The FINANCIAL – The Millennium Challenge Corporation Vice President for Administration and Finance and Head of Agency Cynthia Huger today marked the closeout of the MCC Georgia Compact II at an event celebrating the successes of the five-year, $140 million program focused on the education sector.
MCC Vice President and Head of Agency Huger was joined by Acting Minister of Education, Science, Culture, and Sport Irina Abuladze, Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Vakhtang Makharoblishvili, and Former U.S. Embassy Deputy Chief of Mission Nicholas Berliner, as well as public and private sector partners and compact beneficiaries for the event.
“We are so proud of what we have accomplished through this partnership with the Government of Georgia,” MCC Vice President and Head of Agency Cynthia Huger said. “Thanks to this collaboration, the next generation of Georgians will be equipped with essential skills to increase their earning potential, drive economic growth and create a more prosperous future for the entire country.”
“I am pleased to be back in Georgia today to celebrate the successes of the Millennium Challenge Corporation’s $140 million education-focused compact, five years in the making,” Former U.S. Embassy Deputy Chief of Mission Nicholas Berliner said. “Together with the Georgian government, we are improving education and employment opportunities for all citizens of Georgia. The United States is committed to supporting Georgia’s economic prosperity and stability.”
Accomplishments of the MCC Georgia Compact II
The MCC Georgia Compact II was designed in coordination with the Government of Georgia to improve the quality of human capital in the country by investing in education. The compact’s investments will equip more than 1.7 million Georgians with better education and training, increasing workforce capacity in fields critical for economic growth, including science, technology, engineering and math (STEM).
This is MCC’s first compact to focus exclusively on education. By investing in education at every level, from general education to technical and vocational training to advanced degree programs, the compact helped build a pipeline of better educated students equipped with the skills to meet the demands of industry. The compact also included a focus on increasing women’s participation in the workforce, including in more lucrative STEM fields.
The $73 million Improving General Education Quality Project targeted areas where the Georgian education sector needed the most support: the physical learning environment, secondary school teacher subject knowledge and pedagogical skills, school management capacity and education assessments. Through this project, 91 public schools were fully rehabilitated benefiting more than 37,000 Georgian schoolchildren. In addition, 15,000 secondary STEM and English teachers, 1,800 principals and 1,400 school-based professional development facilitators nationwide were trained, strengthening their instructional skills and management capacity.
The $16 million Industry-Led Skills and Workforce Development Project increased the number of Georgians with in-demand technical skills with an emphasis on STEM-related technical professions and other growing industries. Grants from this project developed 51 new or expanded Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) programs at 10 education institutions throughout Georgia. Over 1,900 students have enrolled in these programs and more than 700 have already graduated.
The $34 million STEM Higher Education Project supported the delivery of high-quality STEM bachelor’s degrees in Georgia. Through a competitive process, San Diego State University (SDSU) was selected to deliver U.S.-accredited bachelor’s degrees in six disciplines including chemistry, computer science and engineering. SDSU partners with three Georgian public universities—Tbilisi State University, Ilia State University, and Georgian Technical University—to deliver these degrees, strengthening the capacity of these universities to deliver internationally accredited degree programs to Georgian students. More than 600 students were enrolled in these programs during the compact, 85 percent from lower-income families, 30 percent from regions outside Tbilisi and 36 percent women.
MCC recognizes the Government of Georgia for being a strong partner throughout compact development and implementation, ensuring not only that compact objectives were met but also making commitments to sustain these objectives for years to come.
Tackling the Big Picture
The compact approached the task of strengthening Georgia’s workforce by covering the entire spectrum of education in Georgia, from rehabilitating schools, to supporting higher education in STEM fields, training teachers and modernizing technical and vocational education. The compact also targeted the gender disparities that were found to be prominent in the Georgian economy, focusing heavily on increasing women’s participation in the workforce, especially in more lucrative STEM fields.
