Distr. GENERAL CRC/GC/2001/1 17 April 2001 Original: ENGLISH |
CRC/GC/2001/1.
(General
Comments) |
Convention Abbreviation: CRC
GENERAL COMMENT NO. 1
The Aims
of Education
Article 29 (1)
(2001)
Article 29 (1), Convention on the Rights of the Child
"1. States Parties agree that the education of
the child shall be directed to:
"(a) The development of the child's personality,
talents and mental and physical abilities to their fullest potential;
"(b) The development of respect for human rights
and fundamental freedoms, and for the principles enshrined in the Charter of the
United Nations;
"(c) The development of respect for the child's
parents, his or her own cultural identity, language and values, for the national
values of the country in which the child is living, the country from which he or
she may originate, and for civilizations different from his or her own;
"(d) The preparation of the child for
responsible life in a free society, in the spirit of understanding, peace,
tolerance, equality of sexes, and friendship among all peoples, ethnic, national
and religious groups and persons of indigenous origin;
"(e) The development of respect for the natural
environment."
Appendix
GENERAL COMMENT 1 (2001): THE AIMS OF EDUCATION
The significance of article 29 (1)
1. Article 29, paragraph 1, of the Convention on
the Rights of the Child is of far-reaching importance. The aims of education
that it sets out, which have been agreed to by all States parties, promote,
support and protect the core value of the Convention: the human dignity innate
in every child and his or her equal and inalienable rights. These aims, set out
in the five subparagraphs of article 29 (1) are all linked directly to the
realization of the child's human dignity and rights, taking into account the
child's special developmental needs and diverse evolving capacities. The aims
are: the holistic development of the full potential of the child (29 (1) (a)),
including development of respect for human rights (29 (1) (b)), an enhanced
sense of identity and affiliation (29 (1) (c)), and his or her socialization and
interaction with others (29 (1) (d)) and with the environment (29 (1) (e)).
2. Article 29 (1) not only adds to the right to
education recognized in article 28 a qualitative dimension which reflects the
rights and inherent dignity of the child; it also insists upon the need for
education to be child-centred, child-friendly and empowering, and it highlights
the need for educational processes to be based upon the very principles it
enunciates.(1) The education to which every child has a right is one
designed to provide the child with life skills, to strengthen the child's
capacity to enjoy the full range of human rights and to promote a culture which
is infused by appropriate human rights values. The goal is to empower the child
by developing his or her skills, learning and other capacities, human dignity,
self-esteem and self-confidence. "Education" in this context goes far beyond
formal schooling to embrace the broad range of life experiences and learning
processes which enable children, individually and collectively, to develop their
personalities, talents and abilities and to live a full and satisfying life
within society.
3. The child's right to education is not only a
matter of access (art. 28) but also of content. An education with its contents
firmly rooted in the values of article 29 (1) is for every child an
indispensable tool for her or his efforts to achieve in the course of her or his
life a balanced, human rights-friendly response to the challenges that accompany
a period of fundamental change driven by globalization, new technologies and
related phenomena. Such challenges include the tensions between, inter alia, the
global and the local; the individual and the collective; tradition and
modernity; long- and short-term considerations; competition and equality of
opportunity; the expansion of knowledge and the capacity to assimilate it; and
the spiritual and the material.(2) And yet, in the national and international programmes
and policies on education that really count the elements embodied in article 29
(1) seem all too often to be either largely missing or present only as a
cosmetic afterthought.
4. Article 29 (1) states that the States parties
agree that education should be directed to a wide range of values. This
agreement overcomes the boundaries of religion, nation and culture built across
many parts of the world. At first sight, some of the diverse values expressed in
article 29 (1) might be thought to be in conflict with one another in certain
situations. Thus, efforts to promote understanding, tolerance and friendship
among all peoples, to which paragraph (1) (d) refers, might not always be
automatically compatible with policies designed, in accordance with paragraph
(1) (c), to develop respect for the child's own cultural identity, language and
values, for the national values of the country in which the child is living, the
country from which he or she may originate, and for civilizations different from
his or her own. But in fact, part of the importance of this provision lies
precisely in its recognition of the need for a balanced approach to education
and one which succeeds in reconciling diverse values through dialogue and
respect for difference. Moreover, children are capable of playing a unique role
in bridging many of the differences that have historically separated groups of
people from one another.
