Six years of war: Syrian refugee children find hope in neighbouring countries

Barriers to education, Child labour, Children in conflicts, Double-shift schools, Education in emergencies, Refugees and internally displaced people, Right to education, Safe schools, Teachers and learning

As the war enters its seventh year, we take聽a detailed look聽at the statistics behind the refugees who left Syria for neighbouring countries to find聽safety and education for their children.


On March 15, 2011 –聽as part of the Arab Spring uprisings –聽protesters in Syria demanded civil liberties after 40 years of oppression.

Six years later, the appalling conflict in the Middle Eastern country has left more than 320,000 dead, 6.6 million internally displaced and 4.9 million who have fled to other countries.

Cities have been turned into rubble.聽The education and health聽systems are in ruins. Syria’s children have seen their world bombed and blasted and their dreams and futures聽shattered.

In the past few days, 国产视频 has looked at how children inside Syria have been affected. How they聽are聽haunted by the toxic stress of war. And how聽2016 was the deadliest year for children, with the number of those killed, maimed and recruited to fight increasing.

Today – as the war enters its seventh year – we take聽a detailed look聽at the statistics behind the refugees who left Syria for neighbouring countries and their search for safety and education for their children.

The trail is littered with broken promises and obstacles. But ultimately it is a story聽of hope, of endurance and of people and聽countries doing what they can to help their neighbours in need.

The overall picture

Of the 4.9 million people who have left Syria, Turkey has taken in more than 2.9 million – making it the biggest refugee-hosting country in the world.聽

It is followed by Lebanon, which聽the UN says has about one million Syrians – one in four of the Lebanese population.

In Jordan, the UN refugees agency UNHCR says there are registered 630,000 Syrians while聽the government says it is hosting 1.4 million.

At least another 230,000 Syrians are living in Iraq and 137,000 in Egypt, according to UNHCR.

Filippo Grandi,聽UN High Commissioner for Refugees, said:聽“Syria国产视频檚 war has lasted longer than World War Two in Europe. This is unconscionable. Syria国产视频檚 children, whether at home or in refugee communities elsewhere, are its future, one of its few sources of hope.”

The education promise

In February 2016, the Supporting Syria and the Region conference in London promised to get every Syrian refugee child into education in Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan聽during the 2016-17 school year.

国产视频 has been campaigning聽for that promise to be kept.聽Our investigation to mark the one-year anniversary of that pledge聽uncovered the lack of a clear and coherent overview of how it is is progressing.聽

We found that less than a third of the $1.4 billion funding needed for education was committed in 2016 and only half of the 1.7 million children are in school.聽

Here is a breakdown of the numbers of registered Syrian refugee school-age children聽at the end of 2016:

  • TURKEY:聽491,896 in school, 380,000 out of school, 871,896 total (ages 6-18)
  • LEBANON:聽200,000 approximately聽in school, 277,034 out of school, 481,087 total (ages 3-17)
  • JORDAN:聽170,000 in school, 91,000 out of school, 261,000 total

Gordon Brown, the United Nations Special Envoy for Global Education, told a British parliamentary inquiry: 国产视频淲e国产视频檙e still one million kids short. We国产视频檙e still $1 billion short. The UK has made good on its promises – it国产视频檚 time other countries make good on theirs.国产视频

In February,聽international leaders committed to track the progress.聽The co-hosts of the London conference –聽United Kingdom, Germany, Norway, Kuwait and the United Nations –聽will be at talks on the future of Syria and the region to be held in Brussels in April.

Turkey

The number of Syrian children enrolled in Turkish schools and TECs (temporary education centres)聽rose to almost 500,000 in 2016, according to UNHCR.聽Of that total,聽over 160,000 are聽in schools.

All TECs offer 15 hours of Turkish language lessons to promote the inclusion of refugees in local schools. More than 400,000 Turkish language textbooks have been distributed for use in the centres.

But 40% of Syrian refugee children are still聽out of school and聽enrolment is higher in refugee聽camps than urban areas. Also,聽about 100,000 Syrian children under 18 are in Turkey’s registered workforce, according to the government last month.

