
Opinion Climate change in the Asia-Pacific: Empty classrooms, stalled dreams, a generation falling behind
Lately, though, that plan has begun to fall apart.
Climate change is transforming Cambodia's floating villages. Over the past decade, erratic rainfall, prolonged droughts, and rising temperatures have dwindled fish populations. This spells both an economic and educational crisis for a country where 12 per cent of the GDP depends on fish exports.
For many children, the climate crisis begins not in the headlines but in the silence of an empty classroom. With fishing now taking longer and yielding less, children are often left stranded, missing up to 10–12 school days each month. It comes as no surprise that many eventually drop out.
This is the human face of climate change — beyond the parched lands or rising seas, there are empty classrooms, stalled dreams, and a generation falling behind.
Across the Asia-Pacific, home to more than half the world's youth, climate change is disrupting education at scale, especially for children in poverty, remote areas, or crisis-affected zones — those already least likely to access quality education.
From floods in Bangladesh to typhoons in Vietnam, and heatwaves in India to landslides in the Philippines, extreme weather is upending education. UNICEF's Children's Climate Risk Index estimates that over 1 billion children are at 'extremely high risk' from the impacts of climate change — education among them.
Yet responses often fall short. Too many focus on short-term recovery rather than addressing deeper issues: Poverty, inequality, and fragile infrastructure.
But around the world, communities are pioneering simple, scalable solutions.
In the Philippines, after Typhoon Haiyan devastated Tacloban in 2013, local authorities rebuilt schools with elevated foundations and typhoon-resistant roofs. These climate-resilient structures allowed students to return to classrooms faster — and in some cases, provided shelter during future storms.
In Cambodia, too, low-tech solutions such as providing dedicated school boats have reduced dropout rates and helped children transition to secondary education, proving that even modest investments can make a difference when rooted in local needs. But adaptation isn't enough. Education must also become a tool to fight climate change.
In Vietnam, youth climate clubs supported by local and international partners are teaching nearly 20,000 students about renewable energy, climate science, and green entrepreneurship. These are not abstract lessons — they are practical tools to help youth lead sustainable initiatives in their own communities.
Across Indonesia, a national green schools programme has been rolled out, integrating environmental education with hands-on activities such as composting, urban gardening, and waste management. Early data shows students not only retain this knowledge but also influence household behaviour, making schools catalysts for broader change. Between January 2022 and June 2024, climate-related disasters closed schools in 81 countries, affecting over 400 million students. In 2024 alone, extreme weather disrupted the education of at least 242 million children.
But education is not only a casualty — it's a crucial part of the solution. Educated communities are more resilient, better prepared to adapt, and more likely to advocate for sustainable policies.
Schools, therefore, must be reimagined as hubs of learning and resilience. That means integrating climate action into every curriculum and transforming school infrastructure — elevated buildings, green roofs, rainwater harvesting, and renewable energy systems.
Young people need more than awareness. They need agency. When children and youth understand how climate change affects their communities — and are empowered to act — they begin to see themselves not as victims, but as leaders.
Asia-Pacific, with its vast youth population and acute climate risk, has a chance to lead. But it will require collective effort: Regional policy coordination, investments in climate-smart education, and platforms that elevate the voices of rural youth, indigenous groups, and girls — too often excluded from the conversation.
The cost of inaction is staggering. Without meaningful intervention, climate change could keep an additional 12.5 million girls out of school each year. But we also know what works.
A schoolboat. A typhoon-proof classroom. A youth-led campaign for solar energy.
This month, as we celebrate Earth Day, let's affirm the right of every child not just to survive climate change — but to learn, adapt, and lead through it. Because education and climate action are not two separate challenges. They are one and the same.

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Indian Express
7 days ago
- Indian Express
Israel allows humanitarian aid to enter Gaza but will that be enough to tackle mass starvation?
