task Force on Teachers for EFA 6-7 July 2010 Amman, Jordan.
This project is financed by Ministry of European Union and the Republic of Turkey. Improving the Quality of Vocational Education and Training in Turkey.
1 Latest EU developments in the field of Adult education 19 Mars 2010 Marta Ferreira.
CREATING THE FUTURE Challenges and Opportunities for ICT in Education and Development Patti Swarts, GeSCI Africa Regional Programme Manager TPD Workshop,
The Millennium Development Goals The fight against global poverty and inequality.
Women’s access to higher education: Impact on MDGs and Sustainability presented by: CHRISTIANA BADOO & JENNIFER AMPONSAH Date: 8 th October 2015.
The Lancashire Skills and Employment Conversation #theskillsconversation.
Hessian Ministry of Economics, Transport, Urban and Regional Development Different approaches of the State of Hessen to adapt labour and qualification.
Beyond Primary Education: Challenges of and Approaches to Expanding Learning Opportunities in AfricaAssociation for the Development of Education in Africa.
11 OECD-EC Education Policy Outlook Country Profile POLAND Judith Peterka, OECD Directorate for Education & Skills Warsaw, 25 November 2015.
Implementation of the international development goals by the Lao PDR I. National Development Strategy II.Progress in the implementation of National Development.
Youth on the Move A new impetus for improving youth employment in Europe Policy coordinator Youth, Human Capital, Social.
Sticking to Our Goals: Scholars and Donors as Agents of Women’s Empowerment and Sustainable Development The Global Women’s Fund of the Episcopal Diocese.
Women, Work, and the Economy: Macroeconomic Gains from Gender Equity The views expressed in this presentation are those of the authors and should not be.
2009 ASEAN-KOREA EDUCATION LEADERS’ FORUM Seoul November 2009.
Presentation to OECD Policy Forum on the reassessment of the OECD Jobs Strategy 7-8 July 2005, Tokyo, Japan Better Jobs, Working Smarter.
Gerard Griffin National Co-ordinator VTOS. ETBs QQI SOLAS DSP HEA Local Government.
The Promise and Problems of Higher Education in Fragile Regions Joseph B. Berger & Katherine Edmund Hudson University of Massachusetts Amherst.
Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world. Nelson Mandela (1918 – 2013) Nobel Laureate, 1993.
Education and Gender Equality Anu Mundkur, Associate Director, Gender Consortium, Flinders University.
World Day Against Child Labour June INTERNATIONAL LABOUR ORGANIZATION.
MODULE 1 Strategic Dialogue of Education Ministers.
Vision of Education and Sports Development to 2030, Strategy to 2025 and ESDP( ) Presented by: Department of Planning, MoES 1.
UBE: Analysis of the UBE Act and the Way Forward
WORK & EDUCATION Matching Skills to Labour Skills Market
Afghanistan EFA MDA National Report
Women’s access to higher education: Impact on MDGs and Sustainability
Building a Sustainable Funding Model
Strategic Skills Development and Youth Employment
Policies and Planning of Literacy and CLCs in Afghanistan
SECTOR PRIORITIES AND OUTCOMES
DIRECTION OF TVET POLICY IN LAO. PDR
Private sector development and SDGs in Albania
WORKING WITH SOMALI PEOPLE TO BUILD PEACE AND PROSPERITY
International policy and education: The Post 2015 Education and Development agenda Elaine Unterhalter.
Data Analysis Workshop on Education Indicators
AGRICULTURAL EDUCATION IN UNIVERSITIES BY YEAR 2030
Beyond 2015: Education, a key goal for sustainable development Dennis Sinyolo EI Senior Coordinator, Education and Employment.
Education SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOAL 4
International policy and education: The Post 2015 Education and Development agenda Elaine Unterhalter.
International Aspects of Access and Inequalities in Education
China’s Employment Policies
Presentation transcript:

Brunei Darussalam Country Paper SEAMEO CONSULTATION AND WORKSHOP Post Education Scenarios and Post-EFA Education Agenda in Southeast Asia CHIENGMAI, THAILAND (28 – 30 JANUARY 2014)

Summary Progress in Education A nation with a small population – Less than half million. Dependent on a non-renewable resource for growth and stability. Challenges always emerging. MOE BD continues to review and fine-tune its education system and management ensuring that it remains relevant at all times and support the nation’s drive to realise Brunei Vision 2035 (Wawasan Brunei 2035).

Brunei Vision 2035 “By 2035, Brunei Darussalam as a nation is to be recognised ‘for the accomplishment of its educated and highly skilled people as measured by the highest international standards; quality of life that is among the top 10 nations in the world; and a dynamic and sustainable economy with income per capita within the top 10 countries in the world’. To realise this goals - new education system known as the “National Education System for the 21st Century”, in short SPN21 (Sistem Pendidikan Negara Abad ke-21).

SPN21 The SPN21 commenced in January 2009 Three main changes to ensure that the Brunei education system stays relevant at all times and brings about high quality education. Education Structure Curriculum and Assessment Technical Education

Top 3 Achievements in Education Achievement 1 : Universalization of Primary Education (EFA2) BD continues to make great strides in education Boys and girls net enrolment ratio in primary education was more than 96.0 per cent Survival rate is about 99.0 per cent. Primary education completion rate is another mark of successful MDG achievement Brunei Darussalam have been more than 100 per cent since 2004. Such achievements are made possible due to these attributing factors: the country’s long-term education policy. high-quality human capital formation. provision of good educational infrastructure and teaching facilities.

