Students, parents, and teachers alike are already feeling the ripple effects of this massive shift, and it’s something worth understanding now. This report is designed to give policy makers, researchers, educational leaders, administrators and teachers a robust, non-specialist source of international comparative trends shaping education , whether in early childhood education and care, schools, universities or in programmes for older adults. · that might sound like a dream, but experts predict that by 2030, free education could become a reality in many parts of the world. From creating a more equal society to boosting economic growth, the potential benefits are enormous. · simple extrapolations of current trends suggest that public education costs will rise sharply, pupil-teacher ratios will fall, and control over the education system will shift from families and localities to higher levels of government. Free primary education is fundamental in guaranteeing everyone has access to education. · making education free for everyone could be one of the most transformative changes our world has ever seen. How will public education change over time? · in june, various international children’s rights and human rights experts called for the expansion of the right to education under international law, to recognize every child’s right to free. Who is interested in a future of education? However, in many developing countries, families often cannot afford to send their children to school, leaving millions of children of school-age deprived of education. Can global education trends shape a better future? What is this report about early childhood education & care? The net loss to public education – meaning traditional schools, charters, public online virtual schools– is estimated at just over 16 million students in the next six years, despite massive new enrollments of immigrant students.
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