The Destruction of Gaza’s Education System: A Generation at Risk

Ayman Qwaider, EENET’s Arabic/MENA Network Manager.

Read this article in Arabic.

Scale of destruction

The genocidal war in Gaza has left no aspect of life untouched. One of the most devastating impacts is on the education system and, consequently, on the future of Gaza. The damage being inflicted will have profound and long-lasting effects on the current and future generations in Gaza. While much has been written about the overall impact of the war, the systematic destruction of Gaza’s education sector deserves particular attention.

Schools, both public and those operated by the United Nations, have been reduced to rubble. Universities, which once served as the backbone of higher education in Gaza, lie in ruins. The very institutions where generations of teachers were trained have been obliterated. Alongside the destruction of formal education facilities, community education centres, art centres, and archives – essential components of cultural and educational life – have also been destroyed. Many of these learning spaces have been converted into shelters for displaced families, underscoring the sheer scale of devastation.

This is not merely the destruction of buildings; it is the dismantling of an entire educational infrastructure. Teachers have been killed, their families displaced, and their schools and universities destroyed. Every household in Gaza has been touched by loss, through the death, disappearance, or separation of loved ones. The images of bombed homes, displaced families, and the daily struggle for survival have dominated social media for months, revealing only a fraction of the suffering that continues unabated.

One cannot overstate the impact of this destruction on education and learning. The cumulative trauma, suffering, and memories of violence experienced by an entire generation are staggering. The children of Gaza, exposed to unprecedented levels of violence and abuse daily, face a future where education is inextricably linked to their trauma.

What happens next?

The question now is: What will education/learning look like in Gaza after this? How can learning continue amid such accumulated trauma and suffering? The psychosocial trauma inflicted on Gaza’s children, teachers, and families has been accumulating over the last 17 years, exacerbated by the continuous Israeli blockade and repeated military assaults. This current unprecedented violence only adds another layer of pain and suffering.

To address these challenges, psychosocial support must be integrated into any educational interventions. Every person in Gaza will need such support, and this must be sustained over a long period. Schools and curricula will need to be re-engineered to meet the needs of these traumatized learners. The curriculum must be informed by the experiences of those who have lived through this trauma, and teaching pedagogy must evolve to capture and address the stories of these children.

Educators themselves will need significant support – socially, culturally, and psychologically – to process and share their experiences. It is vital that they have the space to tell their stories, not just for their own healing but also to inform the world of the realities of life in Gaza. No one should endure genocide without the opportunity to bear witness, and the stories of Gaza’s educators and students are essential for understanding the true cost of this conflict.

The loss of an entire year of education in Gaza is unprecedented. For the first time since 1948, Palestinian students in Gaza were unable to complete their higher education exams, and children were deprived of the opportunity to pursue their dreams. The destruction of Gaza’s education system is not just a loss for the present generation but a profound threat to the future of the entire region. The rebuilding of this system will require more than just physical reconstruction; it will require a reimagining of what education can and should be in the context of ongoing trauma and adversity.

Learning about and from genocide

When talking to friends and colleagues in Gaza, a common sentiment arises: there is much written about genocide, yet not enough is done to integrate this harrowing reality into education. They argue that the experience of genocide should not be relegated to history books alone but must be a vivid memory in the minds of education policymakers. It is crucial that education policies reflect the need to address the impact of genocide, and this should be an integral part of the curriculum.

Incorporating the realities of genocide into the curriculum is not merely about recounting the past but about raising awareness and fostering resilience in the present. It is about ensuring that the next generation understands the gravity of such atrocities and is equipped to recognise and respond to the early signs of genocidal actions in the future. For the children of Gaza, who have lived through a genocide, this is not a distant lesson from history but a lived experience. Integrating this into their education could play a vital role in healing and empowerment. Indeed, all parties, locally and globally, need to integrate genocide education into their curricula if we are to prevent such horrors from occurring again.

Educational genocide is part of a broader genocide targeting human life itself. Education’s mission is to uphold human life as the ultimate goal. In Gaza, resilience, or Sumoud, is not just a concept but a lived reality. The people of Gaza demonstrate social solidarity by supporting one another despite unimaginable circumstances. Conventional education is insufficient; it must evolve into learning through life and daily challenges. The future of education in Gaza requires transformation, moving beyond formal schooling to seek opportunities in adversity. This educational endeavour is not just a duty but a form of resistance against a comprehensive genocide that seeks to erase existence and identity.

The hope is that embedding the lessons of genocide into the curriculum will not only educate but also serve as a powerful reminder to the global community. It can be a tool to ensure that such atrocities are not forgotten and do not go unchecked when they occur. Education has the potential to be a safeguard, raising awareness about the devastating impact of genocide and fostering a commitment to preventing it in the future.

 

Please follow and share EENET’s Hear Us See Us campaign on our website, Facebook and LinkedIn. The campaign shares the experiences of educators and learners in Gaza. We add our voice to the calls for a permanent ceasefire in Gaza and an end to Israeli occupation and apartheid.

 

#CeaseFireNow

#StopArmingIsrael

#FreePalestine

#EndTheOccupation

#EndIsraeliApartheid

#LearningNeverStops

**Deadline expired** Consultancy for Accelerated Learning Program feasibility study, Cameroon

Location: remote (local station: Yaounde, Cameroon).

Duration: start 4 September 2024, 45 working days.