Infrastructure Improvements
“Before the rehabilitation, teachers only could do experiments on a blackboard. Now we have science labs so we can see these experiments with our own eyes and it’s more interesting.”
—Nika, 11th grade student
Most Georgian public schools were built during the Soviet era. Dilapidated and badly maintained, they hurt student attendance, learning, and educational outcomes. Poorly-vented wood- or coal-burning stoves provided little warmth in the classrooms, merely generating smoke and poor quality air. Leaky roofs caused buildings and systems to decay, resulting in collapsing ceilings, rotting floors, and unsafe wiring. Hallways and classrooms were poorly lit. Schools also generally lacked quality teaching equipment and learning materials. MCC’s investment in Georgia helped to rehabilitate 91 schools across the country, which included upgrading utilities like electricity and water and providing modern laboratories and equipment. The project also established a nationwide public school Operations and Maintenance program to ensure ongoing upkeep.
Mamuka Khamkhadze, principal of Rustavi Public School Number 4, says that the rehabilitation presents an “extraordinary opportunity to increase and improve” future achievements, in particular because of the STEM laboratories. “Even the students who previously didn’t show particular interest in STEM subjects have now become more involved, which has been reflected in their increased motivation and achievements,” he said.
“When students have a more comfortable and safe and secure learning environment, they’re going to learn better.”
—Elizabeth Rood, Chargé d’Affaires, U.S. Embassy, Georgia
Training Educators
Infrastructure that’s conducive to learning is important for a quality education, but students also need qualified teachers and stimulating lessons. As part of the compact, English, math and science teachers received training in student-centered pedagogy approaches, innovative and interactive teaching methods, subject matter expertise, science lab health and safety, and gender bias.
MCC’s Georgia Compact II offered training to 1,800 public school principals in Georgia, 1,400 school professional development facilitators, and over 15,000 secondary school STEM and English teachers in the country.
“Previously, we were more focused on theoretical knowledge and reading,” says Nana Markhuashvili, physics teacher at Rustavi Public School N4. “But this type of knowledge is easily forgotten and we realized that students need to acquire skills and use them in practice. Now we’ve switched to focusing on acquiring those skills rather than surface knowledge.”
“The teachers say that classroom instruction has become more enjoyable for them as well. They’ve emphasized that the classrooms have become noisy in a positive sense, which is a good indication that things are changing for better. We’ve heard the students commenting that their teachers have become friendlier, that the teachers have given them more freedom to express themselves.”
—Natalia Edisherashvili, Project Manager, Training Educators for Excellence
Empowering Women through Education
The compact’s holistic approach to education reform in Georgia naturally included tackling gender disparities. Despite outperforming boys in STEM subjects at school, girls in Georgia are often steered into less lucrative careers, meaning that women, on average, earn less than men. As part of the compact, schoolteachers received training in gender bias to curb the tendency to direct girls away from STEM careers.
Jenner Edelman, MCC Georgia Resident Country Director, said that from the very beginning, those involved in the compact’s design and implementation made every effort possible to interest girls and women both in studying STEM and in pursuing STEM careers.
“We have had to convince them and their parents, teachers and principals to look at the data and to break away from stereotypes that STEM isn’t for girls or women aren’t smart enough to be scientists or engineers,” she said. “If you look at the data, girls in Georgia actually outperform boys on average in STEM subjects. More women in STEM in Georgia just makes economic sense. It’s economic empowerment for women, for their families, and for Georgia.”
Building Strong Partnerships
Partnerships and collaboration played a large role in MCC’s Georgia Compact II, starting with the Government of Georgia—a key U.S. strategic partner in the region that MCC worked closely with throughout. For example, in the Improving General Education Quality Project, MCC collaborated with several government agencies in building local capacity to make sure school maintenance and teacher training would continue beyond the life of the compact.
