The war on terrorism has fueled an expansion of the U.S. government鈥檚 work to improve schools overseas.
Signs of that expansion include the growth of federally sponsored education development in countries with large Muslim populations, forthcoming legislation that has the war on terrorism as a rationale for increasing education foreign aid, and a higher profile for education development in the United States鈥 national-security strategy.
The aid goes beyond the U.S. Agency for International Development鈥檚 involvement in rebuilding education in Iraq, which has cost at least $144 million so far. It includes, for instance, the start of a $60 million USAID education project in Pakistan after the agency established a mission there in 2002.
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鈥淎s far as geography is concerned, it鈥檚 very easy to track what鈥檚 happening,鈥 said Joshua Muskin, the senior education adviser for the Washington-based World Learning for International Development, which carries out some education projects for the USAID. 鈥淭hey are really targeting the Muslim region.鈥
Since 2001, the number of countries with USAID-sponsored education projects has risen from 25 to 43. The number of countries with such agency initiatives has stayed the same in Latin America and the Caribbean, but jumped from five to 15 in Asia and the Near East. In the past few years, the USAID has started education projects in five countries with large Muslim populations in Europe and Eurasia as well: Macedonia, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan. An education project in Sudan, also home to many Muslims, has been added to the Africa list.
Fighting the war on terror was a motive for Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton to draft a bill this spring calling for a dramatic increase in foreign education aid, according to her deputy press secretary, Amy Bonitatibus.
鈥淲e need to do more to combat the influence of hatred and bias, and, for example, I think, with respect to education, we are doing far too little around the world,鈥 Sen. Clinton, a New York Democrat, said in a Feb. 25 speech about fighting terror.
In a recent press release about her proposed bill, which the former first lady hopes to introduce by the end of next month, she said: 鈥淭his isn鈥檛 just about being generous; it鈥檚 about being smart. Because in today鈥檚 world, we are all more secure when children and adults around the world are taught math and science鈥攊nstead of hate.鈥
Development Pillar
The higher profile for education development overseas results from a shift in the thinking of U.S. leaders after the terrorist attacks against the United States on Sept. 11, 2001, development experts say.
President Bush cited development, along with diplomacy and defense, as an important tenet of the country鈥檚 national-security strategy. That same document from September 2002 called literacy and learning 鈥渢he foundation of democracy and development.鈥
In 2003, for the first time, the USAID and the Department of State produced a joint strategic plan, spanning 2004 to 2009, indicating that U.S. leaders are trying to more closely align foreign policy and development goals.
鈥淚t鈥檚 just wonderful that in the last couple of years, the development community has broken out beyond the choir鈥攂eyond itself,鈥 said George M. Ingram, the executive director of the Basic Education Coalition in Washington, an umbrella organization for nonprofit groups and companies engaged in international education development.
Added Stephen F. Moseley, the president and chief executive officer of the Washington-based Academy for Educational Development: 鈥淭he education develop- ment that AID has practiced for a long time is becoming more front and center to AID and other agencies, including the Congress, now that people recognize that the long-term well-being of people鈥檚 capacity is important in fighting terrorism.鈥
But others say that the attention given by the nation鈥檚 makers of foreign policy to international development鈥攁nd education improvements abroad鈥攔emains unimpressive.
The defense part of the national-security strategy is getting 40 times the amount of funding that development is, pointed out Frederic D. Barton, the co-director of the postconflict-reconstruction project at the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a huge imbalance,鈥 he said. 鈥淚f the development pillar is going to be that central to the strategy, it really should be a Cabinet office as well.鈥
More Funding
The most obvious change in education development since the 2001 attacks by terrorists from Arab countries is that Congress is providing more money for it. The funding for basic education through the USAID, which Mr. Ingram estimates administers about 80 percent of the federal government鈥檚 foreign aid for education, tripled from $103 million in fiscal 2001 to $326 million in fiscal 2004. That doesn鈥檛 count what the USAID has spent on education in Iraq since the U.S.-led defeat of the regime there.
Development experts don鈥檛 consider $326 million a large sum, given that the USAID is spending that money in 43 different countries. Maine has budgeted more than twice that amount, for instance, to run its K-12 system in fiscal 2005.
But more money for education may be in the pipeline if Sen. Clinton gains support for her bill for universal education in developing countries. Rep. Nita Lowry, D-N.Y., is drafting a similar bill.
Sen. Clinton鈥檚 proposal calls for the United States to spend $500 million for education foreign aid in fiscal 2005, which begins Oct. 1. It spells out a gradual increase until spending reaches $2.5 billion a year in 2009.
The money would go to help countries achieve the goals of 鈥淓ducation for All,鈥 the international campaign to ensure that children worldwide have access to a good-quality basic education by 2015.
Mr. Ingram and Frank Method, a former senior education adviser for the USAID who now directs international education for RTI International, a nonprofit research and development organization in Research Triangle Park, N.C., say passage of such a bill would be significant. Mr. Ingram鈥檚 group has been asking federal legislators to consider a similar level of funding for education overseas for the past year and a half.
Mr. Method said Sen. Clinton鈥檚 proposal is a sign of a rising consensus among people in the federal government to 鈥渢reat education not just as a sectoral kind of activity, but a major driver for large-scale reform efforts.鈥
Also since the 2001 attacks, the Bush administration has authorized two new development funds outside the USAID鈥攐ne that has an education component and another that could be a significant source of education funding.
