Education

Interrupted

This matched appeal has now ended. Thank you to everyone who generously donated.

Global aid for education is under increasing pressure. Budget cuts announced in 2025 led by major donors — including the UK and US — triggered a 25% drop in funding. At the very moment when children’s needs are soaring, support for their education is shrinking. Not too long ago, the world rallied to protect learning during COVID-19. Today, we are facing another urgent crisis for the world’s most marginalised children, but with far fewer resources to respond.  

These cuts are landing on vulnerable children already living through profound disruptions. Across conflict-affected countries like Nigeria and Ukraine, in communities hit hard by climate disasters, and in places where poverty is rising sharply, millions of children are seeing their education interrupted and their futures pushed further out of reach.  

Street Child is built for moments like this. With deep experience working in fragile, hard-to-reach, and rapidly changing environments, we deliver education where others can’t or won’t. Thanks to the incredible generosity of supporters and match funders, this appeal raised vital funds to help mitigate the worst impacts of these cuts on Street Child’s work — helping to keep programmes running and children learning in some of the world’s toughest contexts. Thank you!

in the press

Street Child’s ‘Education Interrupted’ appeal gained national attention, with interviews on LBC and BBC Radio 5 Live amplifying the urgent case for protecting education for the world’s most marginalised children.

FAQS
  • The major wave of aid reductions began in February 2025. The United States abruptly defunded and closed USAID, the world’s largest aid agency, which has historically funded millions of education programmes worldwide. Shortly after, other governments, including the UK, announced significant cuts to their aid budgets. 

  • In 2025, the UK made its largest cut to the aid budget in recent years, which had already seen a series of cuts beginning during COVID-19. In February, the government announced a £5 billion cut to increase defence spending. As a result, the aid budget will fall from 0.7% of GNI (as it was in 2021) to 0.3% by 2027. The Government has specifically called out education as one of the sectors that will be hardest hit. These cuts mark a sharp decline from previous years, when the UK was a leading champion of global education. 

  • UNICEF estimates that by the end of 2026, global education funding will fall by US$3.2 billion, a 24% drop from 2023. Primary education, which is Street Child’s focus, is expected to see funding reduced by about a third. These cuts put an additional 6 million children at risk of dropping out of school (more than the total population of Scotland), with many living in conflict-affected or humanitarian settings.  

  • Education gives children opportunity in life. But for many, school is also much more than learning: it is a safe space, a source of stability, and a lifeline after trauma. Without it, children risk losing not only their education, but their sense of security, hope, and future opportunity. Beyond the classroom, education shapes families and communities too — helping people stay healthy, find work, adapt to challenges like climate change, and build more peaceful societies. Every pound cut is not just a budget decision; it is a child’s potential put at risk. 

  • Street Child held its ‘Education Interrupted’ appeal from November 2025 – April 2026 to help mitigate the worst impact of these unprecedented cuts on our work. Generous donors are matching contributions pound-for-pound, helping ensure that children in Sierra Leone, South Sudan, Somalia, and other countries continue to access safe, high-quality education despite government reductions.  

  • Absolutely. Every bit helps. While private donations cannot, and should not, replace the full scale of government aid cuts, even a small contribution can make a real, tangible difference. In many countries where Street Child operates, it costs around £4 a month to keep a child in education, which is relatively affordable compared with the huge impact it creates. Donations help keep vital programmes alive, ensuring children can stay safe, in school, and learning. At the same time, Street Child continues to raise its voice to push back on these cuts, including through initiatives like the Send My Friend to School coalition, so together we can protect children’s futures. 

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