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<title>FAFO Report 176</title>

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<H1>5. Education Data </H1>
Since 1966 when UNRWA's expenditure on education outstripped that on food
rations, education has become the most important activity of the Agency
as measured in monetary expenses. 

<P>
UNRWA operates at present 640 elementary and preparatory schools in the
five Fields of operations. Registered Palestine refugee children are accepted
into the first grade of UNRWA elementary schools at the age of six. UNRWA
offers six years of elementary education and three years of preparatory
education in the West Bank, the Gaza Strip and the Syrian Arab Republic.
In Lebanon and Jordan, the Agency offers four years of preparatory education
for all pupils who have successfully completed the six year elementary cycle.
UNRWA elementary and preparatory schools follow the curricula of the host
countries. 

<P>
At the upper secondary level, UNRWA does not operate its own schools except
in Lebanon where one secondary school was opened in October 1993 in Beirut
Area. In other Fields and other Areas of Lebanon, refugee students, at this
level, attend private or government schools, in the latter case free of
charge. In Lebanon, however, UNRWA used to provide financial assistance
to refugee students enrolled in private and in government schools, but due
to financial difficulties facing the Agency, this practice has been stopped
effective 1992/1993 school year. 

<P>
At the higher education level, UNRWA awards a limited number of scholarships
to academically outstanding students to study in Middle Eastern universities27.
It also operates its own:<BR>
<OL>
<LI>pre-service teacher training programme which has been upgraded effective
September 1993 from two-year post-secondary programme to four-year programme
leading to first university degree;
<LI>in-service teacher training programme for any unqualified or under-qualified
education staff in UNRWA schools and training centres;
<LI>post-preparatory and post-secondary vocational and technical education
programme for students of both sexes and the eight training centres in the
five Fields. 
</OL>
Some refugee students also attend non-UNRWA vocational institutions in the
Middle East under Agency sponsorship. <BR>
What opportunities do UNRWA's educational data offer for research on the
education of Palestine refugees? Publicly available statistics about UNRWA's
educational system are summarized in the 140 pages Statistical Yearbook
produced by UNRWA's Department of Education. The Yearbook also contains
a description of UNRWA's educational services and structure.

<P>
Parallel to UNRWA's health statistics, the coverage of UNRWA's educational
statistics is limited to information on UNRWA's own educational programmes.
At the elementary and preparatory levels, where UNRWA maintains its own
educational system, roughly 80% of refugee pupils in the five Fields attend
UNRWA schools.28 UNRWA statistics thus provide educational information about
the majority of the refugee population. The main limitation is that we do
not know who this majority is.

<P>
Attendance to private and governmental schools is in principle based on
the choice of refugee families themselves. It is thus reasonable to speculate
whether the group of refugee pupils attending private and governmental schools
differ systematically from other refugee pupils with regard to their families'
socio-economic status. The main factor determining their choice is nevertheless
the availability of an UNRWA school in the locality or not. If no UNRWA
school is available, then the refugees try to join a government school.
Few pupils join private schools except in Lebanon and the West Bank where
9% of the pupils at the elementary level are enrolled in private schools.29
In Lebanon there are restrictions on the enrolment of Palestine refugee
children in government schools. 

<P>
Even though UNRWA possesses some information about refugee pupils in private
and governmental schools, this information is characterized by under-reporting
of the number of students.30 In spite of its broad coverage, UNRWA's educational
statistics thus do not provide an exhaustive picture of the educational
situation of Palestine refugees in the five Fields. This fact may pose problems
for research within each Field as well as for comparison between the Fields.

<P>
The numerical tables of the Yearbook provides a wide range of statistics
for different units (see Appendix 4 for a comprehensive list of units and
variables). Both the type of information, which include very few problematic
concepts and definitions, as well as the procedure for collection, (where
incentives for incorrect reporting are small) give little reason to doubt
the reliability of the data.

<P>
Information within the Department of Education is forwarded from the schools
to the respective Field Offices and subsequently to the UNRWA Headquarters.
The units of analysis in this information are mainly schools, classes, teachers,
and pupils. One may therefore assume that educational information on a school
and Area level exists within the Department of Education. This information
would, if made publicly available, enhance the research potential of UNRWA
educational statistics. The principal problem in using UNRWA statistics
for research on education of refugees is the high level of aggregation in
the publicly accessible material (the Statistical Yearbook). If confined
to the tables of the Yearbook, the units of analysis will have to be the
five Fields.  31<BR>

<h5>27.) Universities in Egypt, Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, West Bank, Gaza, Iraq
Libya, Turkey, Yemen, Sudan, Algeria and Tunisia.<br>
28.) Source: UNRWA Statistical Yearbook for Education; 1992-1993, table 4<br>
29.) Source: UNRWA Statistical Yearbook for Education; 1992-1993, table 4<br>
30.) UNRWA ceased to give assistance to refugee pupils in government and private
schools in the school year of 1992-1993. This has resulted in a lack of interest
and incentive for these schools to report refugee pupils enrolment to UNRWA. 
Private schools under-report or do not report the attendance of refugee pupils in 
their schools and the figures with respect to refugees in government schools are
also believed to be incomplete (UNRWA Statistical Yearbook for Education; 
1992-1993).<br>
31.) To our knowledge UNWRA has collected data about interruptions of education
in the Agency«s schools due to the Intifada and civil war in Lebanon. Interruptions
of education have a severe impact on learning. It is estimated that children living
in Gaza and the West Bank have lost between 35-50 % of the school days because of
school closures and curfews in the four years between 1988 and 1992 (Cultivating
Palestinian Education 1992; 6)</h5>

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<a href="_._.html"><img src="../../../../../../../sys/almashriq-bottom-line.gif"alt = "----------------" border= 0></a><p><pre>
<a href="../../../../../../../base/mailpage.html">al@mashriq</a>                       960428/960613</pre>

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