KIX held the second 2021 Annual Symposium
15 de November de 2021

The Global Alliance for Knowledge Exchange and Innovation (KIX), in collaboration with the International Development Research Centre (IDRC) and the Global Partnership for Education (GPE) organized the Second Annual KIX Symposium virtually, which was attended by representatives from Nepal, Ghana, Bangladesh, Oslo, Chile, Toronto, Barbados, Honduras, Tanzania, Kenya, Bhutan, Burundi, Timor Leste, Guyana, Senegal, Mali, Nicaragua, Zimbabwe, Laos, Nairobi, Uganda, United States, Brazil, Liberia, Angola and Morocco.
Julie Shouldice, Vice President for Strategies, Regions and Policy at IDRC, welcomed the meeting, noting that “access and gender equality and inclusion in education is very important. The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted major failures in gender equality but we now have the opportunity to change them, our intention is that research and evidence generation will respond to the needs and support policy strategies in education.”
By her side, Alice Albright, CEO of the Global Partnership for Education (GPE), congratulated the various KIX centers worldwide, noting that “we are very focused on the work being carried out in each of the countries, with the aim of achieving goals that ensure that the changes are sustained over time. But mainly, we are paying attention to the gender perspective in the development of policies, helping to understand the barriers that prevent boys and girls from learning, we are promoting the transformation of educational systems and contexts so that they can reach their greatest potential”.
Finally, she shared the results of the last management period and the launch of 8 new projects, “we want to take advantage of the knowledge of each of the regions of the alliance, it is a pleasure to see how this is working: the centers have facilitated 58 knowledge exchange and mobilization events, capacity building for more than 3,000 people from the SGA partner countries and 4,300 at the global level”. Currently, GPE KIX globally has more than 50 countries with national delegations made up of representatives from ministries and local education groups.
Two educational priorities that emerged during the initiative were also presented: early childhood education and teacher professional development.. Experts, policy makers and researchers from Latin America and the Caribbean and sub-Saharan Africa presented how these priorities were identified, how they are being addressed through their research, and how stakeholders are using the innovations and interventions that are emerging from this research.
The second panel of the day Teacher professional development in LAC: from knowledge gaps to applied solutions” featured presentations by the Vice Minister of Education of Honduras, Gloria Menjivar; Dante Castillo, irector of Innovative Educational Policies and Practices at SUMMA; Dr. Joel WarricanDirector of the School of Education, University of the West Indies and member of the KIX LAC Advisory Council. The panel was moderated by Dr. Ivana Zacarias researcher at the KIX Center for Latin America and the Caribbean.
Zacarias introduced the research studies that the Center has been carrying out on the main educational challenges of the 10 countries that make up the Center. “In this first year we managed to identify 3 priorities: the Professional Development of Teachers; the impact, challenges and skills developed in the educational field from COVID-19; and the strengthening of public education.”
He also assured that in the context of the pandemic, a high consensus was generated in the countries to improve the quality of the training demanded by the teachers themselves, including new training spaces, improvement of working conditions, review of of salaries and social valuation, rethinking institutional schemes, and including the gender approach in the approach to teaching, since it is a highly feminized profession.
Dante Castillo presented the progress of the work being carried out in the project “.Adaptation and Scaling of Approaches to Teacher Professional Development”, which SUMMA is leading in Honduras together with the Directorate of Professional Development of the Honduran Ministry of Education and the Universidad Pedagógica Nacional Francisco Morazán – UPNFM, and is also being implemented in Ghana and Uzbekistan. This initiative is part of the KIX program, led by the International Development Research Centre (IDRC) and the Global Partnership for Education (GPE).
“A new approach is needed to overcome the unstructured way in which technology has been used for teacher training in LAC and to address issues related to the poor quality of training, the low socialstatus of teacher training, and the low quality of teacher education. cial status of the profession or poor working conditions, these are the challenges that will allow us to take advantage of technology to meet the challenges,” commented Castillo.
He concluded his presentation by listing the new hypotheses of field work:
Teachers and their skills are a key factor in improving student learning
Most LAC countries have enacted policies to institutionalize various forms of DPP (many of them integrating digital technologies)
This technology integration has placed more emphasis on pedagogy than on better modalities of DPP.
Closing the second panel of the symposium, Dr. Joel Warrican Director of the School of Education at the University of the West Indies presented “From Evidence to Innovation: Supporting the Curriculum for Teachers in the Caribbean”, highlighting that in the Caribbean region many people cannot afford to pay for their professional training in teaching, so they are offered an intermediate degree in education at the tertiary level, so that they can then go to the University of the West Indies to complete their degree.
“Today’s world is driven by technology, and our region is permanently affected by natural disasters, hurricanes, volcanoes, etc. that generate serious disruptions for schools and students, hence we ask ourselves in what way can children learn during these times; we see an increase in non-infectious and lifestyle-caused diseases, we see it in children and we ask ourselves, how to keep this in mind so that teachers can face these challenges?” Field studies in the Caribbean countries show that academic performance is very low and that approximately only 30% of the children when they finish high school have the necessary certifications to enter university and the world of work, “that is why we realize that there are many things that do not work in the system, we know that one of the main goals is that in order to improve the training of students we must improve the teachers, improve the use of data and evidence of international practices that work, we must look outward and inward to see what data and practices are the ones that should be carried out in our program”.





























































































































