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Title: 

Education Systems Response to COVID-19: Reflections on the Contributions of Research to USAID's Education and Resilience Agenda

Authors: Flemming, Jennifer
Shah, Ritesh
Weisenhorn, Nina
Chinnery, Julie
Heaner, Gwendolyn
Keywords: COVID-19;pandemic;resilience;education;education systems;case study research;resilience;USAID;Colombia;Georgia;Lebanon;Nigeria;Zambia;shocks;stressors;field note
Issue Date: Dec-2023
Publisher: Inter-agency Network for Education in Emergencies
Citation: Flemming, Jennifer, Ritesh Shah, Nina Weisenhorn, Julie Chinnery, and Gwendolyn Heaner. 2023. “Education Systems Response to COVID-19: Reflections on the Contributions of Research to USAID’s Education and Resilience Agenda.” Journal on Education in Emergencies 9 (1): 196-214. https://doi.org/10.33682/9ge4-wyr8.
Series/Report no.: Volume 9;Number 1
Abstract: Over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, education systems have grappled with the complexity of protecting the wellbeing of learners and educators, along with ensuring learners’ continued engagement with learning. This has led to an increasing number of calls to strengthen education-sector resilience to future shocks and stressors, particularly for the most marginalized, in order to maintain momentum toward achieving Sustainable Development Goal 4. Resilience has been and continues to be a key focal point for the US Agency for International Development (USAID), both across the agency and within its education portfolio. In this paper, we reflect on case study research in five contexts—Colombia, Georgia, Lebanon, Nigeria, and Zambia—during the COVID-19 pandemic and apply it to USAID’s resilience framework for education. We identify practices and structures used in each context that were either operationalized or could be leveraged further to absorb, adapt, and ultimately transform these education systems when facing a pandemic and other types of stressors and shocks.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2451/69900
ISSN: 2518-6833
DOI: https://doi.org/10.33682/9ge4-wyr8
Rights: The Journal on Education in Emergencies, published by the Inter-agency Network for Education in Emergencies (INEE), is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.
Appears in Collections:Volume 9, Number 1



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