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Double trouble for visually impaired pupils in Nigerian schools

Africa/Nigeria/09.10.2018/Source: punchng.com.

In this first part of a two-part report, Afeez Hanafi writes about how dearth of learning facilities compounds the plight of visually impaired persons in schools across Nigeria

With exercise books, a pen and few other materials, Kehinde Lawrence is good to make the best out of every lesson. A Junior Secondary School 3 pupil at Owo High School, Ondo State, she reads her numerous textbooks in school and at home without let or hindrance.

But such ease is a mirage for her visually impaired classmate, Godfrey Ekevre. Aside from a snippet that he takes out of every class, the 25-year-old needs more several hours – or days – to write the same note Lawrence will have completed the moment a class ends.

The Delta-born pupil has been going through the strenuous routine since 2005 when he lost his sight to glaucoma. Before then, he had enjoyed stress-free learning as Lawrence up till Primary 6.

His 13 years of academic life without sight has been both harrowing and depressing; no thanks to the dearth of facilities in the school to aid his learning.

Devices such as braille hand frame and stylus, slate and stylus, Perkins Brailler, SMART Brailler, braille embosser/braille printer and braille notetaker are writing and reading tools for visually impaired persons with the last three devices considered up-to-date but expensive for the special pupils, many of whom are from poor families, to afford.

Perkins Brailler and SMART Brailler are typewriter-like machines for producing braille texts. While the former is old-fashioned, the latter is a modern tool that displays, vocalises and produces information typed in braille.

Similarly, Job Access With Speech, a computer screen reader programme for Microsoft Windows, allows visually impaired persons to read the screen with voice notes or by braille display.

In a review, Vision Australia, a leading national provider of blindness and low vision services in Australia, describes braille hand frame and stylus as a means of writing braille introduced over a century ago. It is said to be “very time consuming,” requiring an average of 90 minutes to produce a page of braille.

Sadly, Ekevre and many of his counterparts in Owo High School, Ondo State and some other institutions across the country use either the moribund braille hand frame and stylus or the archaic slate and stylus to write notes.

Besides the rigour of using the old-fashioned tool, Ekevre is faced with the burden of getting braille paper he slots into the frame to produce notes.

“I wish I was a sighted pupil,” the 25-year-old said regrettably as he began to share his plight with our correspondent.

He continued, “The school used to provide braille paper for us (visually impaired pupils) but they stopped buying it about two years ago. They said there was no money. Since then, we have been buying the paper by ourselves. A pack of the paper is N1,200 and it contains 100 pieces. I use about three packs a term.

“It is also difficult to get sighted pupils to assist us. We call them to dictate their notes to us after classes while we use braille hand frame and stylus to write. We usually give them money for them to assist us. I give them about N500 weekly.

“I bought a fairly-used typewriter which I use during exams for N10,000. My mother cannot afford to buy a new one for me. As I speak to you, it is faulty.

“The school has a library, but it does not make provision for the visually impaired pupils. Even the braille library at the Ondo State School for the Blind where our boarding house is has a few braille materials and most of them are scriptures. Majority of the books on the shelves are in print form.

“Our textbooks are supposed to be in braille so that we can read them by ourselves but what some of my friends who have recorders do is to give textbooks to sighted pupils to dictate to them while they record. I wish I had my own midget too instead of writing notes all the time which is very stressful.”

Although pupils with visual impairment at the school enjoy free boarding and do not pay tution, the expenses they incur to make themselves relevant academically are high compared to what their sighted counterparts are required to spend.

Our correspondent gathered that a regular pupil pays less than N2,000 per term as tuition; half of what Ekevre spends in a term only on braille paper.

For the 25-year-old on whose neck poverty and parental issues hang like a noose, the stress he passes through in the course of learning comes with its attendant psychological implications.

“I don’t usually feel settled. I think of how to get braille paper once the pack I have is almost finished. My mother is a petty trader and she has been striving by all means to fund my education. My father has two wives. For three years now, I have not seen him. He is with the second wife,” he added.

