© OECD 2021
31
The State of Global Education: 18 Months into the Pandemic
In addition to the factors influencing teachers’ salary
cost, many countries, such as the Czech Republic,
France, Hungary, New Zealand, Poland and Portugal,
devoted significant additional funding to the purchase
of digital equipment to support the transition to remote
learning, or to provide the sanitary and hygiene
conditions for safe school reopening. For example,
in New Zealand, a USD 62 million emergency
funding package was announced to support the
development of the distance learning programme until
the end of June 2020, including digital enablement
and capability building. This response was focused
on ensuring underprivileged students had access to
opportunities to learn from home. In the United States,
59% of adults with children below the age of 18
enrolled in a public or private primary and secondary
school reported that computers were provided by the
children’s school or school district (US Department of
Commerce, Bureau of the Census, 2021
[19]
). Funds
were also directed to ensure remedial measures to
address learning loss. For example, Sweden increased
the earmarked government grant directed to schools
that provided education during holidays in 2020
(“Statsbidrag för lovskola 2020”), while in Finland,
remedial measures were targeted to disadvantaged
pupils, such as those with special education needs
or an immigrant background. Other targeted areas
included student and teacher well-being in Denmark
and New Zealand. At tertiary level, some countries
targeted funding to support economic recovery
programmes through adult education.
Specific financial support measures for tertiary education
Tertiary education is key for students’ career and
personal development. It also plays a key role in
lifelong learning, providing adults with opportunities
to reskill and upskill throughout their professional life.
A failure to sustain effective tertiary systems can lead
to inequalities, as youth or older adults may face
difficulties in engaging in learning, particularly as
they become older, endangering their education and
employment prospects in the process. Economies have
been confronted with a massive challenge of how to
support tertiary education to keep students’ education
and, more generally, social cohesion on track.
The economic crisis brought on by the spread of
COVID-19 has affected the most vulnerable the
most, as unemployment rose and specific sectors of
activity relating to tourism, services and entertainment
were the most strongly hit. Funding efforts towards
tertiary education in some countries have focused on
enabling access to higher education programmes
to support economic recovery programmes through
education. For example, higher education institutions
in Sweden received increased funding from the state
to finance short courses for lifelong learning and
programmes leading to professions where there is a
shortage of labour. Similarly, in Finland and Norway,
tertiary institutions received additional funds to support
increased entry places for students in response to job
loss or unemployment during the pandemic.
Ensuring strong public financial support to students,
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