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Public-Private Partnerships in Education for All Workshop UNESCO Headquarters July 18 2006. The workshop aimed at defining how PPP could catalyze educational development in the context of the EFA objectives.
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Public-Private Partnerships in Education for AllWorkshopUNESCO HeadquartersJuly 18 2006
The workshop aimed at defining how PPP could catalyze educational development in the context of the EFA objectives. • Previous World Economic Forum - UNESCO cooperation for roundtables and sessions at EFA WG and HLG focussed on individual success stories, where the private sector was recognized as an important stakeholder in education. • The World Economic Forum, through its Global Education Initiative, has also identified that PPP is an effective mechanism to catalyze educational reform (Jordan, Egypt, and Rajasthan education initiatives). • The workshop is a turning point: UNESCO and World Economic Forum engage champions to scale up and sustain education PPP’s in a collective process. • Best practice sharing from governments, the private sector, and education brokers • Breakout sessions to address central issues regarding the promotion of PPP’s for education
Participants (over 60) included NGOs, think tanks, government representatives, donors, international organizations, and the private sector. Government Bi and Multilaterals • Brazil • Columbia • Egypt • India • Jordan • Namibia • Norway • Philippines • Poland • USA • Yemen • World Economic Forum • UNESCO • UNICEF • USAID • African Development Bank • SIDA Think tanks, universities, NGO’s Private sector • Academy for Educational Development • GAN Net • SRI International • Education International • Committee for Economic Development • Council on Foreign Relations • CfBT Education Trust • Harvard Graduate School of Education • Cambridge University • Intel • BT (British Telecom) • Cisco • Microsoft • SAP • HP • Private sector foundations (Hewlett)
The breakout sessions focussed on three areas: methodology, awareness raising, and facilitation. The following areas were identified: Participants committed to contribute to all of these focus areas.
Next steps • Follow up with commitments made in the meeting to develop work streams with tangible deliverables. • Create an overall schedule of activities that incorporates reports to the EFA high level group meeting in Cairo (November 2006) and the World Economic Forum Global Education Initiative summit in Davos (January 2007), as well as to regional education fora. • Continue to reach out to additional education experts and stakeholders for involvement in developing the initiative.
For more information: Anders Jönsson Project Manager, Global Education Initiative World Economic Forum Anders.Jonsson@weforum.org Tel: +41 22 869 1430 Mari YasunagaProgramme SpecialistUNESCO ED/EFAm.yasunaga@unesco.orgTel: +33 1 45 68 11 40