Ekevre’s counterpart at the United Faith Tabernacle College, Jarawan-Kogi, Plateau State, Yohana Iliya, endures a similar gruelling experience. But unlike Ekevre, the stress is reduced for the Senior Secondary School 3 pupil with the aid of a recorder, which he bought with donations by some Good Samaritans.

“Quality braille materials are expensive. That is why most of us resort to what we can afford. We beg classmates to dictate notes to us. Last term, I sought the help of a classmate, but he refused to offer any help. From the tone of his voice, it was clear that I had become a burden to him. I felt very bad that day, but I had to bottle up my feelings.

“The school has some braille machines but they are not working. We use slate and stylus to write our notes. Since I have a recorder, I spend less on buying braille paper,” he added.

Hundreds of kilometres away, at the Government Secondary School, Kwali, Abuja, Amos Bako strives endlessly to seek education like every other ambitious person. At 27, the SS1 pupil is unwavering in his determination to become an expert in International Relations despite the many hurdles that stand in his way.

He began his tortuous academic journey in 2007 after he became blind as a result of some particles that entered his eyes at a mechanic workshop in his village in Takum, Taraba State.

Like Ekevre and Iliya, Bako does not pay school fees, but he spends a lot of money on buying learning materials which are said to be unavailable in the school.

He stated, “My parents are retired civil servants and they live on their pensions. It is my mechanic friends that sponsor the larger part of my education. Back then when I was an apprentice, I did not think of going to school. I started my primary school in 2007. I finished in 2013 and proceeded to the secondary school.

“Special pupils are facing enormous challenges. Our writing materials are too costly but they are what we need to excel. I buy a pack of braille paper N1,500 here (Abuja). Frame and stylus costs N7,000. Perkins brailler is around N250,000 but I cannot afford it. The school has three braille machines but they are not working now. They have been faulty since I got admission into the school.”

Learning appears to be more daunting for many students at higher institutions across the country. Often times, they depend on some tolerant sighted course mates to move from one lecture room to another and document their notes.

Except for a few whose families could buy them modern facilities, many visually impaired students, especially at public higher institutions, make do with outdated devices to study, too.

Bulus Chuanoemoa, a 300-level student of Special Education, Visual Handicap, at the University of Jos, Plateau State, is one of such indigent students whose studies have been fraught with frustration resulting largely from non-provision of braille facilities by the school.

He said, “We face many challenges starting from the nature of the school environment which is unfriendly to the visually impaired students. The locations of our lecture theatres and departments are difficult for the blind students to navigate. Most times, we need our sighted friends to assist us to attend classes.

“Books in the library and those recommended by lecturers are only available in print form and it is difficult to get them translated into braille. One can buy a book for N1,000 and spend N5,000 to produce it in braille. And sometimes, we have two or three books for a particular course.

“What most of us in my department do is to buy textbooks and look for people to dictate to us while we record. The recording has its own disadvantage too because some pronunciations may not be correct and you will not be able to get their right spellings. There are times when the people that assist us in dictation are unwilling to help. You have to give them money to persuade them to help at such times.

“At times, I copy notes during exam periods when I should be reading. It is very unfortunate. The school has a resource room but it does not have materials we can access. The resource masters there are the ones helping to read questions out to us during exams; the questions are not in braille and we do exams with our typewriters.”

Born to the family of peasant farmers, the 24-year-old in a recent encounter with Saturday PUNCHexplained how he had relied largely on the benevolence of churches to augment whatever his poor parents could afford.

He added, “I could not afford to buy a Perkings Brailler. Instead, I use slate and stylus to write my notes. It consumes a lot of time and energy.  A good laptop or desktop computer with JAWS installed in it is much easier and more convenient for a blind student to use to take examination than using a typewriter. A standard laptop should be about N100,000 and installation of JAWS is N20,000 or more. Where will I get the money from?”

The student of Special Education had it smooth at the primary school section of Pacelli School for the Blind and Partially Sighted but while in the secondary school section, he had to wait for days to get braille textbooks because the (secondary) school reportedly had just one functioning braille machine.From his secondary school days at Pacelli School for the Blind and Partially Sighted in Lagos State up till now that he is doing a master’s degree programme at the University of Ibadan, Oyo State, 32-year-old Oyewale Oyetunji, has been dogged, defying all odds to become a scholar.

