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Showing posts with the label educational attainment

Have emerging Latin American countries chosen quantity over quality in education?

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by Dirk Van Damme Head of the Innovation and Measuring Progress Division, Directorate for Education and Skills  Developing human capital is an integral part of economic growth and social progress. Mature, developed economies in Europe, North America and Australasia expanded their education and skills systems mainly after the Second World War in a context of unbridled economic prosperity and the modernisation of their social and political institutions. The conditions were favourable for increasing the share of tertiary-educated workers, ensuring that upper secondary education gradually became the minimum level of educational achievement for large parts of the population, and for reducing the numbers of people without an upper secondary education. These countries also benefitted from the luxury of time. It took OECD countries 30 years, on average, to halve the share of people without an upper secondary education – from 32% among current 55-64 year-olds to 16% among 25-34 year-olds. C...

Who are the winners and losers of the expansion of education over the past 50 years?

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by Dirk Van Damme Head of the Innovation and Measuring Progress Division, Directorate for Education and Skills Modern education systems, which are open to the middle classes and the poor, not just the elites, were established during the first industrial revolution in the 18th and 19th centuries. The growing demand for elementary literacy and technical skills during that period prompted an expansion of school systems and the adoption of the first pieces of legislation on compulsory education. Popular education continued to grow during the first half of the 20th century, corresponding to the so-called “second industrial revolution”, which was ignited by advances in science and technology. In the early 20th century, attainment of primary education became nearly universal, and the system of secondary education began to grow.  But the great surge in the expansion of education in developed nations, specifically in secondary education, occurred in the wake of World War II, and more specif...