The functions of article 29 (1)
5. Article 29 (1) is much more than an inventory
or listing of different objectives which education should seek to achieve.
Within the overall context of the Convention it serves to highlight,
inter alia, the following dimensions.
6. First, it emphasizes the indispensable
interconnected nature of the Convention's provisions. It draws upon, reinforces,
integrates and complements a variety of other provisions and cannot be properly
understood in isolation from them. In addition to the general principles of the
Convention - non-discrimination (art. 2), the best interest of the child (art.
3), the right to life, survival and development (art. 6), and the right to
express views and have them taken into account (art. 12) - many other provisions
may be mentioned, such as but not limited to the rights and responsibilities of
parents (arts. 5 and 18), freedom of expression (art. 13), freedom of thought
(art. 14), the right to information (art. 17), the rights of children with
disabilities (art. 23), the right to education for health (art. 24), the right
to education (art. 28), and the linguistic and cultural rights of children
belonging to minority groups (art. 30).
7. Children's rights are not detached or
isolated values devoid of context, but exist within a broader ethical framework
which is partly described in article 29 (1) and in the preamble to the
Convention. Many of the criticisms that have been made of the Convention are
specifically answered by this provision. Thus, for example, this article
underlines the importance of respect for parents, of the need to view rights
within their broader ethical, moral, spiritual, cultural or social framework,
and of the fact that most children's rights, far from being externally imposed,
are embedded within the values of local communities.
8. Second, the article attaches importance to
the process by which the right to education is to be promoted. Thus, efforts to
promote the enjoyment of other rights must not be undermined, and should be
reinforced, by the values imparted in the educational process. This includes not
only the content of the curriculum but also the educational processes, the
pedagogical methods and the environment within which education takes place,
whether it be the home, school, or elsewhere. Children do not lose their human
rights by virtue of passing through the school gates. Thus, for example,
education must be provided in a way that respects the inherent dignity of the
child and enables the child to express his or her views freely in accordance
with article 12 (1) and to participate in school life. Education must also be
provided in a way that respects the strict limits on discipline reflected in
article 28 (2) and promotes non-violence in school. The Committee has repeatedly
made clear in its concluding observations that the use of corporal punishment
does not respect the inherent dignity of the child nor the strict limits on
school discipline. Compliance with the values recognized in article 29 (1)
clearly requires that schools be child-friendly in the fullest sense of the term
and that they be consistent in all respects with the dignity of the child. The
participation of children in school life, the creation of school communities and
student councils, peer education and peer counselling, and the involvement of
children in school disciplinary proceedings should be promoted as part of the
process of learning and experiencing the realization of rights.
9. Third, while article 28 focuses upon the
obligations of State parties in relation to the establishment of educational
systems and in ensuring access thereto, article 29 (1) underlines the individual
and subjective right to a specific quality of education. Consistent with the
Convention's emphasis on the importance of acting in the best interests of the
child, this article emphasizes the message of child-centred education: that the
key goal of education is the development of the individual child's personality,
talents and abilities, in recognition of the fact that every child has unique
characteristics, interests, abilities, and learning needs.(3) Thus, the curriculum must be of direct relevance to the
child's social, cultural, environmental and economic context and to his or her
present and future needs and take full account of the child's evolving
capacities; teaching methods should be tailored to the different needs of
different children. Education must also be aimed at ensuring that essential life
skills are learnt by every child and that no child leaves school without being
equipped to face the challenges that he or she can expect to be confronted with
in life. Basic skills include not only literacy and numeracy but also life
skills such as the ability to make well-balanced decisions; to resolve conflicts
in a non-violent manner; and to develop a healthy lifestyle, good social
relationships and responsibility, critical thinking, creative talents, and other
abilities which give children the tools needed to pursue their options in life.
10. Discrimination on the basis of any of the
grounds listed in article 2 of the Convention, whether it is overt or hidden,
offends the human dignity of the child and is capable of undermining or even
destroying the capacity of the child to benefit from educational opportunities.
