Executive Summary
Lebanon’s education system is unravelling. Years of economic collapse, political paralysis, and devastating events like the Beirut Port explosion have left public schools hollowed out and underfunded. Now, in the aftermath of war, thousands of students face yet another crisis—classrooms shuttered, schools converted into shelters, and learning indefinitely stalled. A generation stands on the brink of being lost, as education becomes collateral damage in Lebanon’s endless state of emergency.
In response, policymakers are pushing digital learning as a quick fix—a shiny bandage over a festering wound. But this reliance on technology is a cop-out. It sidesteps the difficult work of reforming Lebanon’s crumbling public education system. Digital tools have a role to play, but they are no substitute for the fundamentals: safe classrooms, trained teachers, and a curriculum that prepares students for the future. Without addressing these core issues, digital learning risks becoming another mirage in the desert of Lebanon’s education crisis.
This paper reveals the stark inequalities that digital initiatives often conceal—and, in many cases, deepen. While private schools quickly adapted to online learning during the pandemic, public schools floundered. Over half of vulnerable households lack internet access, and even fewer have reliable electricity or devices. Teachers, already undertrained and underpaid, were left scrambling to deliver lessons through WhatsApp. Refugee children, with dropout rates exceeding 70 percent, are being pushed even further to the margins.
Lebanon’s push for digital learning reflects a broader trend of outsourcing public services to international donors and NGOs. While these actors may provide temporary relief, they cannot replace the state’s role in guaranteeing access to quality education. Reliance on digital platforms masks deeper structural inequalities, prioritising quick wins over the hard, necessary work of systemic reform.
We argue that Lebanon’s education crisis demands more than stopgap solutions. Policymakers must confront the hard truths: rebuilding the public education system is non-negotiable. This means investing in schools, empowering teachers, and tackling the socioeconomic barriers that keep students locked out of learning. Digital tools can complement this process, but they cannot drive it. The stakes are clear—without urgent reforms, Lebanon risks losing not just its schools, but an entire generation.
Introduction
The recent Israeli aggression against Lebanon has plunged the country deeper into crisis, compounding years of systemic challenges that have significantly deteriorated its public education sector. Thousands of families have been displaced, with many public schools repurposed as collective shelters while the public school year was postponed to November 4. Long before this latest crisis, Lebanon’s public schools were struggling under the weight of multiple intersecting challenges. At a systemic level, these include chronic underfunding, leading to a decline in the quality of education, in addition to the Syrian refugee crisis, the 2019 economic collapse, the 2020 Beirut Port explosion, the COVID-19 pandemic, and ongoing political instability. Public schools, which are free of charge and serve a majority of Lebanon’s underprivileged children, have borne the brunt of these shocks, leaving many students without consistent access to quality education and resulting in severe learning losses. Lebanese children have lost over 60 percent of their schooling in the past six years, while Syrian refugee children, who rely heavily on public education, face enrolment rates below 30 percent and some of the highest dropout rates, with fewer than 4 percent advancing to secondary education.1
In this context, digital learning has been promoted as a potential solution to ensure learning continuity amid recurring disruptions. Digital learning broadly refers to the educational practices that use technology to support teaching and learning. During the COVID-19 pandemic, Lebanon’s Center for Educational Research and Development (CERD) adopted a combination of online learning, televised lessons, and printed educational materials to support remote learning.2 More recently, the “Emergency Education Costed Response Plan” (EECRP) introduced by the Minister of Education and Higher Education (MEHE) during the latest Israeli aggression, proposed a flexible model that combines in-person, hybrid, and online learning depending on the schools’ circumstances (such as whether they have been repurposed as shelters or physically damaged), in order to “ensure learning continuity for all students.”3
While digital learning initiatives aim to mitigate disruptions to education, they expose the issue of digital equity. Digital equity in education ties to the broader issue of “digital divide”, which can be broken into three levels: access (disparities in access to digital technologies and internet connectivity), skills (disparities in basic digital literacy), and outcomes (disparities in the ability to use digital tools effectively to achieve meaningful learning outcomes). In Lebanon, where stark inequalities in education persist, notably between public and private schools, the introduction of digital technology to ensure learning continuity raises critical questions: Can public schools leverage digital learning to bridge these gaps? Who truly benefits from these digital initiatives, and who is left behind?