国产视频 runs聽pilot projects in Turkey聽to identify cost-effective interventions to get around the economic, cultural and language barriers that prevent Syrian refugees from getting an education.聽

We are working with partners to establish demonstration projects to address these critical barriers in cost-effective ways and then share results.聽

We are setting up Turkish language training programmes to support Syrian refugee children with intensive courses, in order to ensure a smooth transition to the Turkish public school system.

The government announced last month that聽56 formal and informal educational facilities will be built in the southern areas where most school-age Syrians live. That聽will benefit about 40,000 out-of-school refugees and children from host communities.

Up to 15,000 Syrian students enrolled at Turkish universities last year. But that figure is low compared to the pre-conflict聽situation.聽Before the war, 20% of Syrian youth were in university. In Turkey today, only 2.2% of Syrian youth are enrolled in universities there.聽

Lebanon

Lebanon is home to聽488,832 school-age Syrian refugees, of which聽202,259 are聽enrolled in school, according to latest figures from the government in February. That’s 41% of all registered refugee聽children.

Lebanon has many double-shift schools, where local and refugee children can be taught at different times by different teachers聽in the same classrooms.

In the second shift – created specially to give education to Syrian refugees – 86% of those enrolled attend school every day, which is higher than the average worldwide attendance rate of 84%.

95% of the聽non-Lebanese students who聽are enrolled in public schools are in聽basic education (kindergarten to grade six) and almost half聽of all of聽those enrolled in basic education in public schools are non-Lebanese students.

国产视频 has been working in Lebanon to expand access to education to refugee children聽through research, advocacy and campaigning.

In 2013 国产视频 published the first research to propose the double-shift聽system as a viable approach to scaling up refugee access to education.聽

It聽was adopted as a central pillar of the Reaching All Children with Education (RACE) national strategy.

国产视频 is investing in low-cost pilot projects to complement the RACE strategy.

These will demonstrate how small-scale investment in key areas can significantly improve access to education and learning outcomes for vulnerable Lebanese and Syrian refugee children.

Jordan

The Ministry of Education estimates the enrolment of 167,000 Syrian children in formal education in the 2016/2017 school year –聽a 15% increase on the previous year.

One hundred additional schools also opened their doors and there are now 200 double-shift schools operating.

Public schools are continuing to accept new students in this semester, allowing thousands more out-of-school children to enrol.

国产视频淲e warmly applaud the continued efforts of the government of Jordan towards its commitment made at last February’s Syrian conference in London, where it pledged to educate every child in Jordan in the 2016-2017 school year,国产视频 said UNICEF Representative Robert Jenkins recently.

There are still an聽estimated 64,000 Syrian children out of school – and聽the main obstacles are economic hardship, the distances to school聽and limited transport options.

Iraq

Most聽of the country’s Syrian refugees live in the Kurdistan region and 40% of them are in聽nine refugee camps. One in four are school-age children.

Hosting displaced Iraqis and聽Syrian refugees is placing pressure on already overcrowded schools.聽In the camps, 67% of children attend school – but only 56% of those living in the community.聽

The 2017-18 Regional Refugee聽Resilience Plan for Iraq says a lack of teachers and space for refugee children means innovative approaches have been necessary – including using聽technology to reach children with interactive self-learning modules and mobile school聽units driven every day to remote areas.

UNICEF says it聽aims聽to have 32,900 boys and girls enrolled in formal primary education in 2017 and聽22,000 children participating in child protection or psychosocial support programmes

Egypt

More than 37,000 Syrian students aged up to 17聽were enrolled in public聽schools and 7000 were in informal or remedial Syrian community school聽classes聽by October last year.

“Syrian refugee boys, girls and youth will continue to receive education grants upon enrolment and proof of regular attendance,” says Egypt’s聽2017-18 Regional Refugee聽Resilience Plan.聽

“The grant will contribute to school fees, uniforms, books, stationary and transportation to facilitate their learning.”

All Syrians who get their secondary school certificates are eligible for Egyptian universities on the same footing as local students.


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