While denying a child's access to educational opportunities is primarily a
matter which relates to article 28 of the Convention, there are many ways in
which failure to comply with the principles contained in article 29 (1) can have
a similar effect. To take an extreme example, gender discrimination can be
reinforced by practices such as a curriculum which is inconsistent with the
principles of gender equality, by arrangements which limit the benefits girls
can obtain from the educational opportunities offered, and by unsafe or
unfriendly environments which discourage girls' participation. Discrimination
against children with disabilities is also pervasive in many formal educational
systems and in a great many informal educational settings, including in the
home.(4) Children with HIV/AIDS are also heavily discriminated
against in both settings.(5) All such discriminatory practices are in direct
contradiction with the requirements in article 29 (1) (a) that education be
directed to the development of the child's personality, talents and mental and
physical abilities to their fullest potential.
11. The Committee also wishes to highlight the
links between article 29 (1) and the struggle against racism, racial
discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance. Racism and related phenomena
thrive where there is ignorance, unfounded fears of racial, ethnic, religious,
cultural and linguistic or other forms of difference, the exploitation of
prejudices, or the teaching or dissemination of distorted values. A reliable and
enduring antidote to all of these failings is the provision of education which
promotes an understanding and appreciation of the values reflected in article 29
(1), including respect for differences, and challenges all aspects of
discrimination and prejudice. Education should thus be accorded one of the
highest priorities in all campaigns against the evils of racism and related
phenomena. Emphasis must also be placed upon the importance of teaching about
racism as it has been practised historically, and particularly as it manifests
or has manifested itself within particular communities. Racist behaviour is not
something engaged in only by "others". It is therefore important to focus on the
child's own community when teaching human and children's rights and the
principle of non-discrimination. Such teaching can effectively contribute to the
prevention and elimination of racism, ethnic discrimination, xenophobia and
related intolerance.
12. Fourth, article 29 (1) insists upon a
holistic approach to education which ensures that the educational opportunities
made available reflect an appropriate balance between promoting the physical,
mental, spiritual and emotional aspects of education, the intellectual, social
and practical dimensions, and the childhood and lifelong aspects. The overall
objective of education is to maximize the child's ability and opportunity to
participate fully and responsibly in a free society. It should be emphasized
that the type of teaching that is focused primarily on accumulation of
knowledge, prompting competition and leading to an excessive burden of work on
children, may seriously hamper the harmonious development of the child to the
fullest potential of his or her abilities and talents. Education should be
child-friendly, inspiring and motivating the individual child. Schools should
foster a humane atmosphere and allow children to develop according to their
evolving capacities.
13. Fifth, it emphasizes the need for education
to be designed and provided in such a way that it promotes and reinforces the
range of specific ethical values enshrined in the Convention, including
education for peace, tolerance, and respect for the natural environment, in an
integrated and holistic manner. This may require a multidisciplinary approach.
The promotion and reinforcement of the values of article 29 (1) are not only
necessary because of problems elsewhere, but must also focus on problems within
the child's own community. Education in this regard should take place within the
family, but schools and communities must also play an important role. For
example, for the development of respect for the natural environment, education
must link issues of environment and sustainable development with socio-economic,
sociocultural and demographic issues. Similarly, respect for the natural
environment should be learnt by children at home, in school and within the
community, encompass both national and international problems, and actively
involve children in local, regional or global environmental projects.
14. Sixth, it reflects the vital role of
appropriate educational opportunities in the promotion of all other human rights
and the understanding of their indivisibility. A child's capacity to participate
fully and responsibly in a free society can be impaired or undermined not only
by outright denial of access to education but also by a failure to promote an
understanding of the values recognized in this article.