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Fashion Value Chain
25-07-2025
- Fashion Value Chain
Re-Discovering Purpose: Oakridge Bachupally Students Lead Global Change at NAE Summit 2025
In a world where education must prepare students not just for exams but for impact, the NAE Student Summit 2025 stood as a beacon of global citizenship, youth-led change, and purposeful learning. Held at The Village School in Houston, the summit brought together over 160 students from Nord Anglia Education schools worldwide, including a passionate delegation from Oakridge International School, Bachupally. Oakridge Students Group Among them were changemakers like Siddhi, Riya, Samyuktha, Saanvi, and Nia, who didn't just attend-they led, inspired, and transformed. Service in Action Houston Food Bank Visit The summit in Houston-held in the first UNICEF-recognized Child-Friendly City in the U.S.-kicked off with workshops led by Lisa Petro from Generation Global, where students explored the power of dialogue in fostering empathy, inclusion, and global change. They also learned about Nord Anglia's Social Impact Grants, which have supported student-led initiatives with over $735,000 since 2021. On the second day, guided by UNICEF, students and educators-including Ms. Sonia from Oakridge Bengaluru-engaged deeply with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), connecting global frameworks to real-world case studies to inspire meaningful action. Service in Action: Houston Food Bank Visit In a powerful act of service, Oakridge students joined peers to sort 6,541 kg of food donations, providing 12,020 meals to families in need. 'It was humbling to see how small actions can create big change,' shared Siddhi, Grade 11. Later for two days students visited the Houston Museum of Natural Science to explore the evolution of energy and the importance of renewable solutions. Later, Oakridge students took the stage during Peer Talks to share their insights. Day 4 focused on advocacy, where students practiced speaking up for change and navigating tough conversations, while teachers participated in a UNICEF emergency aid simulation to better understand humanitarian response efforts. Riya presented SuvriddhiOS, a platform promoting sustainable development in urban communities. Samyuktha shared HealthMirror, a student-led initiative improving health awareness among underserved populations. Their stories sparked conversations on compassion, innovation, and youth-led impact. Capstone Projects: Learning into Action The summit culminated in powerful capstone presentations, where students showcased how they plan to drive change in their communities. From climate action to digital inclusion, their ideas reflected a week of growth, collaboration, and purpose. 'I am incredibly proud of our students who represented Oakridge Bachupally at the NAE Summit 2025. Their leadership, empathy, and commitment to global change reflect the true spirit of purpose – driven education. From impactful service to powerful advocacy, they returned not just inspired, but ready to inspire. This summit reaffirmed our belief that our students are not just learners, but changemakers shaping a better world. This summit reaffirmed our belief that international education is not just about global exposure – it's about global responsibility,' said Ms. Anuradha, Principal of Oakridge Bachupally. 'One thing that I fondly remember from this trip is our time spent volunteering at the Houston food bank. To see people get into action without having to tell them what to do, to see us all identify and take care of problems in the matter of seconds and just not hesitating to get the job done no matter the circumstances was something that warms my heart as I think about it even now. That is the type of ideology and experience that I want social impact to be centred around' – Siddhi from grade eleven k. 'Attending the NAE Summit 2025 @ Houston, Texas as a Regional Lead was an incredibly enriching experience. One of the highlights for me was delivering a Chaperone Peer Talk on 'Championing Social Impact in Schools: A Journey from Vision to Action.' It was a proud moment to share our region's progress and inspire others through our stories of student-led change. The summit itself was a powerful blend of learning, collaboration, and action' – Fiona Chettiar Regional Representative Social Impact Program-India & CAS Coordinator- Oakridge Bachupally. The NAE Summit 2025 was more than an event-it was a launchpad for future changemakers. For Oakridge Bachupally, it marked a milestone in nurturing knowledge, empathy, and service. Ranked among the top international schools in Hyderabad, Oakridge International School Bachupally continues to empower students with global opportunities, real-world impact, and a purpose-driven education. Discover how your child can be part of this global journey. Visit Call us today to learn more about our global learning programs.


Time of India
24-07-2025
- Time of India
UP's ‘Learning by Doing' is gaining ground: 5 lessons it can learn from Germany
In Uttar Pradesh's government schools, a quiet reform is taking shape—one where students trade textbooks for tools, and science periods end not with recitations but with solar lamps, pulleys, and planted seed trays. This is Learning by Doing (LBD), a vocational experiment embedded within the school curriculum. It doesn't carry the glamour of coding bootcamps or the heft of engineering diplomas. But its aim is foundational: To introduce skills to students not as an alternative, but as a part of learning. LBD, introduced through government schools, is an early-stage yet structured attempt to make classrooms more skill-oriented. While the model is entirely local and meant for students of Class 6 to 8, it shares certain thematic resonances with Germany's dual education system, globally recognised for seamlessly blending classroom theory with hands-on training in actual workplaces. There is no official blueprint linking the two. Yet, in spirit, the comparison is instructive. Germany spent decades refining a vocational pathway that connects school with employment. