The world is 4 million teachers short. Here’s how to solve that.

Children at school in India.

The developing world faces a whole lot of challenges and shortages. One of the most acute: the lack of well-trained teachers for all the would-be students around the globe.

“Even in the short term, to meet our goals for 2015, we need an additional 4 million teachers just to meet the universal primary education goal," explains UNESCO's Jordan Naidoo.

There's a shortage of doctors as well — particularly when it comes to fields like mental health.

“Let’s imagine the ratio of psychiatrists to the population in the US, and let us apply that ratio to a country like India. If we had the same number of psychiatrists to the population as the US does in India, with a population of 1.2 billion people, we would expect about 150,000 psychiatrists. The actual number is about 4,000," says Vikram Patel, a professor at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

A possible solution to both issues? Training more civilians to fill in the gaps. 

Patel’s work is focused on task-sharing, an approach that provides training to members of the community so they can address medical issues where they live. For example, someone who’s been trained in task-sharing would meet with a depressed individual and help them undergo talk therapy. It doesn’t solve the issue of the lack of medication, but it has been shown to help. For a mental health community that, Patel feels, has grown unnecessarily complicated and specialized, this method could address some of a community’s needs. 

But those needs don't end with medicine. Countries like the Central African Republic – which has a teacher to student ratio of about 1 to 80 — desperately need legions of educators. And training them in the standard Western way — with a bachelor’s degree plus a two-year teaching program – is far too slow for the immediate needs of developing nations.

Naidoo is quick to caution that this doesn’t mean anyone off the street can become a teacher. But he feels that: “if you get somebody who’s really committed, and has a sense of caring, a sense of conviction to impart knowledge, if they have certain basic knowledge in terms of the content, I think we can give them the skills to make them more effective teachers.”

The rise of mobile technology helps in both medicine and education; teachers can be trained via online resources and video chat sessions, and community members can connect to trained psychiatrists.

Neither Naidoo nor Patel see civilian-training programs as the be-all, end-all for shortages in the developing world. Especially in psychiatry, there are problems that non-doctors would have trouble coping with.

In Patel’s opinion, “there are limits to how much you can task-share. For example, the more complex psychological treatments, I don’t think can be task-shared very easily…more serious psychoses, more serious personality disorders, I haven’t come across anyone who’s successfully been able to task-share those.”

But training civilians means there’s someone filling these shortages — and that, both Patel and Naidoo feel, can make a world of difference.

This story was adapted from an interview on the PRI radio show Innovation Hub.

Sign up for our daily newsletter

Sign up for The Top of the World, delivered to your inbox every weekday morning.