Article contents
Comparative analysis of Child Development Approaches Across Different Education Systems Globally
Abstract
A comparative analysis of worldwide educational systems and their effect on child development emerges from this research that relies on Entire World Educational Data, UNICEF State of the World’s Children 2021 and Global College Statistics Dataset. The research uses global education metrics together with societal economic factors and welfare evaluation metrics and university performance indicators to uncover fundamental associations between school success rates and education impartiality as well as worldwide youth development success components. Acting upon data stemming from more than 200 nations regarding literacy rates, primary and secondary enrollment, educational funding and childhood health indicators, college-grade CGPA, gender balance and availability of sports programs and placement opportunities. The evaluation utilizes Python and Excel and Tableau for analytical purposes to quantify the correlations between socio-economic factors, gender roles and early child development and higher education achievement levels. Countries that enhance their spending on primary education and childhood healthcare programs generate superior academic results at tertiary institutions by achieving better CGPA and finding better placements. The research presents evidence about the gender inequality problems as well as the challenges in providing high-quality education and research productivity differences that exist between worldwide locations. Living in low-income countries frequently leads students to abandon their studies earlier while keeping postgraduate education out of reach because of early life development challenges. This study enhances global educational comprehension while demonstrating that policies must combine solutions for early childhood development and high education quality improvement. The research results provide evidence for developing inclusive educational reforms that use data to decrease long-term educational gaps. Some datasets containing synthetic information portray actual educational reality to help educators along with governments and global institutions take practical actions.
Article information
Journal
Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences Studies
Volume (Issue)
7 (4)
Pages
95-113
Published
Copyright
Open access

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.