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Libas Purple Days Sale Libas Undo UP is laying that foundation within classrooms—using tools, teachers, and time. Learning by Doing in UP: How it was born The Learning by Doing (LBD) programme was born out of a simple but powerful idea that students retain more when they experience learning, not just listen to it. It aligns with the National Education Policy 2020's call for integrating vocational exposure into regular schooling. The materials are replenished through School Management Committees, and the programme is fully state-funded under Samagra Shiksha. Since its launch, LBD has been rolled out in phases. The pilot, introduced in 2023–24, covered 60 government schools across 15 districts and reached close to 6,000 students. Encouraged by increased attendance and visible classroom engagement, the state expanded it in 2024–25 to 2,274 schools—one for each block and urban area across all 75 districts. A further 3,288 schools will be covered under Samagra Shiksha and PM SHRI schemes in 2025–26, taking the total number of schools under LBD to over 5,500 within three academic years. What are UP students learning? At the core of the programme is a modular skill curriculum embedded in the daily timetable. Students in Classes 6 to 8 (ages 11 to 14) learn how to wire a basic circuit, operate hand tools, grow micro-gardens, cook simple nutritious meals, and even build rudimentary machines. Each school receives a toolkit with 205 items to facilitate 60 hands-on activities across five themes: Woodwork and metalwork, agriculture and horticulture, energy and environment, health and nutrition, and simple engineering models. No fancy robotics, no imported kits—just saws, screwdrivers, soil trays, and an invitation to tinker. The manual guiding these activities has been developed in partnership with UNICEF and Vigyan Ashram, and approved by SCERT. It consists of sixty structured modules that teachers can plug into their weekly schedules without disrupting the core curriculum. These tasks are not meant to train children for a job market—they are designed to familiarise them with the logic of doing. Each activity builds a concept, and each concept builds confidence. How it's taught: Teachers as facilitators, not lecturers In the Learning by Doing model, the teacher no longer stands at the centre of the room with a chalk and a blackboard. Instead, they move between workstations, watching, guiding, stepping in only when needed. Before the programme begins, science and math teachers undergo a four-day training module. It's not about delivering lectures. It's about managing tools, ensuring safety, facilitating group work, and letting students learn through trial. The classroom is organised into small groups. Each group gets a set of tools, raw materials, and a task to complete—whether it's wiring a simple circuit or planting a row of seeds. The instructions are clear, but the outcomes aren't always predictable. That's the point. Students are encouraged to explore what happens when things don't go as planned. The infrastructure is modest but managed. Kits are funded by the state. Materials and consumables are replenished through School Management Committees. Germany's Dual System: Bridging education and employment The dual education system in Germany is not just a feature of its schooling structure—it's a national employment strategy. Formalised through the Vocational Training Act of 1969, and rooted in craft guild traditions that date back to the Middle Ages, the system integrates on-the-job training in companies with classroom instruction in vocational schools (Berufsschulen). Typically, students enter the dual system after completing their general education around age 16. They sign a formal apprenticeship contract with an employer, train three to four days a week in the workplace, and spend the remaining one to two days in vocational schools. These programmes span two to three and a half years, depending on the trade. The scope is vast: Germany recognises over 325 licensed occupations, from mechatronics and nursing to logistics, hospitality, and information technology. Apprentices receive a monthly stipend, increasing each year, and enjoy full social benefits—health insurance, accident coverage, and unemployment protection. On completion, students sit for a final exam administered by regional Chambers of Commerce (IHK) or Chambers of Crafts (HWK). The certification is not symbolic—it's legally recognised, respected by employers, and portable across the European Union. Teachers in Berufsschulen hold specific pedagogical qualifications and subject-matter expertise. In workplaces, trainers (Ausbilder) are themselves certified and licensed to supervise apprentices, ensuring instructional consistency across both sites. Today, over 500,000 apprentices train annually in the system, supported by more than 430,000 companies—from small bakeries to multinational engineering firms. Around 60% of apprentices are retained by their employers after graduation. The result: one of the lowest youth unemployment rates in Europe, and a deeply skilled mid-level workforce that anchors Germany's manufacturing and service industries. A lesson or two for UP's Learning by doing To be clear, LBD is not Germany. It does not aspire to mirror the dual model in scale or structure. But in spirit, it shares the idea that skills are not separate from education—they are central to it. And in that spirit, LBD can borrow a few threads: 1. Exposure to workplaces Even brief visits to farms, workshops, or small industries can bridge the gap between classroom activity and real-world applications. Students could document what they see, build mini-models, or write reports—linking observation to action. 2. Recognition and micro-certification While Germany offers full qualifications, UP could begin by issuing certificates of competence for each skill area by the end of Class 8. This would create a simple portfolio for students moving into secondary school or ITI tracks. 3. Train-the-trainer ecosystem Germany's system invests in both teachers and workplace trainers. UP could develop master trainers from its most experienced LBD teachers to mentor newer schools and update modules regularly. 4. Industry involvement Germany's employers co-design curricula and host apprentices. While LBD is school-based, UP could invite local ITIs, Krishi Vigyan Kendras, or artisans to review student projects, offer demonstrations, or co-create localised toolkits. 5. Vertical linkages The success of LBD should not stop at Class 8. By linking it to existing vocational programmes in secondary schools or ITIs, UP could offer a seamless school-to-skill continuum, with LBD as the starting point. A model worth building on UP's Learning by Doing doesn't need to replicate the German blueprint. But it already represents a significant pedagogical shift—from memorisation to participation, from theory to touch. Its success lies not in grand policy statements but in simple outcomes: a student building her first solar lamp, a classroom debating how to recycle plastic waste, a teacher asking not 'what is the formula' but 'how do you test it?' Germany's system took decades to perfect. UP has just started. But it's a start worth investing in. Not just for jobs, but for joy in learning. Not just for skills, but for confidence in making. And that is a lesson any system—German or Indian—would do well to remember. Ready to navigate global policies? Secure your overseas future. Get expert guidance now!