Working Group on
Communication for Education and Development (COMED)
Education in Africa faces numerous challenges in the 21st century.
Efforts such as Education for All, broadening access, improving quality,
and building capacities, together with the resources and the reforms
to accomplish them, will require the participation of and dialogue between
the various actors and partners in education. Communication, sharing
information, building trust and confidence, sustaining goodwill and
reinforcing cooperation will be crucial to support the partnerships
that promote educational development. But how to communicate?
Communication for education, outside the context of pedagogy, is
a fairly new idea. It has tended to be seen as an add-on, a marginal
or contextual activity, with ambiguous relevance to the main substance
or concerns of education. Yet with the need to seek broader social support
for education policies and reforms, and especially to promote the involvement
of civil society, parents, teachers, students and donors, the role of
communication is slowly gaining recognition. Even then, much of what
is implemented is episodic and media related: ministers giving press
conferences or appearing on television visiting communities, ministries
refuting negative press reports, occasional announcements through radio
and television, some coverage of project activities or celebration of
specific education events. Is that all that can or should be communicated
about education?
What is the Working Group on Communication for Education and Development?
The Communication for Education and Development (COMED) program was
established in 1998 to help build national consensus and enhance public
support for education policies and programs. COMED became an ADEA Working
Group in 2002.
The working group is made up of four major constituencies: ministries
of education through their communication or information units, media
specialized in education reporting, communication researchers and trainers,
and development organizations involved in the working groups areas
of concern.
The working group receives support from the World Bank, the West African
News Media and Development Center (WANAD) and the Norwegian Trust Fund
for Education in Africa.
NORAD is the lead agency for the working group, and WANAD is the coordinating
agency.
What are the objectives of the working group?
The working group seeks specifically to strengthen institutional communication
capacities in ministries of education, improve and increase media understanding
and coverage of education, create networks of journalists and communicators
for education, and support partnerships for the promotion of education
in Africa. Through its activities the working group will also contribute
to education in Africa through mainstreaming strategic communication
approaches in education policy formulation and implementation, assisting
in the design of communication structures within ministries. It aims
to improve visibility of education as an important development sector
by creating and sustaining public awareness, and enhancing trust among
media, education stakeholders and ministries in support of national
education policies and programs.
What does the working group do?
The working groups major thrusts are in three areas: capacity-building
and reinforcement, networking, and advisory services.
Three sub-regional and national-level training workshops were organized
in which over 200 journalists and communication officers of ministries
of education from 30 African countries participated. These training
workshops were held in Cotonou for West Africa, (September 13-18, 1999);
in Harare for East and Southern Africa, (February 16-26, 2000), and
in Yaounde for Central Africa and the Indian Ocean, (June 28-July 7,
2000). Meetings and briefings for African ministers of education were
also held between 1999 and 2002 to build political support for the program.
The main objectives of the training workshops are to enhance the participants
professional skills and to encourage working relationships between journalists
and ministerial communication officers. They aim to encourage the creation
of regional networks of education communicators. In view of the atmosphere
of mutual suspicion, frustration and hostility, which generally exists
between journalists and communication officers, the COMED program decided
to train the two groups together, in order to increase their mutual
understanding and build trust. A six-module curriculum was prepared
for that purpose and to introduce trainees to the Internet as a research
and networking tool.
Other activities undertaken by the COMED Program included: (i) a pilot
national training workshop in Dakar, Senegal, in April 2000 for Senegalese
education journalists and communicators; (ii) sponsoring journalists
who attend and cover events related to education, including the ADEA
Biennial Meeting and the EFA Sub-Saharan Africa Conference in Johannesburg
in December 1999, the World Education Forum in Dakar in April 2000,
the Zimbabwe International Book Fair in August 2000, and the ADEA Biennial
in Arusha in 2001; (iii) a plenary session on Communication Strategies
for Promoting Education at the ADEA Biennial in Arusha in 2001; (iv)
a sub-regional training course in the use of education statistics for
journalists from some francophone West African countries, in Dakar in
June, 2001; (v) technical assistance to the Parliament of Benin during
the national consultations prior to introduction of legislation on educational
reform; (vi) assistance to the Federation Africaine des Associations
des Parents dEleves, (FAPE) in creating a communication strategy
and program for its network within its program lecole de parents.
Since its official recognition, the working group has continued to
fulfill its objectives through various activities, including (i) participation
in the IIEP Summer School training workshop on education project management,
in Paris in July 2002; (ii) coverage of the International Conference
on Early Childhood Education in Asmara in October 2002; (iii) coverage
of FAPED and MINEDAF VIII in Dar-es-Salaam in 2002; (iv) participation
in the national workshop on Educational Reform and Communication of
the Ministry of Education in Djibouti in January 2003; (v) publication
of African Education Bulletin Online, an electronic journal, and an
Internet-based discussion forum; (vi) a proposed pilot project on communication
about HIV/AIDS in education, involving production of video docudramas
in Kiswahili and a pilot research field study in the Benin Republic;
(vii) coverage of the Secondary Education in Africa Conference in Kampala,
Uganda in June 2003; (viii) coverage of the joint UNICEF and World Bank
Workshop on Gender Issues and Investments in Education, in Ouagadougou,
Burkina Faso in June 2003; (ix) coverage of the ADEA WG on Higher Education
/World Bank Conference on Innovations in Higher Education, Accra, Ghana
in September, 2003.
The working group and its network of journalists and communicators
could play a key role in Education for All and other education campaigns
at regional and national levels. The cross-cutting nature of communication
interventions enhances the working groups potential for collaborating
with other ADEA working groups and various institutions and stakeholders
in promoting education in Africa.
The Akintola Fatoyinbo Africa Education Journalism Award
Direct link to the site
The COMED training program has been actively involved in the design
and management of the Africa Education Journalism Award instituted by
ADEA in 2001. The objectives of the award are to encourage African journalists
to write relevant and reliable articles on education, encourage African
newspapers to publish regular columns and supplements on education,
foster the development of a network of African journalists specialized
in covering education topics, and strengthen ADEAs ties with African
media. In 2003, the award was renamed the Akintola Fatoyinbo Africa
Education Journalism Award.
How to Contact the Working Group
Mr. Lawalley COLE
WGCOMED Coordinator
WANAD Centre,
01 B.P. 378
Cotonou, BENIN
Tel: +229 21 31 24 45
Fax: +229 21 32 54 46
E-mail: l.cole@unesco.org