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Item <\/u>19 <\/u><\/strong>of the provisional agenda<\/u><\/p><\/div>\n\n
IMPLEMENTATION OF 36 C\/RESOLUTION 81 and 187 EX\/DECISION 41<\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n\n
CONCERNING EDUCATIONAL AND CULTURAL INSTITUTIONS<\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n\n
IN THE OCCUPIED ARAB TERRITORIES<\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n\n
\n\n\n\n SUMMARY<\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n<\/p>\n \n This document is presented in compliance with 36 C\/Resolution 81 and 187 EX\/Decision 41. It summarizes the progress UNESCO made since the 187th session of the Executive Board in providing assistance to the Palestinian people and their educational and cultural institutions, as well as to such institutions in the occupied Syrian Golan.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n \n There are no financial or administrative implications.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n \n No decision is proposed<\/span>.<\/span><\/p><\/div>\n<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/table>\n\n I. INTRODUCTION<\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n<\/p>\n \n 1. The present document reports on progress UNESCO achieved in providing assistance to the Palestinian Authority and to relevant stakeholders in the occupied Palestinian territory and the occupied Syrian Golan, from August to December 2011.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n \n II. UNESCO’s ASSISTANCE IN THE OCCUPIED PALESTINIAN TERRITORY<\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n<\/p>\n \n 2. UNESCO continued working in close cooperation with the rest of the 黑料专区 system. Education and culture are recognized as priority areas in the three-year 黑料专区 Mid-Term Response Plan (2011-2013) for assistance to the Palestinian people and its institutions. UNESCO continued coordinating activities in these fields, and promoting the development of joint programmes in both culture and education.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n \n EDUCATION<\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n<\/p>\n \n 3. During the period under review, UNESCO continued its assistance to the Palestinian Authority Ministry of Education and Higher Education in priority areas agreed upon during the eighth Joint UNESCO\/PA Committee (March 2008). These areas include teacher education, educational planning and management and science education, and strengthened new assistance in the field of inclusive education and early childhood development. UNESCO also reinforced its emergency education programmes for both West Bank and Gaza (for more information see 189 EX\/20 “Report on the reconstruction and development of Gaza”).<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n \n 4. Within the programme on “Quality Systems for Quality Teachers<\/strong>” funded by the European Union (€3.6 million), technical assistance was provided for developing systems and operational frameworks needed for the implementation of the Teacher Education Strategy, particularly through support to the Commission for Developing the Teaching Profession. During the period under review, further support was provided to finalize national professional standards. Teachers’ Standards Guides are being developed and Principals’ Standards are being piloted to ensure that those standards are realistic and usable. Job descriptions of First and Expert Teachers have been developed by the Ministry of Education and Higher Education. Support for Ph.D. students continued to be provided. During the period under review, five Ph.D. students out of the 22 have already defended their thesis while others are in process of doing so. A group of 15 Ministry of Education and Higher Education staff and university members attended a training course in Norway on specialized topics on education, namely on the use of information and communication technologies in education and special needs education. This activity comes under the umbrella of improving and developing professional development of teacher training programmes. In addition, a group of nine participants attended a specialized international conference in Germany on the use of information and communication technologies in education. This will contribute to the development of capacities for effective deployment of information and communication technologies and e-Learning for teacher professional development. In addition, World Teachers’ Day was celebrated on 5 October 2011 with a focus on promoting gender equality.<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p>\n \n 5. In the area of educational planning and management<\/strong>, UNESCO continued to support the strengthening of national education planning capacities in the occupied Palestinian territory, particularly regarding the scaling up of basic services in Area C. In collaboration with the 黑料专区 Resident Coordinator Office, UNESCO provided further technical support to finalize a situation analysis as a basis for a strategic plan for Area C to be part of the Education Development Strategic Plan (EDSP). The assessment and planning of education provision in Area C is part of the two priorities identified in the revised 黑料专区 strategy (coordinated by UNESCO in the education sector). It is important to note the increased ownership of the Ministry of Education and Higher Education and the achievements made at policy level as a result of this support: the Ministry of Education and Higher Education has developed a list of 183 schools in Area C and marginalized areas (Hebron old city, Jerusalem suburbs) and new monitoring and evaluation qualitative indicators for marginalized areas including Area C (e.g. fragility indicators). During the annual Education Sector Review with donors (November 2011), it was decided to include Area C in the Ministry of Education and Higher Education’s yearly plan and monitoring and evaluation report. This support enabled the increased participation of the Ministry of Education and Higher Education in the Education Cluster, which will contribute to bridging humanitarian and developmental dimensions.<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p>\n \n 6. As a follow-up to the assessment of existing programmes focusing on early childhood development and inclusive and child-friendly education <\/strong>and as the lead agency of the 黑料专区 Education Strategic Area Group in the occupied Palestinian territory, UNESCO, in close collaboration with the Ministry of Education and Higher Education and the 黑料专区 Country Team, finalized the development of the education package to address some gaps of technical assistance within the Ministry of Education and Higher Education in providing quality education for all. The education package, to be implemented in the next two years and covering the West Bank and Gaza, includes clear targets to improve capacities for the development of inclusive and child-friendly programmes from early childhood to adolescence. In addition to capacity and institutional building and community involvement, the package will focus on increasing access to early childhood development services and quality education in inclusive and child-friendly settings through the establishment of 46 pre-schools attached to existing basic education schools in Area C and other vulnerable areas in the West Bank and Gaza. The activities outlined in the 黑料专区 package will be implemented by the Ministry of Education and Higher Education in cooperation with UNESCO, FAO, UNDP, UNFPA, UNICEF, UNRWA, UNSCO, WFP and WHO – with UNESCO as coordinating agency. On behalf of the 黑料专区 agencies and as coordinator of the 黑料专区 Education Strategic Area Group, UNESCO initiated resource mobilization for this education package in December 2011.