“In the 21st Century, the world has gone beyond typewriter which is prone to errors. But in Nigeria, blind students still use it,” he said in utter disappointment.

“I spent a lot of money to have textbooks in braille during my undergraduate days in UI. What I do mostly now is to scan the textbooks and read them on my computer with the aid of JAWS.

“Most of the materials in the school library are in print. In terms of accessibility for the blind, the library can be rated low – two or five per cent. What I see is the dearth of facilities and we have complained to lecturers a number of times, but they blame it on inadequate funding.”

Corroborating the lack of facilities, the Principal, Special Inclusive School, Kogi State, Dr David Matthew, lamented that all efforts to get the attention of the state government to the plight of the special pupils had proved abortive.

It was learnt that the school was established by  Christian Missions in Many Lands – a United States faith-based mission – and managed by the state government.

The principal said, “Copying of notes and lack of braille machines are some of the challenges the pupils are facing. We also have shortage of special teachers.

“Our learning disability department has collapsed because the person in charge has been made the principal of his community school. He has a master’s degree in learning disability. Unfortunately, the government is not providing replacement for those who are leaving.

“Over the years, I have visited Kogi State Ministry of Education and Government House several times, but all I got were empty promises. I later decided that the best thing was to make do with our little resources. My belief is that these challenges are temporary. I believe a time for divine intervention will come.

“A blind pupil has to be active and studious and should get friends around to dictate notes to them. If they don’t have pocket money to motivate their sighted counterparts, it will be very difficult for them to catch up.

“Sadly, most of them come from poor families. That is why we don’t insist that they buy new typewriters. A fairly-used typewriter is between N6,000 and N10,000. Sometimes, foundations donate writing materials to the school. It costs visually impaired persons a lot of money to succeed academically.”

Asked whether the deficient learning tools had implications for the pupils’ performance, Matthew said, “Performance cannot be attributed directly to inadequate facilities. You may have a pupil who has all the necessary tools but may not be brilliant. And you may have a pupil who doesn’t have all and he may be brilliant.”

He recalled that learning was excitement during his school time as he was given scholarships which are hard to come by these days.

“When I was in secondary school, I was lucky to be given scholarships by the then Benue State Government. At a time, I had as many as five typewriters but today, such privilege is not common. What we need is political will. The government should be ready to carry physically challenged persons along,” he added.

Tongtonk Danlami, a special teacher at Nakam Memorial College, a mission school in Jos, also decried the rate at which inadequate funding was crippling the smooth running of the inclusive boarding school.

Danlami said, “The issue of braille books for visually impaired pupils has been a problem over the years. Even when the school could afford to change print books to braille ones, where to do it was a problem.

“We have a library where we use a computer with JAWS, but it has stopped working. We also have the problem of having examination questions in braille. It is the teachers that assist the special pupils. The school only has one braille machine and it is old.

“A number of the children come from poor families and most parents don’t pay school fees. We have been having challenges in feeding them. Also, visually impaired persons need white canes (a cane that primarily aids its user to scan their surroundings for obstacles and helps other traffic participants in identifying the user as visually impaired) so that they can move from one place to another by themselves. We need sponsorship to provide all these things for the pupils. A white cane is about N10,000.”

National Policy on Special Needs Education in Nigeria

The Federal Ministry of Education in the 2015 National Policy on Special Needs Education in Nigeria admittedly highlighted the deficient educational system for persons living with disabilities. It stated that though Nigeria was involved in the special needs education, the practice fell short of the global best practices. The report added that the special needs classroom laboratories in the country were not technology-driven.

It read in part, “Facilities and materials that enhance learning are either lacking or – where they exist – inadequate and or/obsolete. What is more, many special needs education practitioners lack the technical knowhow to operate specialised special needs education gadgets.

“….Also, professionals in the area of gifted education are few in Nigeria. Learning materials are generally inadequate. It is the general teachers that seem to be dominating the field of Special Needs Education. Graduates of Special Education in Nigeria face the challenge of relevance on graduation because the curriculum in place is not skill-relevant after school life.