Human rights education
15. Article 29 (1) can also be seen as a
foundation stone for the various programmes of human rights education called for
by the World Conference on Human Rights, held in Vienna in 1993, and promoted by
international agencies. Nevertheless, the rights of the child have not always
been given the prominence they require in the context of such activities. Human
rights education should provide information on the content of human rights
treaties. But children should also learn about human rights by seeing human
rights standards implemented in practice, whether at home, in school, or within
the community. Human rights education should be a comprehensive, life-long
process and start with the reflection of human rights values in the daily life
and experiences of children.(6)
16. The values embodied in article 29 (1) are
relevant to children living in zones of peace but they are even more important
for those living in situations of conflict or emergency. As the Dakar Framework
for Action notes, it is important in the context of education systems affected
by conflict, natural calamities and instability that educational programmes be
conducted in ways that promote mutual understanding, peace and tolerance, and
that help to prevent violence and conflict.(7) Education about international humanitarian law also
constitutes an important, but all too often neglected, dimension of efforts to
give effect to article 29 (1).
Implementation, monitoring and review
17. The aims and values reflected in this
article are stated in quite general terms and their implications are potentially
very wide ranging. This seems to have led many States parties to assume that it
is unnecessary, or even inappropriate, to ensure that the relevant principles
are reflected in legislation or in administrative directives. This assumption is
unwarranted. In the absence of any specific formal endorsement in national law
or policy, it seems unlikely that the relevant principles are or will be used to
genuinely inform educational policies. The Committee therefore calls upon all
States parties to take the necessary steps to formally incorporate these
principles into their education policies and legislation at all levels.
18. The effective promotion of article 29 (1)
requires the fundamental reworking of curricula to include the various aims of
education and the systematic revision of textbooks and other teaching materials
and technologies, as well as school policies. Approaches which do no more than
seek to superimpose the aims and values of the article on the existing system
without encouraging any deeper changes are clearly inadequate. The relevant
values cannot be effectively integrated into, and thus be rendered consistent
with, a broader curriculum unless those who are expected to transmit, promote,
teach and, as far as possible, exemplify the values have themselves been
convinced of their importance. Pre-service and in-service training schemes which
promote the principles reflected in article 29 (1) are thus essential for
teachers, educational administrators and others involved in child education. It
is also important that the teaching methods used in schools reflect the spirit
and educational philosophy of the Convention on the Rights of the Child and the
aims of education laid down in article 29 (1).
19. In addition, the school environment itself
must thus reflect the freedom and the spirit of understanding, peace, tolerance,
equality of sexes, and friendship among all peoples, ethnic, national and
religious groups and persons of indigenous origin called for in article 29 (1)
(b) and (d). A school which allows bullying or other violent and exclusionary
practices to occur is not one which meets the requirements of article 29 (1).
The term "human rights education" is too often used in a way which greatly
oversimplifies its connotations. What is needed, in addition to formal human
rights education, is the promotion of values and policies conducive to human
rights not only within schools and universities but also within the broader
community.
20. In general terms, the various initiatives
that States parties are required to take pursuant to their Convention
obligations will be insufficiently grounded in the absence of widespread
dissemination of the text of the Convention itself, in accordance with the
provisions of article 42. This will also facilitate the role of children as
promoters and defenders of children's rights in their daily lives. In order to
facilitate broader dissemination, States parties should report on the measures
they have taken to achieve this objective and the Office of the High
Commissioner for Human Rights should develop a comprehensive database of the
language versions of the Convention that have been produced.
21. The media, broadly defined, also have a
central role to play, both in promoting the values and aims reflected in article
29 (1) and in ensuring that their activities do not undermine the efforts of
others to promote those objectives. Governments are obligated by the Convention,
pursuant to article 17 (a), to take all appropriate steps to "encourage the mass
media to disseminate information and material of social and cultural benefit to
the child".(8)
22. The Committee calls upon States parties to
devote more attention to education as a dynamic process and to devising means by
which to measure changes over time in relation to article 29 (1). Every child
has the right to receive an education of good quality which in turn requires a
focus on the quality of the learning environment, of teaching and learning
processes and materials, and of learning outputs. The Committee notes the
importance of surveys that may provide an opportunity to assess the progress
made, based upon consideration of the views of all actors involved in the
process, including children currently in or out of school, teachers and youth
leaders, parents, and educational administrators and supervisors. In this
respect, the Committee emphasizes the role of national-level monitoring which
seeks to ensure that children, parents and teachers can have an input in
decisions relevant to education.