One, the Middle East Partnership Initiative, is administered by the State Department and provides support for projects in Arab countries for economic, education, and political reform. In fiscal 2002 and 2003, the initiative gave away a total of $38.9 million for education, and $43.5 million was appropriated for education in fiscal 2004.
Raj Wadhwani, an education analyst for the partnership initiative, views its education work as being linked to the U.S. war on terrorism.
鈥淲hen you look at a lot of the school systems in the Middle East,鈥 he said, 鈥渢hey don鈥檛 produce graduates that are able to contribute to their economies. After 9/11, you saw lots of articles about madrassas [Islamic religious schools]. Young men went to schools and weren鈥檛 learning math or history. They were learning the Quran. There were no avenues for those students.鈥
The U.S. government鈥檚 contributions to school projects through the partnership are meant to produce graduates who can improve their countries鈥 economies, Mr. Wadhwani said.
Money has not yet started to flow from the second fund set up by Mr. Bush, the Millennium Challenge Account, which is run by a new agency called the Millennium Challenge Corp. The federal fund has a proposed budget of $1 billion for fiscal 2005 and will give aid to countries that are poor but have policies deemed good by the United States. The corporation announced last month that 16 countries鈥攏one in the Middle East鈥 would be eligible to apply for the money. Whether any of the money goes to education depends on what kinds of development projects the countries propose.
Susan G. Foster, an education communication specialist for the USAID, declined to comment on whether the USAID鈥檚 education development work has become increasingly linked to national-security interests since Sept. 11, 2001.
The USAID鈥檚 joint-strategy plan with the State Department, however, says that the agency 鈥渨ill promote improved education globally, with a particular focus on the Muslim world.鈥
A June 2003 issue paper, 鈥淪trengthening Education in the Muslim World,鈥 published by the USAID, says that since the 2001 attacks, the agency has redoubled efforts to understand how to support 鈥渆ducational needs and aspirations of the Muslim world鈥 in ways that build on its strengths.
The paper adds: 鈥淢any researchers, educators, and practitioners believe that improving the educational systems in these countries is one way to bring about development advances that will help more Muslim children grow up to be productive members of their societies and may help diminish their vulnerability to recruitment efforts by extremist Islamic groups.鈥
Content Unchanged
Still, Ms. Foster emphasized that the content of USAID education projects hasn鈥檛 been affected by national-security interests since 2001.
鈥淗ow do you change content when it鈥檚 basic skills鈥攍earning to read and write鈥攁nd providing the skills that will make you a participating and functioning individual?鈥 she said.
The USAID is poised to release three reports that will give more insight into its recent education activities. One report, expected to include descriptions of how education money was used, is required by law and was scheduled for delivery to Congress last week. Another will describe in more detail the agency鈥檚 education programs in 2002 and 2003. And a third report, also expected to be released this summer, will spell out the USAID鈥檚 education strategy for the future.
A common thread in all USAID education projects, Ms. Foster said, is to help learners gain general skills and basic knowledge. She said projects have tended to focus on primary schooling rather than secondary. The agency has also put a strong emphasis on the inclusion of girls in education.
For the most part, the people carrying out education projects agree with Ms. Foster that their substance has not changed dramatically since September 2001.
In Pakistan, for instance, Mr. Method said, the $60 million project that RTI International is implementing for the USAID supports education reform by the Pakistani government that was already being considered before the attacks on the United States. RTI International is helping the Pakistani government to decentralize education planning and administration.
Again, though, the USAID Web site says the agency鈥檚 work in Pakistan 鈥渋s focused on strengthening Pakistan鈥檚 capacity to combat terrorism.鈥
Mr. Method said that by supporting deep and comprehensive education reform, the program addresses conditions that could lead to political instability and terrorism, but that it doesn鈥檛 have elements that are specifically geared to counter terrorism.
One American involved in another USAID-sponsored project in Pakistan believes that participants were selected from targeted regions of the country because of the U.S.-led war on terrorism.
This spring, Jack Levy, a professor of education at George Mason University in Fairfax, Va., directed the training of 14 teacher-trainers from Pakistan in child-centered teaching methods. The training was part of a $5 million, three-year project that is being carried out by the Academy for Educational Development.
Mr. Levy interpreted the project as linked to the war on terrorism because the Pakistani teachers chosen to study at George Mason came mostly from rural regions near Afghanistan, where the Taliban and other Islamic extremist groups are active. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the soft side of the war on terrorism鈥攖rying to win the hearts and minds of people in those regions,鈥 he said.
International-development experts say it鈥檚 reasonable for the United States to align its education development work with strategies for protecting national security. At the same time, they caution that doing so will not be effective if the scope is too narrow.
The risk, said Mr. Method, is that instead of systematically addressing basic needs, the U.S. government 鈥渨ill target resources on particular populations and address issues of content directly, and will cause the broad agenda of Education for All to be misunderstood as a counterterrorism strategy.鈥
Mr. Ingram said he鈥檚 concerned the U.S. government might get involved in improving education in particular countries for only a short time.
鈥淲e need to be involved in these countries for the long term鈥攆or the seven years or 15 years it takes to develop an effective education system,鈥 he said. 鈥淏y nature, U.S. foreign-policy priorities shift every five to seven years.鈥
Coverage of cultural understanding and international issues in education is supported in part by the Atlantic Philanthropies.