World Bank released Report titled “The Impact of Climate Change on Education” | Current Affairs | Vision IAS
MENU
Home

Periodically curated articles and updates on national and international developments relevant for UPSC Civil Services Examination.

Quick Links

High-quality MCQs and Mains Answer Writing to sharpen skills and reinforce learning every day.

Watch explainer and thematic concept-building videos under initiatives like Deep Dive, Master Classes, etc., on important UPSC topics.

ESC

Report highlights that climate change intensifies extreme weather, disrupting schooling and causing learning losses and dropouts. Click here to read the complete report.

Impact of Climate Change on Education

  • Education Remains Overlooked in Climate Policy Agenda: In 2020, education accounted for less than 1.3% of climate assistance and mentioned in less than one in three Nationally Determined Contribution plans.
  • School Closures: Over 2005-2024, schools were closed in at least 75% of extreme weather events, impacting 5 million people or more. 
    • Over 99 % of children across world are exposed to at least one major climate and environmental hazard, shock.
  • Rising temperature negatively impact learning outcomes: Even an increase of 1°C in outdoor temperature on exam days can result in a substantial decline in test scores.
    • E.g. Students in hottest 10% of Brazilian municipalities, lost about 1% of learning per year due to increasing heat exposure.
  • Increasing food insecurity and economic fragility jeopardize school enrollment: Up to 170 million people will be at risk of hunger by 2080 due to climate change, affecting student learning.
  • Disproportionately harm: Climate-related events prevent at least 4 million girls in low- and lower-middle-income countries from completing their education.

Approach to adapt education systems for climate change

  • Education Management for Climate Resilience: Invest in early warning systems. E.g. InaRISK mobile app enhances disaster knowledge for students and staff in Indonesia.
  • School Infrastructure for Climate Resilience: Strengthening resilience of existing buildings. E.g. Rwanda’s Project equipping school sites with Retaining walls to mitigate flood- and rainstorm-related landslides.
    • Management of classroom temperatures. E.g. Green Economy Strategy and Implementation Plan (Kenya) promoting bioclimatic design, enhancing student comfort during high temperature.
  • Ensuring Learning Continuity in case of climate shocks: Keep schools open (as much as possible), strengthen remote learning mechanisms.
    • E.g. Back-to-school campaign (Ghana) resulting in nearly 100% re-enrollment after COVID-19. 
Watch Video News Today

Explore Related Content

Discover more articles, videos, and terms related to this topic

RELATED VIDEOS

3
Simplified | The Hidden Casualty: Education in the Climate Change Narrative

Simplified | The Hidden Casualty: Education in the Climate Change Narrative

YouTube HD
Simplified | Education and Employment in the Climate Era

Simplified | Education and Employment in the Climate Era

YouTube HD
Climate Change: Evolution of UNFCCC and other International Initiatives

Climate Change: Evolution of UNFCCC and other International Initiatives

YouTube HD
Title is required. Maximum 500 characters.

Search Notes

Filter Notes

Loading your notes...
Searching your notes...
Loading more notes...
You've reached the end of your notes

No notes yet

Create your first note to get started.

No notes found

Try adjusting your search criteria or clear the search.

Saving...
Saved

Please select a subject.

Referenced Articles

linked

No references added yet

Subscribe for Premium Features