Application deadline: 23 August 2024.

Accelerated Learning Program feasibility study and identification of alternative education possibilities in the West, Littoral, North-West and South-West Regions of Cameroon for displaced children affected by the crisis.

The Norwegian Refugee Council and Plan International open a call for consultants to submit proposals and a study methodology with a participatory approach, and both qualitative and mixed quantitative methods for a feasibility study. The study methodology should follow a non-experimental design to produce credible results. The specific objective of this study is to confirm the feasibility and to identify the possibilities for an ALP as well as the difficulties hindering access to formal education for out-of-school children affected by the crisis in the North-West and South-West, whether they are hosted in the West and Littoral regions of Cameroon or living in the Northwest Southwest region. The study should have a gender-sensitive analysis and take into account the specific needs and the main challenges faced by girls, and then to develop operational and tangible recommendations for a potential scaling up of the AEP.

Read more details and apply. 

[Blog] Education in crisis: How crises around the world are impacting children’s learning

“Education and learning is not just about books and classrooms; it’s about offering hope, resilience, and the promise of a better future.” R Jenkins writes in a blog for UNICEF. He calls for more funding to address the current crises in education, and lists nine crises which need urgent action and support: Democratic Republic of Congo, Eastern Chad, Ethiopia, Haiti, Mali, Myanmar, State of Palestine, Sudan, Ukraine.

Read the blog.

[Conference] BAICE 2024 – Transgression and transformation: (re)bordering education in times of conflict & crises

Dates: 3 to 5 September 2024.

Location: University of Sussex.

Education systems ricochet from one global crisis to the next with increasing frequency, with each one impacting in different ways and disgorging new challenges. The years 2023-2024 may well be remembered as a time of unparalleled and intersecting global conflict and crises. BAICE 2024 will engage with these global developments and crises with the aim of fostering dialogue across borders in a variety of understandings: disciplinary, theoretical, methodological, pedagogical, international, South-North as well as geographical, planetary and political.

More information and registration.

**Deadline expired** International Inclusive Education Consultant, Timor-Leste

Location: Home or remote-based (duty station: Dili, Timor-Leste).

Duration: September 2024 to February 2025.

Application deadline: 15 August 2024.

 

Read details of the timeline and TOR.

UNICEF is looking for a consultant to review Inclusive Education training materials and develop a training and support plan for teacher and school leader training to Improve Inclusive Education in Timor-Leste.

**Deadline expired** Request for Proposals: My Education, My Future (MEMF) Final Evaluation

Location: remote.

Duration: September 2024 to January 2025.

Application deadline: 26 August 2024.

 

Read the full terms of reference.

The objective of this consultancy is to assess the contribution of the MEMF in improving girls’ and boys’ life skills and learning outcomes in Burundi and Tanzania. In Burundi only, the evaluation will use a quasi-experimental difference in difference methodology to assess the attribution of the project in improving girls’ and boys’ life skills. This approach will include selected control schools identified at baseline in Burundi. Quantitative and qualitative data should be collected to respond to this question. The evaluation will take into account the initial Baseline Assessment undertaken in 2020, outcome monitoring findings led in 2023 and the recent research on girls’ clubs led in June 2024.

[Journal] International Review of Education – Journal of Lifelong Leaning, Volume 70, Issue 3, June 2024

The International Review of Education is dedicated to policy-relevant and theoretically-informed research in lifelong and life-wide learning in international and comparative contexts. The editorial focuses on Gaza and human rights. Articles include a Rohingya case study about educational inequality and emancipation and adult women’s education in prison in South Africa.

Some articles can be freely downloaded and others can only be viewed through a subscription.

Read the journal.

 

[blog] Educating for the present and the future: using Artificial Intelligence (AI) to address the learning crisis

In a blog on the World Bank site, J Saavedra et al. argue that using Artificial Intelligence (AI) could address the learning crisis.

“Inequality in education is rampant; middle-income countries are five years behind the OECD average and seven years behind Singapore on PISA scores. The concept of Learning Poverty highlights stark inequalities between countries: 90% of 10-year-olds in Sub-Saharan Africa cannot read and understand a simple text, a figure that is 56% (pre-pandemic) in Latin America and less than 3% in the Nordic countries.”

However, they warn, “Technology cannot replace trained teachers nor match the impact of a good teacher with AI-amplified skills.”

Read the blog.

[Advocacy] #TeachersMissing campaign

Globally, 44 million additional teachers are needed to ensure universal primary and secondary education by 2030. The Teacher Task Force’s #TeachersMissing advocacy campaign for 2024 is sounding the alarm on the urgency of addressing the global teacher shortage. Through this campaign, the Teacher Task Force will harness the collective momentum to address the critical issue of teacher shortages.

Read an article and access the resources.

[Publication] Enabling Education Review, Issue 12

EENET is delighted to share our latest edition of Enabling Education Review. It’s available now in PDF and HTML formats.

Theme: Knowledge, power and ownership.

This time, authors offer a variety of insights into education and inclusion issues within the overall theme of “knowledge, power and ownership”. They look at colonialism, language, agency, participation, power relations and more.

There are articles from Afghanistan, Kenya, Nigeria, Palestine, Sierra Leone, UK and various global perspectives.

Enjoy reading!

Front cover: Enabling Education Review Issue 13, Knowledge, Ownership and Power