Studying Abroad at Home
Georgia faces a shortage of highly-trained professionals in the fields of engineering and computer science. The shortage means that businesses cannot avail of the modern technology and practices necessary to innovate and increase productivity, forcing them to hire foreigners to fill these jobs in some cases.
To address this gap, compact funding established a partnership between San Diego State University (SDSU) and Georgian public universities to deliver U.S. accredited bachelor’s degree programs in the STEM disciplines. In the interests of building local capacity and ensuring the project’s sustainability, SDSU will transition to a support role by 2023, with partner universities gaining the accreditation and certification that will enable them to deliver internationally recognized degrees on their own.
For George Sharvashidze, Rector of Tbilisi State University, this sustainability objective is crucial for his country’s future. “That’s exactly how the program can have a lasting impact,” he said, “not only during the duration of the grant period, but I believe many generations of Georgians will benefit from accredited education in this country for years to come.”
Tamar Basiashvili, a biochemistry student at SDSU Georgia, believes that the program will serve as a model for Georgian academic institutions. “It allows us to see much more closely what we should strive towards,” she said. “I do really hope that the Georgian education system is going to reform and provide better opportunities to students as well as to some of the professors and teachers here in Georgia.”
Tamar added, “SDSU Georgia allowed me to see how big the opportunities are in the field and what is out there in the world.”
Tamar is one of many female students pursuing an interest in STEM thanks to the SDSU partnership. The STEM Higher Education project resulted in a student body that was 36 percent female—impressive even by American STEM higher education standards. SDSU in Georgia also created a Women’s Empowerment Club, which provides peer mentoring and support to female STEM students through mentorship by a female chemistry professor. Through the compact, SDSU in Georgia also created a career development center and held internship and career fairs, which helped prepare female students for their eventual job search and challenged stereotypes by introducing potential employers to qualified female STEM students.
Gaining 21st Century Skills
Georgia inherited a run-down Soviet Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) system, held back by a centralized and top-down bureaucracy. TVET institutions were in a state of disrepair, staff skills were neglected, and many graduates were not well-positioned to obtain employment in a changing labor market. Also, existing TVET programs reflected substantial gender disparities in STEM fields.
As part of the compact, 10 Georgian public and private TVET providers received large grants to scale up or introduce new programs in partnership with firms and institutions such as CISCO, British Petroleum, Pearson, the University of Finland, the Technical University of Munich, Wageningen University and Research, Deutsche Bahn, and many others. One such initiative is a new dual learning program that the Railway Transport College has developed. The program is very popular because graduates are offered opportunities for apprenticeships and eventually jobs.
Lasha Kareli is one of nearly 2,000 students so far who has benefited from the MCC-funded overhaul to Georgia’s TVET system. Lasha, 25, studied business administration at university and also pursued a master’s degree. But he lacked a specific profession. Then, through social media, he discovered a vocational program at Community College Spectri, and joined the program to become an air conditioning technician. “This profession is quite popular, and with the development of tourism, it’s also in high demand,” Lasha said. “It’s possible for people my age to get hired, but high salaries are rare. This is one reason I decided to study in this college. This profession offers high salaries and it is high in demand on the market.”
TVET fields in Georgia have traditionally been male-dominated, but collaboration with the U.S. Embassy in Georgia and the private sector exposed TVET providers to recruitment tools to increase female enrollment. They received a three-week tour of U.S. community colleges that have a successful track record of recruiting and graduating women in traditionally male-dominated programs, and also received training on delivering more gender-aware and inclusive TVET teaching.
Groundwork for Lasting Change
MCC’s five-year compact with Georgia has helped address crucial challenges across the education sector, reduce gender disparities and establish strong partnerships. Students, teachers and professionals across Georgia are directly benefitting from MCC’s investment, gaining tangible, in-demand skills and knowledge that will re-shape the country’s workforce and boost economic growth.
The $140 million MCC Georgia Compact is the largest donor investment in education in the country’s history.
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