“Bias, cultural archetypes and negative behaviour patterns about special needs education are endemic in Nigeria…in the National Police of Education, it is stated that services to persons with special needs should be free, but it is not stated in an imperative term for the Federal Ministry of Education to operate.”

The report recommended that federal and state governments should ensure that necessary training and facilities that would guarantee easy access and implementation of special needs education progammes were put in place. For instance, it was stated that for students with visual impairment, there should be “training in orientation and mobility, braille reading and writing, use of computer with JAWS and repair of the equipment, etc.”

The report equally pointed out that there was inadequate synergy between the Federal Ministry of Education and other government ministries, agencies, non-governmental organisations, private sectors and international development partners.

Unfortunately, little or nothing has been done to address the disturbing issues raised in the report three years after.

No provisions for blind pupils in 2017, 2018 education budgets

A look at the 2017 and 2018 budgets of the Federal Ministry of Education showed that no provisions or allocations were made for the procurement of learning facilities for the visually impaired pupils.

For example, the 2017 budget with a personnel cost of N3,236,821,170 and an overhead of N827,950,190, did not mention any provision for blind pupils. In the budget, the government made provision for Almajiris (disadvantaged school-age children in the North roaming the streets) with N5,000,000 budgeted for their education programme. However, there was no such budget for the visually impaired pupils.

The government budgeted a staggering N30,000,000 for supply of text books to primary schools in the Kankara area of Katsina State. Similar provisions were made for several schools across the country, but there was no mention of materials for the blind pupils.

Meanwhile, it was observed that the ministry budgeted N5,000,000 for the training of personnel working in centres of persons with special needs. The government also earmarked N15,000,000 for the training of  95 teachers handling persons with special needs in the northern part of the country.

Also in the ministry’s 2018 budget totalling N621,226,697,523 with capital projects of N102,907,290,833, there was no mention of any provision for the visually impaired pupils or their schools.

The Ministry of Education’s Director of Press and Public Relations, Mr. Ben Bem Goong, did not pick several calls put across to him. He had also yet to reply to a text message sent to his phone by our correspondent on the lingering challenges facing the blind pupils.

Ondo, Plateau react

The Chairman of Plateau State Universal Basic Education Board, Prof. Matthew Sule, said the agency recently conducted training for special teachers in public schools across the state.

He added, “We are providing facilities for the children that are physically challenged. We have also provided teaching resources across the 17 LGAs in Plateau State.”

The Ondo State Commissioner for Information, Mr. Yemi Olowolabi, said the government provided the necessary braille equipment for the Ondo State School for the Blind.

But Olowolabi was silent on the provisions made for the visually impaired pupils in other public schools in the state, including Owo High School, which Ekevere attends.

He said, “This administration has spent so much money on the school. Government has increased funding of the school. Its quarterly grants are regular so that all their braille equipment is adequately provided. The government has a budget for the equipment.

“The Commissioner for Education also visits the school on a regular basis and a monitoring team was set up to monitor how the equipment is utilised.”

How visually impaired pupils fare in US

Unlike in Nigeria where special needs education is in a shambles, countries such as the United States provided state-of-the-art learning aids for visually impaired pupils.

For instance, the American Printing House for the Blind annually produces braille textbooks and other educational tools in large quantities, and distributes them to visually impaired pre-college pupils across the 50 states in the US.

The 2017 fiscal year report of APH stated that $17.8m was allocated to providing accessible materials to 63,357 registered pupils with visual impairment through the Federal Quota Programme. The FQP mandates that textbooks and aids are provided free to the eligible blind pupils in educational settings throughout the federation.

Other functions of APH include conducting research to develop and improve educational materials in core curriculum areas such as science, mathematics, English language arts, and social studies and adapting testing materials related to these subject areas.

APH also undertakes research in areas such as braille reading, orientation and mobility, and assistive technology while special materials are developed for teaching.

In the report, APH President, Craig Meador, identified BrailleBlaster as one of the modern technologies produced for the visually impaired persons to further bridge the educational barrier between them and their sighted counterparts.

“This revolutionary new software tool translates text into braille more quickly, easily and accurately – giving students access to learning materials on the first day of class at the same time as their sighted peers,” Meador said.

