Dr EYONG EBOT TATAW
Developpeur et evaluateur des curriculum PhD en Curriculum et Evaluation
Making sure the examination is itch free from cheating and copy work.
Our children need not only general education but also technical and vocational. Education Without Education Without Barriers, Cameroon in Cameroon.
An era without education will lead to ungoverned and uncivilized youths.Let us send our kids to school to avoid the worse.
Education
Every child has the right to learn.
A smiling young student holds a small chalkboard in a classroom in Côte d’Ivoire.
UNICEF/UN0149769/Dejongh
On any given school day, over 1 billion children around the world head to class.
More children and adolescents today are enrolled in pre-primary, primary and secondary education than ever before. Yet, for many of them, schooling does not lead to learning.
A lack of trained teachers, inadequate learning materials, makeshift classes and poor sanitation facilities make learning difficult for many children. Others come to school too hungry, sick or exhausted from work or household tasks to benefit from their lessons.
The consequences are grave: An estimated 617 million children and adolescents around the world are unable to reach minimum proficiency levels in reading and mathematics – even though two thirds of them are in school.
This learning crisis is the greatest global challenge to preparing children and adolescents for life, work and active citizenship.
Schooling does not always lead to learning. Worldwide, there are more non-learners in school than out of school.
What’s more, roughly one in five school-aged children are not in school at all.
Children and adolescents are excluded from education for many reasons. Poverty remains one of the most obstinate barriers, with children from the poorest households almost five times more likely to be out of primary school than those from the richest.
Children with disabilities and from ethnic minorities are also more likely to be left behind.
For girls in some parts of the world, education opportunities can be especially limited. Only 66 per cent of countries have achieved gender parity in primary education. Harmful gender norms can have severe effects for boys, too.
Location also keeps children from school. Children from rural areas are more than twice as likely to be out of primary school than their urban peers. In conflict zones, 27 million children are out of school.
Without skills for lifelong learning, children face greater barriers to earning potential and employment later in life. They are more likely to suffer adverse health outcomes and less likely to participate in the decisions that affect them – threatening their ability to build a better future for themselves and their communities.
Link to video on it's hosted site.
UNICEF’s work in education
All children have the right to go to school and learn, regardless of who they are, where they live or how much money their family has.
Quality learning requires a safe, friendly environment, qualified and motivated teachers, and instruction in languages students can understand. It also requires that learning outcomes be monitored and feed back into instruction.
In 144 countries around the world, UNICEF works to provide learning opportunities that prepare children and adolescents with the knowledge and skills they need to thrive.
Key areas of our work in education include:
Access: Gender-equitable access to quality education from early childhood to adolescence, including for children with disabilities, marginalized children and those living in humanitarian and emergency settings.
Learning and skills: Quality learning outcomes and skills development that come from strong education systems and innovative solutions.
Emergencies and fragile contexts: Improved learning and protection for children in emergencies and on the move.
The lesson of the learning crisis is clear: Business as usual is not improving learning outcomes. A new, more radical approach that focuses on enhancing learning is long overdue and forms the basis of UNICEF’s global education strategy.
To build a world in which every child learns, UNICEF will increasingly promote equity and inclusion. This includes making targeted efforts for children who are excluded on the basis of gender, disability, poverty, ethnicity and language, as well as those who are displaced or affected by emergencies.
Link to video on it's hosted site.
Planned results for 2021
Education partnerships
As efforts to realize the Sustainable Development Goals accelerate, UNICEF is expanding education systems to capture the children most at risk. We forge partnerships with key development organizations, like the Global Partnership for Education, the Global Education Cluster and the United Nations Girls' Education Initiative, to advance our strategic plan and create a world where every child learns.
In collaboration with the UNESCO Institute for Statistics, UNICEF launched the Out-of-School Children Initiative (OOSCI) in 2012, aiming to make a substantial and sustainable reduction in the number of out-of-school children worldwide by providing partner Governments with actionable data. OOSCI identifies barriers that lead to exclusion and develops proposals for policies and programmes that put more children in school, on track to complete their education. Over 90 countries have joined the initiative since its launch, many of whom rely on OOSCI data to forge education sector plans.
