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15/06/2021

Amidst one of the worst health crises the world’s seen in recent history, the Belgian embassy, and Belgian organisations VVOB and Enabel joined forces to co-chair the Education Development Partners group in Uganda. ‘Team Belgium’ took up the yearlong responsibility to strategically guide this forum for dialogue and advice on education in exceptionally challenging circumstances. Skilling, teacher training and digitalisation were top priorities.

[Picture above: Belgian Ambassador Rudi Veestraeten (right) symbolically hands over chairmanship of the Education Development Partners group to Irish Ambassador William Carlos.]

Education Development Partners members in Uganda:

  • Bilateral partners: Belgium, France, Ireland, Japan, Norway, Sweden
  • Development agencies: Enabel, FCDO/UK Aid, Die Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ), Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), Korea International Cooperation Agency (KOICA), USAID
  • UN agencies: ILO, UNCDF, UNESCO, UNFPA, UNHCR, UNICEF, WFP
  • International organisations: African Development Bank, European Union (DG ECHO), VVOB, World Bank

Every year, a different member takes up chairmanship. The Belgian embassy, VVOB and Enabel teamed up for the job from June 2020 to June 2021, in the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic and global school closures. Learners in Uganda saw their education disrupted completely from March to October 2020. Schools then reopened partially grade by grade, only to shut down completely again – temporarily – in June 2021. Challenging times to say the least, but fellow EDP members applauded ‘Team Belgium’’s leadership in discussions on the COVID-19 response.

On skilling and teacher training

Uganda and Belgium share an important ambition to prepare Uganda’s youth with tomorrow’s skills – and to attract and retain the education professionals that can realise this ambition. Uganda’s teacher workforce needs to expand to respond to the demographic bulge, and teachers need to be equipped with the right pedagogical skills to enable children and youth to thrive in their school and work careers.

 

To achieve this, highly ambitious curriculum innovations are the talk of the town: competence-based education, life skills, project work, entrepreneurship education, linking the education system with the world of work and digital literacy are all high on the agenda of MoES. Team Belgium has been supporting these innovations for many years through:

This last-mentioned multi-donor programme ‘Support to Skilling Uganda’ is co-funded by different EDP members – Belgium, Ireland, the EU and GIZ – for a total amount of 30 million euros. Belgium takes the lead with 22 million; Team Belgium designs solutions and weighs in on the policy dialogue to advance access to and quality of technical and vocational education and training (TVET) in Uganda. Since 2014, ‘Support to Skilling Uganda’ has spearheaded solutions for both formal and non-formal access to certified skilling provision in response to the government’s 2012 TVET strategy, and the recently adopted TVET policy. The TVET Council is tasked with the implementation of this policy and embraces a private sector-led approach to skilling, for which the Support to Skilling Uganda offers solutions.

 

Seeing this high involvement, Team Belgium chairs the EDP’s technical working group on Skilling through Enabel. The working group ensures that information on skilling smoothly flows to and from MoES, creates a platform for dialogue between the EDP members on Skilling and organises regular reviews and inputs for policy formulation. Other working groups are dedicated to Basic Education and Digitalisation.

Despite the hardships faced by the education sector, we have been presented with a unique opportunity to build back better, rethink the education system and make it more resilient. Team Belgium’s chairmanship has been challenging, exciting and rewarding"
Diplomat Alexandre Brecx, deputy head of cooperation at the Belgian Embassy in Kampala, Uganda

On digitalisation

As chair, Team Belgium put digitalisation firmly on the agenda, which has been crucial in supporting the ministry to put the policies on TVET and on teachers into practice. And although digitalisation has been an important priority for the Belgian Development Cooperation for many years, the COVID-19 pandemic was catalytic in increasing access to teaching and learning materials and online facilitation.

 

Enabel’s widely praised Teacher Training Education Sandbox is exemplary. The project experimented with EdTech to ensure the continuity of learning for student teachers while their teacher training colleges remained closed. Different subjects and e-learning courses using open and free digital tools were developed and rolled out. The project also focused on ensuring virtual communication between colleges and students, piloting new ways of online results-based management and improving 21st century skills of lecturers.

From Team Belgium to Team Europe

VVOB and Enabel’s collaborative efforts for teacher training, skilling and digitalisation in Uganda have only just begun: sharing a space at the MoES offices, supporting the yearly Teacher Instructor Education and Training Symposia, developing toolkits for active teaching and learning and for continuous professional development… are just a few of the initial joint initiatives. The unique expertise and privileged position that VVOB and Enabel bring to the Belgian development cooperation efforts make Team Belgium a strong and valued partner to the education sector in Uganda.

 

“And seeing the challenging times ahead we’re going to need this internal cohesion within Team Belgium, but also within the EDP group as a whole and externally with the Ministry”, Diplomat Brecx says. “Despite the hardships faced by the education sector, we have been presented with a unique opportunity to build back better, rethink the education system and make it more resilient. Team Belgium’s chairmanship has been challenging, exciting and rewarding, all at the same time.”

 

Team Belgium will stay on as co-chair for the next six months in support of the incoming chair Ireland, a likeminded partner, and ensure that the initiatives of the past year continue to have a place on the agenda. “Hopefully, this spirit of collaboration will take us from ‘Team Belgium’ to ‘Team Europe’!” Alexandre Brecx concludes.