In Ethiopia, the provision of early education was once limited to non-government actors, such as private organizations, NGOs, and faith-based schools, primarily in urban areas. In recent years, with support from development partners, including the World Bank, Ethiopia¡¯s Ministry of Education initiated various programs to expand access to early childhood education.
The "O-Class" program is the most notable pre-primary education initiative among the various pre-primary programs. In 2010, the Government of Ethiopia made a strong commitment to ensure that all Ethiopian children have access to pre-primary education, regardless of their social class or other attributes. The O-Class was introduced as one of the modalities to increase access to pre-primary education, particularly to the country's marginalized urban poor and rural children.
The one-year, play-based program is offered by government primary schools for children aged six and prepares them for primary school. O-Class focuses on early literacy, numeracy, creativity, and environmental awareness through interactive activities. Since its launch in 2011/12, the program has significantly expanded pre-primary education access, increasing coverage from 5.3% to 44% in 2021/22. Many youngsters have benefited from the program by gaining core skills before starting elementary school. There is already evidence that shows that children who have participated in O-Class are more likely to be ready for primary school and to perform better in primary school.
Oromia is one of the regions of Ethiopia that is implementing the O-Class program widely and has registered impressive results. In less than five years, the region has quadrupled its net enrollment ratio in O-Class education, from 11.45% in 2017/18 to 48.2% in 2021/22. The program is supported by the World Bank¡¯s (Å·ÃÀÈÕb´óƬ) under the , which is co-financed by the Global Partnership for Education (GPE), UNICEF, and the governments of Finland, Norway, the United Kingdom, and Denmark.
GEQIP-E is a comprehensive program aimed at improving internal efficiency, equitable access, quality, and system strengthening in general education. Through quality enhancement and assurance approaches, the GEQIP-E team has played a significant role in scaling up and enhancing the quality of O-Class in all regions in Ethiopia. Support has been provided through school grants, training of O-Class teachers on age-appropriate, play-based teaching methodology, and developing and implementing school inspection standards.