23. The Committee calls upon States parties to
develop a comprehensive national plan of action to promote and monitor
realization of the objectives listed in article 29 (1). If such a plan is drawn
up in the larger context of a national action plan for children, a national
human rights action plan, or a national human rights education strategy, the
Government must ensure that it nonetheless addresses all of the issues dealt
with in article 29 (1) and does so from a child-rights perspective. The
Committee urges that the United Nations and other international bodies concerned
with educational policy and human rights education seek better coordination so
as to enhance the effectiveness of the implementation of article 29 (1).
24. The design and implementation of programmes
to promote the values reflected in this article should become part of the
standard response by Governments to almost all situations in which patterns of
human rights violations have occurred. Thus, for example, where major incidents
of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance occur which
involve those under 18, it can reasonably be presumed that the Government has
not done all that it should to promote the values reflected in the Convention
generally, and in article 29 (1) in particular. Appropriate additional measures
under article 29 (1) should therefore be adopted which include research on and
adoption of whatever educational techniques might have a positive impact in
achieving the rights recognized in the Convention.
25. States parties should also consider
establishing a review procedure which responds to complaints that existing
policies or practices are not consistent with article 29 (1). Such review
procedures need not necessarily entail the creation of new legal,
administrative, or educational bodies. They might also be entrusted to national
human rights institutions or to existing administrative bodies. The Committee
requests each State party when reporting on this article to identify the genuine
possibilities that exist at the national or local level to obtain a review of
existing approaches which are claimed to be incompatible with the Convention.
Information should be provided as to how such reviews can be initiated and how
many such review procedures have been undertaken within the reporting period.
26. In order to better focus the process of
examining States parties' reports dealing with article 29 (1), and in accordance
with the requirement in article 44 that reports shall indicate factors and
difficulties, the Committee requests each State party to provide a detailed
indication in its periodic reports of what it considers to be the most important
priorities within its jurisdiction which call for a more concerted effort to
promote the values reflected in this provision and to outline the programme of
activities which it proposes to take over the succeeding five years in order to
address the problems identified.
27. The Committee calls upon United Nations
bodies and agencies and other competent bodies whose role is underscored in
article 45 of the Convention to contribute more actively and systematically to
the Committee's work in relation to article 29 (1).
28. Implementation of comprehensive national
plans of action to enhance compliance with article 29 (1) will require human and
financial resources which should be available to the maximum extent possible, in
accordance with article 4. Therefore, the Committee considers that resource
constraints cannot provide a justification for a State party's failure to take
any, or enough, of the measures that are required. In this context, and in light
of the obligations upon States parties to promote and encourage international
cooperation both in general terms (arts. 4 and 45 of the Convention) and in
relation to education (art. 28 (3)), the Committee urges States parties
providing development cooperation to ensure that their programmes are designed
so as to take full account of the principles contained in article 29 (1).
Notes
1. In this regard, the Committee takes note of General Comment No. 13 (1999) of the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights on the right to education, which deals, inter alia, with the aims of education under article 13 (1) of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. The Committee also draws attention to the general guidelines regarding the form and contents of periodic reports to be submitted by States parties under article 44, paragraph 1 (b), of the Convention, (CRC/C/58), paras. 112-116.
2. United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization, Learning: The Treasure Within, Report of the International Commission on Education for
the 21st Century, 1996, pp. 16-18.
3. United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization, The
Salamanca Statement and Framework for Action on Special Needs
Education, 1994, p. viii.
4. See General Comment No. 5
(1994) of the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights on persons with
disabilities.
5. See the recommendations
adopted by the Committee on the Rights of the Child after its day of general
discussion in 1998 on children living in a world with HIV/AIDS (A/55/41, para.
1536).
6. See General Assembly
resolution 49/184 of 23 December 1994 proclaiming the United Nations Decade for
Human Rights Education.
7. Education for All: Meeting our
Collective Commitments, adopted at the World Education Forum, Dakar, 26-28 April
2000.
8. The Committee recalls the recommendations in this respect which emerged from its day of general discussion in 1996 on the child and the media (see A/53/41 para. 1396).
?1996-2001
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
Geneva, Switzerland