EFA 5 : Gender Parity and Equality Achievement 2 EFA 5 : Gender Parity and Equality The net enrolment in primary education over the last five years remains above 95.0 per cent and the survival rate has increased. Net enrolment at secondary and tertiary levels also showed a positive trend . The employed female labour force steadily increased . BD has achieved gender parity in primary and secondary education. At the tertiary level, girls are even doing better than boys. Decades before the dawn of the new millennium and the MDGs, Brunei Darussalam had recognised that educating a boy benefits only an individual while educating a girl benefits the whole family and hence, the society. Brunei Darussalam has also acceded to the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) on 24th May 2006.

Literacy rate: High and increasing levels Achievement 3 Literacy rate: High and increasing levels The literacy rate has increased from 69.0 per cent in 1971 to 80.3 per cent in 1981, further increased to 89.2 per cent in 1991 and 93.7 per cent in 2001. The literacy rate continued to increase from 95.0 per cent in 2005 to 96.3 per cent in 2010. Adult literacy rates are very high : 99.60% in 2011. This has helped to create a more inclusive society as well as facilitating adaptation to the demands of a modern world.

Top 3 Emerging Issues / Trends in Education 1. Mismatch : Education vs Skills needed for job As the smallest country in terms of population, Brunei has the highest unemployment rate (10%,est.2001). (World Fact Book, 2004). BD MOE is trying to reduce unemployment by matching the skills provided in education and training with the skills required by the industry and world of work. Efforts to improve the image of technical education by integrating vocational and technical education with general education.

Emerging Issue 2: Capacity Development 1. BD now ready to set more ambitious goals which go beyond MDG achievement at an aggregate level. 2. Nevertheless, major capacity development challenges remain - capacities which will be required to strengthen the national data and information base for monitoring the country’s progress in achieving both the MDGs and the recently formulated 30 year development framework: the Wawasan Brunei 2035. 3. It will also need to formulate appropriate and effective policy measures which promote more broad based and diversified investment and economic development opportunities for the country and its people.

Emerging Issue 3:Quantity at the Expense of Quality ( EFA 6 ) The basic challenge is how to meet two conflicting requirements: on the one hand the demand for rapid expansion of the scale of provision and on the other hand the requirement to improve the quality of provision. There is a tendency that quality is not adequately addressed (being sacrificed) due to the fast expansion of learning opportunity. Shift in focus from quantity to quality and equity by investing in infrastructural development, teacher training, faculty and curriculum development.

Top 3 Priorities in Education Priority 1. Early Childhood Care and Education (EFA 1) Investing in ECCE under Brunei Vision 2035. Developing an effective ECCE framework as strategic objectives under the Ministry of Education’s Strategic Plan 2012 – 2017. BD MOE has continuously conducting capacity building programs has made effort to improve access and provisions of ECCE services in both urban and rural schools; improve and strengthen ECCE infrastructure as well as strengthen Inter-agency coordination is currently conducting a feasibility study on the need for early childhood and care education specifically to cater for children below the age of five;

Priority 2 :Technical and Vocational Education MOE is currently restructuring and transforming the TVET system. to make the TVET system more effective in managing human resources (“employability skills” ) The provisions of multiple entries to TVE and multiple pathways to higher education that is comparable and similar to other international systems. new programmes aligned with the needs of the industries and employment market demands; an increase in operational budget; industrially experiences teaching staff undergoing industrial attachment. recruitment of more industrial practitioners into TVET.

Priority 3: Strengthening Teaching and Learning Programmes and Processes Brunei has shortage of teachers both in number and quality and Teaching is not an attractive profession. MOE continues to invest its teaching force by providing teachers with the opportunity to upgrade their pedagogical competencies to increase students’ learning outcomes. Providing and strengthening the leadership skills as well as teachers professional and development programmes either locally or abroad. MOE is currently developing the Brunei Teachers’ Standards (BTS) which will hope to improve the quality of primary and secondary education including technical education and to ensure that all teachers are fully certified and qualified to teach in government and non-government schools and higher institutions.

Top 3 Challenges in Education Challenges 1 : SPN 21 - Beyond MDG2 Having achieved universal primary education, Brunei Darussalam has recognised that the way forward is to raise the level of literacy beyond the UNESCO’s definition that is “who can read and write with understanding a short simple statement related to everyday life”. By raising the level of literacy, it proposes to enhance the nation’s skills, develop a more responsive and stable economy and provide employment opportunities for all. The country is in a consolidation phase wherein it has to consolidate its achievements, sustain them and raise their levels to new heights to cope with the new millennium imperatives. The Government has formulated various policy responses in line with its National Vision – Wawasan Brunei 2035.

Challenges 2 : Teaching And Learning BD has a shortage of teachers both in number and quality. Improving quality of education is really one of the big challenges faced by BD Several measures have been undertaken : Since 2012, more than 80% of teachers in secondary have obtained at least first degree qualifications. School Leadership Programme for all school leaders and administrators which would help them transforming the schools settings to support high quality teaching and learning for all students. The new teachers’ salary scheme incentive known as the Teachers Service Scheme (SPG - Skim Perkhidmatan Guru), introduced in 2008 aims at expanding the capacity of teachers, to keep good performing teachers in schools, making them to feel highly valued and teaching as a prestigious career. The Ministry also continuously providing professional development programmes for teachers.

Challenges 3: New wave of linking ‘Education to Work’ Having a small population size does not preclude having high human development and robust economic development. Economic diversification requires continuous reassessment of policy direction and the human development required to support it

Terima Kasih Thank You