[eng] Despite the significant expansion of education worldwide, multiple exclusions
continue to deny the right to quality education for all. School failure, Early
School Leaving (ESL), and different forms of school disengagement affect
numerous young people around the globe and learning gaps across different
students’ profiles continue to persist (Schleicher, 2019). Spain is one of the
most challenging cases in the European Union (EU): in 2021 13,3% of the
population between 18-and 24-years old had not completed the second stage
of secondary education and did not follow any type of education or training.
This places the country in the penultimate position in the entire EU-27, only
ahead of Romania, and far away from the UE-27 average of 9.9% and the EU2030 target of 9% (MEFP, 2021). This situation seriously endangers the basic
principle of equality of educational opportunities and questions the very
notions of citizenship and social cohesion. Furthermore, it jeopardizes the
commitment of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development to ensure
inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning
opportunities for all (SDG 4). According to UNESCO (2021), the dual global
challenge of contemporary educational systems is the lack of equity and
relevance, which undergirds the need for a new social contract which can help
redress educational exclusion and ensure positive educational experiences and
learning for all. Research demonstrates that among the multiple factors
explaining educational exclusion there is the lack of meaning that multiple
students attribute to the form and content of school learning (Coll, 2013;
Tarabini, 2019).