More from UNICEF
Group work helps students to learn from each other. This is one of the techniques teachers are being taught from Pedagogical Advisors to improve quality education at Phonkeo Primary School, Saravane Province Lao PDR.
Report
Addressing the learning crisis
How are education resources distributed across segments of society?
Three young students stand smiling in their classroom in Jordan.
Video
A video message from Executive Director Henrietta Fore
Executive Director Henrietta Fore shows how UNICEF is working to give every child the opportunity to learn and thrive
UNICEF Executive Director Henrietta Fore and European Investment Bank (EIB) Group President Werner Hoyer hold the newly signed Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) between UNICEF and the EIB
Press release
27 January 2020
European Investment Bank and UNICEF partner to help improve access to quality education and protect children from climate change
Philippines. A boy stands outside a prototype High Performance Tent.
Press release
23 January 2020
On World Education Day, UNICEF unveils latest innovation to improve education in emergencies: The High Performance Tent
Resources
UNICEF Education Strategy, 2019–2030
This strategy guides UNICEF’s work in education, confirming its commitment to deliver with partners the Sustainable Development Goals for education and the realization of the Convention on the Rights of the Child – so that every child learns.
The Investment Case for Education and Equity
This report explains the global education crisis and outlines solutions, calling for an increase in funding for education and investments that are equitable and efficient.
UNICEF Education Annual Results Report, 2018
This report shows how UNICEF supported countries in building stronger education systems to ensure that all girls and boys, including those in humanitarian contexts, had equitable access to education and the opportunity to develop the skills they need for life and work.
OUTREACH TO LYCÉE TECHNIQUE BILINGUE DE NSAM.
With the understanding that youths at this level and ages are fragile and need a lot counsel, direction and inspiration, BRIOT decided to reach out to the students of LTB de NSAM.
Our Topics:
*Potential: There's a need for students to understand their potentials to enable them make the right career choices, wherein their passion and creativity will gain expression, leading to great inventions and innovations.
*Vision: We've got to emphasize the need of every student owning and running with a clear vision from this phase, addressing the survival mentality when choosing a career and molding their mindsets for the best choices.
*Moral Virtues for Excellent Leadership: Added to identifying and harnessing your potential with a clear cut vision, at this level we need to imbibe in them moral virtues, so that their excellent characters and personalities will reduce and why not completely wipe out moral and social decadence. Also, this will groom excellent leadership qualities in them all.
12.02.2020
of secondary education.
EYONGEBOT TATAW
A BETTER CAMEROON
Education builds the inner mind.It raises the hopes and dreams for the unprivileged people in our societies.So is not late for us to go back to school.
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Yaoundé
L'ISSTS Est Itué à Yaoundé Au Cameroun, Montée Jouvence Quartier, NSIMEYONG II Mbenda, (Route De Mendong), à L’ancien Institut Polyvalent De La Rénovation Pédagogique
Yaoundé, B.P:31518YAOUNDÉ
l'ISSTS dispose d'une prépa Intégrée de médecine : Médecine générale, Médecine dentaire et Pharmacie.
Nkoabang, Camp Artitique LADA
Yaoundé, 00237
L’École des Sciences Médicales et d’Application Marie Zambo, (ESMA-MZ) est un établissement d
Yaoundé
page officielle du Dr NEKOU K. DAVID , Médecin ,interne de gynécologie et d'obstétrique , leader associatif
Yaoundé/Biyemassi
Yaoundé
Member of WHO Youth Council/Ambassador of World YMCA at WYC/Médical Doctor/ESH FOUNDATION Director
Carriere
Yaoundé
Nous mettons à la disposition de la population camerounaise des kits médicaux de qualités et accessible à tous.
Yaoundé
Dr Claudel NOUBISSIE est médecin, entrepreneur, auteur et conférencier.
Yaoundé
Dr love est une page de motivation personnel,débats sur des sujets tabout, d'échange d'expérienc