SUMMA declares its support and commitment to the Regional Teaching Strategy at the UNESCO World Summit on Teachers
5 de September de 2025

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On August 27, as part of the 2025 World Summit on Teachers held in Santiago, Chile, the UNESCO Regional Office in Santiago, together with the governments of Chile and Brazil—co-chairs of the Regional Steering Committee for SDG 4—brought together Latin American ministries of education, United Nations agencies, intergovernmental organizations, and representatives of the education community and civil society to discuss the shortage of qualified teachers in the region.
The meeting of the Regional Steering Committee for SDG 4 culminated in the launch of UNESCO’s Regional Strategy for Teachers 2025-2030, a public policy instrument aimed at strengthening initial training and continuing professional development, professionalizing the teaching and management career, and improving teachers’ working conditions and well-being, with a special focus on equity, diversity, and digital skills. In addition, the Regional Action Plan 2025–2030 for the prevention and response to violence in education was presented.
In this context, SUMMA, which took part in the meeting, expressed its support and commitment to the Strategy. SUMMA Director Javier González highlighted projects and initiatives led by SUMMA, such as the KIX LAC Hub; the project to Strengthen Initial Teacher Training in the Eastern Caribbean; and the Empowering Teachers Initiative (ETI). Progress is already being made on these initiatives through various lines of work proposed in the Strategy.
During the Summit, which took place on August 28 and 29, the challenge posed by the global shortage of teachers was addressed. As highlighted in a new UNESCO document on the cost and financing of the teaching profession, published on the occasion of the Summit, teacher shortages in all regions of the world are jeopardizing access to quality education.
According to UNESCO, 44 million teachers will need to be recruited between now and 2030 to achieve universal primary and secondary education. This will cost US$120 billion annually to cover the salaries of new teachers between now and 2030, while some countries are still struggling to meet investment commitments made in the past. In addition, the teaching profession is undergoing a profound vocational crisis: the attrition rate among primary school teachers—the percentage of primary school teachers who leave the profession—has doubled, from 4.6% in 2015 to more than 9% in 2022.
A call to rethink the redistribution of resources

In his speech at the opening of the Summit, SUMMA Director Javier González spoke about the amount of resources allocated to education in Latin America and the Caribbean. “With the limited data available on annual spending per student—around $2,500 in the region—we see that we are far from the investment levels of countries where there is a significant correlation between spending and quality. This necessarily leads us to talk about the tax structure, which, although it may seem unrelated to education, is deeply connected,” he said.
He went on to warn of the need to rethink not only the amount but also the distribution of resources. “Most of our countries allocate fixed budgets per school or simply based on the number of students, as if all students cost the same,” he said. He called for a rethinking of resource redistribution. “At SUMMA, we have worked on experiences that show the importance of allocating more to the schools that need it most. This is an essential step toward more just and equitable education systems,” he concluded.
Support from the Empowering Teachers Initiative Network for Latin America and the Caribbean to UNESCO’s Regional Strategy
In Latin America and the Caribbean, UNESCO’s Regional Strategy for Teachers 2025-2030, published on the occasion of the Summit, will provide a framework for cooperation and practical tools for countries and communities in the region to strengthen the teaching profession.
In this context, the Empowering Teachers Initiative (ETI) – led by SUMMA (Laboratory for Research and Innovation in Education for Latin America and the Caribbean) and The Foundation for Information Technology Education and Development (FIT-ED) – and the Empowering Teachers Initiative Network for Latin America and the Caribbean, created within the framework of the ETI program, declared their commitment to the Regional Teacher Strategy (RTS) (2025-2030).
In this statement, which you can read in full here, the Network expressed its support and commitment to the Strategy, declaring that “teacher professionalization must be approached from a comprehensive perspective that includes initial and continuing training, working conditions, and the social value of the teaching profession. This is in order to strengthen the teaching profession and performance, and its contribution to the development of countries.”
KIX LAC Hub Support for UNESCO’s Regional Strategy

Raúl Chacón, director of the KIX LAC Hub—led by SUMMA and the Organization of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS)—reaffirmed the hub’s support for the Regional Strategy for Teachers, as part of its commitment to the well-being and professional development of teachers in Latin America and the Caribbean.
The Santiago Consensus

To reverse the global teacher shortage and empower the profession, the Summit adopted the Santiago Consensus, a concrete framework of guiding principles and priority actions.
Key commitments included in the Consensus are:
Developing inclusive policies and fair employment conditions that support teachers throughout their careers—including recruitment, mentoring, assignment, professional development, working conditions, and career paths;
Improving social dialogue and teacher participation in decision-making and policy formulation;
Mobilizing national and international resources, including innovative financing mechanisms such as debt-for-education swaps;
Prioritizing gender equality, inclusion, and diversity among teaching personnel to raise the social status of the profession.
Watch the sessions of the Summit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wQLWMJlR-Rc&t=27994s
Read the Declaration of Commitment to the Regional Teachers Strategy from ETI LAC Network





















































































