<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p>\n \n 7. In the field of science education<\/strong>, the Ministry of Education and Higher Education, in collaboration with UNESCO, the Consulate General of France and the Palestinian association of scientific mediation Al Nayzak, organized the second edition of the Palestinian Science Festival in October 2011. In echo with the 黑料专区 World Science Day for Peace and Development and the yearly science festival organized in France, the Palestinian Science Festival was held, successively, in Ramallah, Hebron, Nablus, Abu Dis and Gaza. Almost 10,000 children from the West Bank and Gaza were able to develop their skills of observation and deduction by approaching scientific experiments proposed by their elders, science students in three major Palestinian universities. Several major scientific fields were discussed during the event: medicine, chemistry, biology, food chemistry, environment, mechanics, genetics, geology, computer science, irrigation and water management, through activities designed and led by university students.<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p>\n \n 8. In the framework of its work to provide learning opportunities for marginalized communities<\/strong>, UNESCO continued its collaboration with the NGO Right to Play to conduct play activities in 13 government schools located in the restricted access area of Gaza, East Jerusalem and the West Bank. The activities were implemented by training facilitators from the 13 schools, emphasizing youth leader capacity-building, and enabling the implementation of safety, sport and play activities with the children at the targeted schools. This activity was also linked to the Crisis Planning and Management project, as well as the crisis-Disaster Risk Reduction project of the UNESCO – Her Highness Sheikha Mozah’s Office programme for Emergency Support to the Education System in Gaza (for more information see 189 EX\/20 Report on the reconstruction and development of Gaza).<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p>\n \n 9. Through its activities in the West Bank and Gaza, UNESCO is providing psychosocial support to teachers and students<\/strong>. UNESCO also continued cooperation with the Multipurpose Community Resource Centre, a non-formal education centre in Nablus. The Centre organized various educational activities during summer camps. One hundred and forty-three children benefited from catch-up courses (English, French, science, mathematics), games and sports activities. A group of 30 children aged between 7 and 13 from the Old City, Balata village and Balata Refugees Camp participated in the activities of rehabilitation of the archaeological site of Tall Balata, together with a group of 20 young men and women aged 15 to 18.<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p>\n \n 10. UNESCO also continued to be an active player in 黑料专区 coordination structures<\/strong>, where it harmonized its humanitarian work with other actors through the Humanitarian Country Team and its subsidiary structures, mainly the Education Cluster, as well as through specific working groups of the Protection Cluster, such as the Child Protection Working Group or the Displacement Working Group. In this regard UNESCO took active part in the preparation of the 2012 Consolidated Appeal, the drafting and the implementation of the Humanitarian Country Team’s advocacy strategy, and the inter-cluster rapid response strategy. Activities were conducted with a view to consolidate a solid and seamless linkage between humanitarian and development activities; in this regard, useful lessons learned from the intervention in Gaza are being collected to inform similar interventions in the West Bank as appropriate, particularly those concerning Area C. The experience with the Inter-agency Network for Education in Emergencies’ Minimum Standards is called to be particularly useful and will be an important contribution to concerted efforts by all actors.<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p>\n \n CULTURE<\/strong><\/p><\/div>\n<\/p>\n \n 11. The UNESCO Ramallah Office continues its strategic cooperation with the Palestinian Authority, mainly through the provision of technical assistance as well as building national capacities of relevant institutions. Alignment to national priorities in the field of culture (Palestinian National Plan 2011-2013) aims at building the Palestinian State and contributing to the attainment of MDGs 1, 3 and 7.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n \n 12. Over the past nine years, following the adoption by the World Heritage Committee of decision 26 COM 6.1 to safeguard Palestinian cultural and natural heritage (Budapest, 2002), UNESCO has been undertaking capacity-building and preparatory efforts to increase cooperation in the field of culture. These efforts are now coming to fruition: a nomination dossier for the cultural heritage site Birthplace of Jesus: the Church of the Nativity and the Pilgrimage Route, Bethlehem <\/i>has been finalized, and a number of local professionals have been trained in preparing World Heritage-related documents. In the area of intangible cultural heritage, UNESCO provided technical assistance to develop the framework for the inventory of folktales, traditional dance, fishing culture and traditional agricultural knowledge as part of the implementation of the MDG-F Programme for Culture and Development, partially financed by the Government of Spain and UNESCO’s regular programme budget.<\/p><\/div>\n <\/p>\n \n 13. A four-day workshop for “Developing a National Charter for the Conservation and Management of Palestinian Heritage<\/strong>” was carried out in December 2011, in cooperation with the Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities, ICCROM, and several local cultural heritage organizations, with the support of the MDG-Fund and the Government of Malta. The workshop produced agreed guidelines and material for the definition of the Palestinian Heritage Law for the effective protection of cultural properties.<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p>\n \n 14. Within the framework of the MDG-Fund, the Sebastiya Integrated Conservation and Management Plan <\/strong>gathers all relevant information on the protection of archaeological sites and features, historic urban fabric and cultural landscape, and is expected to be completed by March 2012. The design of the light tourist facility at the entrance of the archaeological site of Sebastiya was approved by the relevant authorities, while salvage excavations are ongoing at the building site. UNESCO through the MDG-Fund also continues to support the Freedom Theatre Acting School in Jenin Refugee Camp – a three-year training programme of high professional standards covering all aspects of theatre and drama (students are trained to become actors, directors, producers, theatre managers, playwrights and drama teachers).<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p>\n |