Source of the notice: https://punchng.com/double-trouble-for-visually-impaired-pupils-in-nigerian-schools/

 

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«Premio Confucio» de UNESCO concedido a programas de Irán, Nigeria y España

Redacción: Spanish

Tres programas educativos dirigidos respectivamente a adolescentes y adultos, prisioneros e inmigrante adultos han recibido el Premio Confucio para la Alfabetización de la UNESCO de este año en Qufu, en la provincia oriental china de Shandong.

Los programas se desarrollaron en Irán, Nigeria y España, según dijo Robert Parua, especialista de Programas para la Educación de la Oficina de la UNESCO en Beijing.

El primero de los programas, a cargo de la Organización del Movimiento por la Alfabetización en Irán promueve la alfabetización y la educación continua de adolescentes y adultos, particularmente las mujeres y niñas de las áreas rurales. El programa del Servicio Nigeriano de Prisiones forma a los reos para permitirles acceder a empleos o desarrollar actividades profesionales propias al salir en libertad.

El tercer programa, dirigido por la Fundación Elche Acoge de España, se inició en 1994. Su meta es enseñar «español como segundo idioma para inmigrantes adultos» para que se integren en la sociedad y el mercado laboral.

El Premio Confucio para la Alfabetización fue establecido en 2005 con miras a reconocer los esfuerzos de individuos, gobiernos y organizaciones no gubernamentales por aumentar la alfabetización.

Confucio, quien vivió entre los años 551 y 479 a.C., fue un educador y filósofo. Fundó la escuela del confucianismo, que ha influido profundamente en las generaciones chinas posteriores.

Fuente: http://spanish.xinhuanet.com/2018-09/28/c_137499328.htm

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Education in Nigeria: Overcoming Mass Displacement

Africa/Nigeria/By Kathryn Quelle/Source: www.borgenmagazine.com.

Boko Haram is a militant group in northern Nigeria that wants to institute Islamic law. The group also operates in Chad, Niger and Cameroon, but it originated in Nigeria in the late 1990s. The ongoing Boko Haram insurgency officially started in 2009, and since then militants have killed at least 20,000 people. The violent attacks have also displaced about two million Nigerians, with little chance of them being able to return home in the near future.

Mass internal displacement has a large impact on a country’s economy as well as its resources and living conditions. Displacement also greatly affects education. An estimated 952,029 Nigerian children have been displaced with little or no access to education because of the Boko Haram violence. At one point, the U.S. Embassy in Nigeria reported that only 28 percent of primary age children attended school in Borno state in northern Nigeria, as opposed to 97 percent in most parts of southern Nigeria.

In the local Hausa dialect, Boko Haram means “Western education is forbidden” and the quality of education in Nigeria will suffer if the group succeeds in their goals. In 2016, Human Rights Watch reported that Boko Haram had deliberately killed more than 600 teachers. Attacks in northern Nigeria have also destroyed more than 900 schools and forced at least 1,500 to close.

In combination with local NGOs, the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) launched the three-year Education Crisis Response (ECR) program in 2014 to address the fractured system of education in Nigeria. According to USAID, the program’s goal was to “expand access to quality and protective non-formal education and alternative education opportunities for out-of-school children, ages 6 to 17.”

Results in the Classroom

During ECR’s tenure in Nigeria, USAID partner Creative Associates International established more than 1,400 non-formal learning centers and more than 700 formal schools. Creative reached more than 80,000 children, 23 percent more than its target of 65,000. USAID’s final report found that 47 percent of the children reached by the program had never attended school before.

When ECR was launched, USAID performed a baseline assessment. The agency found that 64 percent of the children scored at zero level for Hausa and 50 percent scored at zero level for English, meaning the children could not even recognize letters from the languages. After three years, USAID’s endline assessment found that 49 percent could read Hausa and 37 percent could read English, showing significant improvement.

Besides substantially raising literacy rates in both Hausa and English, ECR also addressed mathematical knowledge. At the beginning of the program, 40 percent of children could not recognize the numbers 1-9. At the end, the same percentage were able to perform basic mathematic functions.

