The risk of failure
The price of educational failure is high. People with lower levels of education are more likely to be unemployed and less able to contribute both to their own well being and to that of their societies.

What does OECD do?
OECD investigates the wider impact of education for both individuals and societies, and helps countries promote opportunities for people from all backgrounds and at every stage of life. The aim is to ensure that education systems avoid perpetuating social and economic disadvantage and that they contribute to growth and social stability.

OECD work includes compiling comparable education indicators - published in Education at a Glance - which provide insights into the human capital of OECD countries and their progress in creating fair and equitable education. A wide range of topics are included in these indicators, including the financing of education and OECD’s PISA programme.

Equity in education - and other issues - are covered in country reviews and in work on students with special needs. Related is OECD’s work on lifelong learning, which promotes learning as a continuous thread in people’s lives - from preschool into adulthood. Through PEB (Programme on Educational Building) OECD works with countries on improving the physical environment of learning institutions.

More

Top of page

In The News

Many schools collapse due to avoidable errors in design and construction.

Keeping Schools Safe in Earthquakes

-- OECD Forum -- 3-4 June 2008


Summaries and Speeches

Just published

Did you know? Across OECD countries nearly one in three adults has only primary or lower secondary education

No More Failures: Ten Steps to Equity in Education

Focus

The 3rd PEB compendium features educational institutions from 20 countries selected by an international jury for their exemplary facilities. This work addresses how the design, use and management of physical infrastructure can contribute to the quality of education.

PEB Compendium of Exemplary Educational Facilities: 3rd Edition