Every Child Needs a Teacher
At the national level, the organisers envision 3 stages as part of their advocacy approach, which emphasises the participation of community members of all ages:
- Creating a dossier to make "the case for teachers": Children, adult learners, teachers and campaigners will gather "evidence" that supports the argument that high-quality teachers are crucial. Among the types of evidence that may make up the dossier/briefcase/album are: Paper cut-out "teachers", with messages such as "please send a teacher to school" or "send my friend a teacher"; pictures of classrooms or of children and teachers out-of-school because of the lack of teachers; or personal testimonials of the impact that high-quality teachers have had, or of the detrimental impact due to a lack of teachers. Those submitting these testimonials are encouraged to use drama, stories, songs or pictures to convey the message.
- Discussing the dossiers on "Officials Back to School Day": Officials, political figures and celebrities will be invited to schools and adult learning centres to report back on progress made on previous pledges and to be presented with the Case for Teachers (the evidence that has been collected in the dossiers). They will be asked to commit to taking action to send teachers to school.
- Engaging members of the public in "The Big Hearing": Based on the style of court hearings, or pubic enquiries, the big hearing will be relevant to the national context. Some countries will put politicians and officials on trial to assess the progress they have made on their commitments to ensure all children have a free quality education. In other countries the case for teachers will be presented to officials, after which they will be asked to take action.
As part of this Action Week, GCE asks economically rich countries to: increase aid and cancel debt, support countries' long-term education plans including teacher salaries, and end donor conditions that prevent countries from employing sufficient numbers of professional teachers. It asks that economically poor countries: increase public spending on education, ensure quality teaching by training teachers to a professional standard, pay teachers a living wage and give them a say in education policy-making, and reduce class sizes and improve classroom conditions.
Email from Alex Kent to The Communication Initiative on February 26 2006; and Global Action Week 2006 page on the GCE website.
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