Beyond the Classroom

Beyond simply improving education in Nigeria, the learning centers set up by the program also provide meals and help students get to and from school. For example, ECR established 12 non-formal education centers specifically for children with physical disabilities, and the program distributed wheelchairs and crutches to the students. These 12 centers enrolled 539 children over three years and, in addition to basic knowledge and skills, the centers taught children vocational skills that they can utilize even after the program has ended.

The ECR program also focused on children’s psychosocial development. Many of the children in the program were displaced due to attacks on their homes and villages, leaving them traumatized. USAID recognized that children have a hard time learning when their fears and traumas are not addressed, and it trained facilitators on how to teach children sensitively.

Facilitators encouraged positive, interactive student-teacher relations and used group exercises to encourage children to make friends and interact with each other. Within local communities, organizations also encouraged spreading messages of peace. ECR director Ayo Oladini said, “We make sure that we don’t create any more trauma, either for these children or within the community where they live.”

Ensuring the Continued Success of Education in Nigeria

Throughout its tenure, ECR was supported by Nigeria’s state and federal governments. Officials helped determine which communities to focus efforts in, developed training manuals and sat in on classes. Every learning center established also had two local government education officials assigned to mentor teachers.

Nigeria’s government further demonstrated their commitment to education and ensuring ECR’s continued success by implementing transition plans worth $287,709 in its 2017 budget. The budget has been used to establish 100 more non-formal learning centers following ECR’s model and train more than 8,000 formal school teachers in conflict-sensitive education. At the end of the three years, five Nigerian state governments separately promised to replicate ECR’s non-formal education model.

In addition to government support, ECR mainstreamed 30,154 children who passed its end-of-program exam into formal schools to ensure the children’s continued success. ECR also provided them with additional free scholastic materials. Even though the ECR program has ended, the program has re-established quality education in Nigeria and helped a lot of kids get back to school.

Source of the notice: http://www.borgenmagazine.com/school-fees-in-africa/

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Nigeria: Conferencia de donantes para la región del Lago Chad consigue más 2000 millones de dólares

África/Nigeria/10.09.18/Fuente: news.un.org.

Más de 10 millones de personas precisan asistencia humanitaria y protección en una zona que comprende el noreste de Nigeria y zonas de Níger, Chad y Camerún, afectada por la violencia, el hambre y los desplazamientos masivos.

Los donantes que asistieron a la Conferencia de Alto Nivel sobre la Región del Lago Chad, una zona que padece una gran crisis humanitaria, anunciaron este martes compromisos por un valor de 2170 millones de dólares que servirán para respaldar iniciativas en Camerún, Chad, Níger y Nigeria.

Además de este apoyo, tres instituciones financieras multilaterales -el Banco Africano de Desarrollo,  el Banco Islámico de Desarrollo y el Banco Mundial– anunciaron préstamos en condiciones favorables por valor de 467 millones de dólares.

La conferencia, que se ha celebrado durante dos días en Berlín, contó con la participación de más de setenta países, organizaciones internacionales y representantes de la sociedad civil.

Más de 17 millones de personas en el noreste de Nigeria y en partes de Camerún, Chad y Níger se enfrentan a una compleja crisis originada por la pobreza extrema, el cambio climático y los conflictos violentos.

La crisis ha provocado el desplazamiento interno de 2,4 millones de personas, la destrucción de los medios de subsistencia, la violación de los derechos humanos y la interrupción de los servicios de salud, educación y otros servicios básicos.

Los objetivos del evento fueron conseguir asistencia humanitaria, la protección de civiles, la prevención de crisis y la estabilidad de esas cuatro naciones, la resiliencia y el desarrollo sostenible.

El administrador del Programa de las Naciones Unidas para el Desarrollo (PNUD), Achim Steiner, indicó que las donaciones y préstamos concedidos representan “un fuerte apoyo a nuestra nueva forma de trabajar juntos que incluye tanto las necesidades humanitarias como las causas a largo plazo de la crisis”. De este modo, añadió,  la  “respuesta representa una oportunidad para invertir en un futuro donde las crisis son menos probables y las naciones más resistentes”.

Durante la jornada inaugural, el coordinador de la ayuda humanitaria de la ONU, Mark Lowcock, recordaba que más de 10 millones de personas precisan asistencia y protección en la región del Lago Chad.

