the Education Commission

The World Skills Clock: A new real-time data and advocacy tool for SDG 4

At the RewirEd Summit in Dubai last December, the Education Commission, Generation Unlimited, UNICEF, and the World Data Lab launched the prototype of a powerful new data and advocacy tool: the World Skills Clock monitors learning and skills trajectories globally and at the country level using a real-time data model. As an interactive webtool, the clock provides estimation, projection, and visualization of worldwide data related to children and youth reaching certain learning and skills benchmarks. The World Skills Clock is free and accessible to everyone online and serves as an important advocacy tool to highlight the critical need to prioritize education in the global recovery at key international moments such as the UN Transforming Education Summit, the World Economic Forum, the G20, and COP27.

Why do we need a World Skills Clock?

The world is seriously off-track in meeting the goals of SDG 4, and without significant change, by 2030, half of all children and youth will not have the basic skills required to play a productive role in society. The alarming scale of the learning crisis has been further exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic and needs urgent action to avoid, as the UN Secretary-General has said, “a generational catastrophe.”

Gaps in availability and real-time presentation of education data have been major bottlenecks to tracking and monitoring progress in the sector. This has affected the ability of national and international actors to identify areas of urgent need, advocate for, and ensure accountability for achieving results. Now more than ever, it is critical to measure and identify where children and young people are falling behind.

The World Skills Clock aims to mobilize new momentum for urgent action towards achieving greater progress on SDG 4 in this decisive decade. It complements tracking of other SDGs including the World Poverty Clock (SDG 1) and the World Hunger Clock (SDG 2). In its current form, it measures the number of youth who are not meeting basic secondary education level skills as well as digital skills.

Our Vision

By providing real-time data on the status of skills development around the world, the World Skills Clock will:

How can you be part of the World Skills Clock?

We invite interested organizations to join us on this exciting journey. Over time the World Skills Clock will be extended to include forecasts of alternative pathways – describing scenarios with rapid, medium, or stalled development – as well as provide more data disaggregation by gender, income, and urban/rural location. It will be expanded to including additional skills needed for work and life.

In 2022 we aim to launch a full version of the World Skills Clock with the following features:

The World Skills Clock Initiative invites additional partners to build the World Skills Clock and develop wider action tracks such as developing country roadmaps, costing and financing of learning expansion pathways (including the use of digital learning), and building coalitions and advocacy for policy action and progress. For more information, please contact Madelyn Cunningham (mcunningham@educationcommission.org).