| Ensure that, by 2015, all children have access to and complete primary education that is free, compulsory and of good quality | Achieve universal primary education |
The challenge
Universal education will speed progress toward all development goals
Almost all of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) are interdependent, but achieving two of them - universal education, and gender equality and empowering women - is vital to meeting all others.
Educating children helps reduce poverty. It is education that will provide the next generation with the tools to fight poverty and conquer disease. School also offers children a safe environment, with support, supervision and socialization. Here they learn life skills that can help them prevent diseases, like how to avoid HIV/AIDS and malaria. They may receive life-saving vaccines, fresh water and nutrient supplementation at school.
Educating a girl dramatically reduces the chance her child will die before age five, and improves her chances of being able to support herself and have a say in her own welfare and in society.
This Goal is also inextricably linked to MDG 3 – gender parity – as universal primary education, by definition, requires gender parity.
Many countries are close to universal coverage
Universal education might seem a relatively straightforward goal, but it has proven as difficult as any to achieve. Decades after commitments and reaffirmations of those commitments have been made to ensure a quality education for every child, some 93 million children are still denied this right.
93 MILLION CHILDREN OF PRIMARY SCHOOL AGE ARE OUT OF SCHOOL
Number of primary-school-age children not in school, by region (2006)

Source: UNICEF global databases, 2007; and UNESCO Institute for Statistics, Global Education Digest 2007
However, attendance data based on household surveys show that the number of children of primary school age who are out of school has declined markedly in recent years, from 115 million in 2002 to 93 million in 2005–2006. This is substantial progress, and many countries are close to delivering universal primary education.
Yet, in some countries and regions the task remains enormous, for example in sub-Saharan Africa, where 41 million primary-school-age children are out of school, and in South Asia, where 32 million remain out of school.
|
Countries and Territories |
Primary school net enrolment ratio (%), 2000-2006* |
Primary school net attendance ratio (%), 2000-2006* |
||||
|
Male |
Female |
Male |
Female |
|||
|
Sub-Saharan Africa |
75 |
70 |
64 |
60 |
||
|
Eastern and Southern Africa |
83 |
81 |
66 |
67 |
||
|
West and Central Africa |
68 |
59 |
62 |
55 |
||
|
Middle East and North Africa |
86 |
81 |
89 |
86 |
||
|
South Asia |
90 |
83 |
81 |
79 |
||
|
East Asia and Pacific |
98 |
97 |
91 |
92 |
||
|
Latin America and Caribbean |
95 |
94 |
90 |
91 |
||
|
Central and Eastern Europe, CIS |
91 |
89 |
93 |
91 |
||
|
Industrialized countries§ |
95 |
96 |
- |
- |
||
|
Developing countries§ |
90 |
86 |
80 |
78 |
||
|
Least developed countries§ |
80 |
75 |
65 |
63 |
||
|
World |
91 |
87 |
80 |
78 |
||
| § Also includes territories within each country category or regional group. e - Excludes China. Source: The State of the World's Children 2008, UNICEF. | ||||||
|
Countries and Territories |
Secondary school net enrolment ratio (%), 2000-2006* |
Secondary school net attendance ratio (%), 2000-2006* |
||||
|
Male |
Female |
Male |
Female |
|||
|
Sub-Saharan Africa |
30 |
25 |
25 |
22 |
||
|
Eastern and Southern Africa |
35 |
30 |
20 |
19 |
||
|
West and Central Africa |
26 |
20 |
30 |
25 |
||
|
Middle East and North Africa |
67 |
62 |
54 |
52 |
||
|
South Asia |
- |
- |
55 |
50 |
||
|
East Asia and Pacific |
61e |
62e |
60e |
63e |
||
|
Latin America and Caribbean |
67 |
71 |
- |
- |
||
|
Central and Eastern Europe, CIS |
80 |
75 |
80 |
78 |
||
|
Industrialized countries§ |
92 |
93 |
- |
- |
||
|
Developing countries§ |
52e |
50e |
50e |
46e |
||
|
Least developed countries§ |
33 |
28 |
26 |
24 |
||
|
World |
59e |
58e |
50e |
47e |
||
| § Also includes territories within each country category or regional group. e - Excludes China. Source: The State of the World's Children 2008, UNICEF. | ||||||
Many education systems are inefficient
One in six children of secondary school age attends primary school because they started school late or had to repeat grades. These children are effectively occupying places that could accommodate children of primary school age currently out of school.MORE THAN 85 PER CENT OF PRIMARY-SCHOOL-AGE CHILDREN ATTEND SCHOOL
Primary school net enrolment/attendance ratio, by region (2000–2006)

17 PER CENT OF SECONDARY SCHOOL-AGE CHILDREN ATTEND PRIMARY SCHOOL
Primary school net enrolment/attendance ratio of secondary-school-age children, by region (2000–2006)

Source: UNICEF global databases, 2007; and UNESCO Institute for Statistics, Global Education Digest 2007
Reaching end goals will require extra effort
For countries nearing universal primary education, reaching the last few per cent of children out of school may be a particular challenge, requiring different strategies as well as concerted effort and investment.
IN MORE THAN 60 DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, AT LEAST 90 PER CENT OF PRIMARY-SCHOOL-AGE CHILDREN ARE IN SCHOOL
Primary school net enrolment/attendance ratio (2000–2006)
Source: UNICEF global databases, 2007; and UNESCO Institute for Statistics, Global Education Digest 2007
References
UNESCO Institute for Statistics, Children Out of School: Measuring Exclusion from Primary Education, 2005.
UNICEF, Progress for Children, 2007.