“La violencia, el hambre, el desplazamiento y el miedo son las duras realidades de su vida cotidiana, pero hoy tenemos un mejor acceso a muchas comunidades que hace un año», destacaba.

La educación, otro factor en riesgo

Por su parte, UNICEF anunciaba al inicio de la conferencia que los conflictos en curso, el desplazamiento y el temor a los ataques contra las escuelas ponen en peligro la educación de más de 3,5 millones de niños en la cuenca del Lago Chad.

El Fondo de la ONU para la Infancia advirtió que hay casi 1000 escuelas cerradas o que no están operativas debido a la violencia o los disturbios en el noreste de Nigeria, Chad, Camerún y Níger.

El director de programas de emergencia de UNICEF, Manuel Fontaine, recordó que la educación ayuda a salvar vidas en lugares inseguros y, además, «les proporciona las habilidades necesarias para construir un futuro mejor para ellos y sus familias, y contribuir a conseguir comunidades pacíficas y prósperas”. Sin embargo, con demasiada frecuencia “se carece de fondos humanitarios para  educación en situaciones de emergencia».

La Conferencia de Alto Nivel sobre la Región del lago Chad se celebró este año por segunda vez. La primera edición tuvo lugar en Oslo en el mes de febrero de 2017 y consiguió compromisos de 650 millones de dólares.

Fuente de la noticia: https://news.un.org/es/story/2018/09/1440932

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La violencia en el lago Chad pone en peligro la educación de 3,5 millones de niños

Africa/Nigeria/04.09.18/Fuente: www.europapress.es.

La educación de casi 3,5 millones de niños está en juego en la cuenca del lago Chad, que baña al país que le da nombre, a Camerún, Níger y Nigeria y que se ha convertido en la zona de operaciones del grupo islamista Boko Haram, dejando casi 1.000 escuelas cerradas o inoperativas en esta región, según ha alertado el Fondo de la ONU

«En contextos de inseguridad, la educación puede ser un salvavidas», ha defendido el director de Programas de Emergencia de UNICEF, Manuel Fontaine. «La educación es la base del aprendizaje de niños y jóvenes durante toda su vida» ya que «les brinda las habilidades necesarias para construir un futuro mejor para ellos y sus familias, y para contribuir a comunidades pacíficas y prósperas».

Sin embargo, ha lamentado, «con demasiada frecuencia falta financiación para la educación en situaciones de emergencia». En el caso de la cuenca del lago Chad, UNICEF ha solicitado para este año casi 36 millones de euros pero hasta la fecha solo ha recibido el 8 por ciento de esta cantidad.

A pesar de los desafíos, incluidos la inseguridad, el desplazamiento y la pobreza, UNICEF y sus aliados apoyaron el año pasado a los gobiernos de los cuatro países para garantizar que más de un millón de niños afectados por la crisis pudiesen regresar a la escuela.

Además, han dado formación sobre evacuaciones seguras y confinamientos a aproximadamente 150.000 estudiantes de primaria, para que estén preparados ante eventuales ataques o incidentes de seguridad durante la jornada escolar. Igualmente, se ha capacitado a casi 2.000 docentes para que sepan cómo reducir el riesgo de desastres a través de una educación resiliente, y más de 14.000 docentes han sido entrenados para integrar el apoyo psicosocial en sus lecciones.

También se ha involucrado a las comunidades para que participen en la protección de las escuelas, y en Nigeria este aprendizaje se está integrando en la formación de los futuros profesores, ha añadido la agencia de la ONU.

Asimismo, UNICEF trabaja con sus aliados y los gobiernos de la región para garantizar que haya oportunidades educativas alternativas. Por ejemplo, mediante la radio se está ayudando a niños en Camerún y Níger a seguir aprendiendo a leer y a escribir, aritmética y habilidades para la vida.

HAY QUE INVERTIR EN EDUCACIÓN

«A medida que las comunidades se recuperan del conflicto, la inversión en servicios como la educación es esencial para la estabilidad a largo plazo y el bienestar de la región y sus niños», ha defendido la directora regional de UNICEF para África Occidental y Central, Marie-Pierre Poirier.

