Photo Credit: World Bank
In Comayagua, Honduras, the Marcelino Pineda Elementary School is witnessing positive changes, thanks to World Bank and GFDRR initiatives. These efforts are focused on making schools more inclusive for persons with disabilities, notably by adding ramps. Darlin Elvir Gonzalez, a parent, appreciates these improvements and reflects on her own childhood challenges in accessing education due to a lack of such facilities. This initiative marks a significant step toward educational inclusivity in Honduras.
Carmelita Rita Namashulua, Mozambique's Minister of Education and Human Development, talks about how, with the support of the Global Facility for Disaster Reduction and Recovery and the World Bank, 1,100 classrooms were rebuilt, rehabilitated, or constructed across Mozambique between 2017 and 2021. These classrooms, which can withstand the impact of disasters, have benefited more than 132,000 children in the country.
2020 Understanding Risk Forum - Community Session 37: Case studies highlight the need that we have witnessed in our work for contemporary design standards for school infrastructure that go beyond the traditional ‘cells and bells’ typologies that have been used for nearly a century and respond to new pedagogies, evolving functional and community requirements, and an increased need for flexibility and redundancy.