«También instamos a todos los estados a respaldar la Declaración de Escuelas Seguras y poner en marcha mecanismos para que los niños estén protegidos en las escuelas, incluso durante el conflicto», ha añadido la responsable.

Tras más de nueve años de conflicto, en la cuenca del lago Chad hay más de 10 millones de personas, entre ellas 6 millones de niños, necesitadas de asistencia humanitaria pese a que la seguridad ha mejorado. Además, hay 2,4 millones de desplazados.

La denuncia de UNICEF se produce con motivo de la conferencia sobre la región que se celebra entre este lunes y martes en Berlín y que reúne a gobiernos, organizaciones multilaterales e internacionales que busca esencialmente apoyar la continuidad de la respuesta humanitaria.

Fuente de la noticia: http://www.europapress.es/internacional/noticia-violencia-lago-chad-pone-peligro-educacion-35-millones-ninos-20180903144137.html

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Nigeria: Herdsmen attacks have forced 20,000 children out of schools into IDP camps – SUBEB

Africa/Nigeria/03.09.18/Source: www.pulse.ng.

Attacks by herdsmen have forced at least 20,000 schoolchildren out of their classroms with many of them ending up in camps for Internally Displaced Persons (IDP), according to the Chairman of State Universal Basic Education Board (SUBEB), Reverend Philip Tachin.

While inspecting primary school projects that were constructed by the Benue State Government and the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC) intervention fund, Rev. Tachin said the state houses at least 16,000 schoolchildren in IDP camps.

He said the destruction of schools by the attackers is presenting a huge challenge for the government.

He said, «20,000 children forced out of school while over 16,000 of these pupils are now housed in various Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) camps across the state.

«The renewed herdsmen attacks in 2018 also led to the complete destruction of structures in over 50 public primary schools in the affected areas and communities of the state.

«The development is quite a huge challenge for the state government, given the amount of resources that would be required to rebuild the affected structures.»

He assured that the state government is undeterred and will continue to execute rehabilitation projects to combat the problem.

Hundreds of people have been killed in Benue State this year alone as attacks mostly attributed to herdsmen grew as a result of an escalation of simmering tension with local farming communities.

Source of the notice: https://www.pulse.ng/news/local/herdsmen-have-forced-20-000-children-out-of-school-in-benue-id8804352.html

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Over 10 Million Nigerian Children Are Reportedly Out Of School

Africa/Nigeria/21.08.18/Source: www.konbini.com.

A lot of African countries have been working hard to improve children’s access to basic education, but there’s still a lot left to be done. 32.6 million children of primary-school age and 25.7 million adolescents are still not going to school in sub-Saharan Africa. But worse, at over 10.5 million, Nigeria has the highest number of children out of school in the world.

According to UNICEF, Nigeria’s population growth has put pressure on the country’s resources, public services and infrastructure. With children under the age of 15 accounting for 45% of the 171 million population, the burden on education has become overwhelming.

And while primary school enrolment has increased in recent years, net attendance is only about 70% — which translates to Nigeria having over 10.5 million out-of-school children. 60% of those children are in northern Nigeria.

Not to mention that the increased enrolment rates have created challenges in ensuring quality education, as resources are spread more thinly. It is not rare to see cases where there are 100 pupils for one teacher, or where students learn under trees because of a lack of classrooms.

The Minister of Education, Mallam Adamu Adamu, in January, claimed that the number of out-of-school kids in Nigeria dropped from 10.5 million to 8.6 million in the last three years:

«When President Buhari came into power in 2015, UNICEF said out-of-school children in Nigeria was about 10.5 million.

But I want to tell Nigerians that with the effort of this president, especially with the school feeding programme, it dropped from 10.5 million to 8.6 million as at last year.»

That’s untrue. and we need to face the fact that the Nigerian education system has undoubtedly failed millions of children. In north-eastern Nigeria, conflict has deprived many children of access to education. Teachers have been killed, and schools burned down or closed for security reasons.

It’s evident that the government cannot fix the educational sector alone, international and private intervention is urgently needed.

Source of the notice: http://www.konbini.com/ng/lifestyle/10-5-million-nigerian-children-school/

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