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Unicef y OMS promueven nueva guía de apoyo a la lactancia materna

UNICEF – OMS/ 17 de abril de 2018/Fuente: http://prensa-latina.cu

La Organización Mundial de la Salud (OMS) y el Fondo de Naciones Unidas para la Infancia (Unicef) promueven hoy una guía de apoyo a la lactancia materna en los centros de salud para embarazadas y recién nacidos.
El documento incluye lo que denominan 10 pasos para una lactancia materna exitosa y apoya la iniciativa de hospitales amigo de la madre y el niño, lanzada en 1991 con el fin de alentar a las madres primerizas a amamantar y a orientar a los trabajadores de salud sobre la mejor forma de apoyarlas.

Según dijo la directora ejecutiva de Unicef, Henrietta H. Fore, la lactancia materna salva vidas y ayuda a mantener a los bebes sanos desde sus primeros días hasta su madurez.

Los hospitales no están solo para curar a los enfermos, también tienen que promover la vida y garantizar que la gente pueda desarrollarse y vivir al máximo de sus posibilidades, señaló el director general de la Organización Mundial de la Salud, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.

Unicef y la OMS consideran que son los centros sanitarios -representantes de la lucha a favor de la sanidad universal- quienes deben ejercer el liderazgo a la hora de promover esas prácticas.

De acuerdo con sus informes, Cuba destaca entre los países con mejores resultados al aplicar la iniciativa de hospitales amigos de la madre y el niño.

La guía de 10 pasos que promueve ahora la OMS y la Unicef insiste en la necesidad de informar a todas las embarazadas y a sus familias de los beneficios de la lactancia natural y la forma de ponerla en práctica.

Además, aboga por facilitar el contacto ‘piel con piel’ y ayudar a las madres a iniciar la lactancia cuanto antes sea posible tras el parto.

La lactancia materna es vital para la salud de un niño y reduce los costos de atención para los centros de salud, las familias y los gobiernos, indican investigaciones.

Amamantar a todos los bebés durante los primeros dos años salvaría anualmente la vida de más de 820 mil niños menores de 5 años, reporta la OMS.

La lactancia durante la primera hora después del nacimiento protege a los recién nacidos de las infecciones, mejora su coeficiente intelectual, la preparación para la escuela y reduce el riesgo de cáncer de mama en la madre.

Fuente del documento:
http://prensa-latina.cu/index.php?o=rn&id=170415&SEO=unicef-y-oms-promueven-nueva-guia-de-apoyo-a-la-lactancia-materna
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Ghana: Education; The Right Of Every Child

Ghana/April 17, 2018/By: Josephine Nettey/Source: http://theheraldghana.com

The goal of education is not to increase the amount of knowledge but to create the possibilities for a child to invent and discover, to create men who are capable of doing new things (Jean Piaget)

At independence, many countries looked to reform education to accelerate economic and social development. Ghana was no exception, and the newly independent government saw in education the keys to social and economic development. This insight still lived 5 decades onwards in the Republic, for this reason the framers of the 1992 Constitutionprovided for the security and guarantee of this right in Article 25, Clause (1) Sub-clause (a) of the 1992 Constitution. This provision reads;

  • All persons shall have the right to equal educational opportunities and facilities and with a view to achieving the full realization of that right,
  • Basic education shall be free, compulsory and available to all.

Where Basic Education Level is provided for Section 1(2) of the Education Act, 2008 as amended by Education (Amendment) Act, 2010 as follows;

  • The basic level of education shall consist of
  • Two years kindergarten
  • Six years of primary
  • Three years of junior high school.

Per the above provisions all persons, every child has a right to education emphatically the right to free and compulsory education. This right as provided for imposed a duty on our government after the coming into force of the constitution to ensure that all children are educated as provided for in Article 38 Clause (2) of the 1992 constitutions. This provision reads;

  • The Government shall, within two years after Parliament first meets after the coming into force of this Constitution, draw up a programme for implementation within the following ten years, for the provision of free compulsory and universal basic education.

The issue is that all successive government following the enforcement of the 1992 Constitution have failed to implement the above provision in providing freecompulsory and universal basic education to all children. They have even failed more woefully in enforcing the compulsory aspect of the education as mandated them. Because of their inactionour children are on the street instead of being in the classroom working and engaging in perilous activities daily.

Yet we dare to tag them as “Street Children” …!!!  Who is to blame?

Especially when our own laws namelyThe Children Act, 1998 (Act 560) sets the minimum age for light work at 13yrs and hazardous work at 18years. However, the opposite is true that most often than not we see children below these ages engaged in hazardous work in the middle of highways and major roads including begging, selling, wiping windscreen of cars and even inhaling fumes from vehicle exhaust.

Noting that Begging as an activity is an offence as per Section 2 Subsection 1 (a) and (b) of the Beggars and Destitute Act, 1969 (N.I.C.D 1969) which reads;

  • A police officer may arrest without warrant
  • A person who is found begging
  • A person wandering, or
  • A person who is in any premise or place for the purpose of begging.

That is to say we will have no street children on our streets if the Police Agency were complying to the law and arresting these children and putting them in schools to receive education and enjoy their fundamental as such.

The sight of these children on the street is even more distasteful when you see them accompanied by adults who clearly by their conductare perpetuators of denying theirchild access to education. But isthat really the case?

Especially when the mandate is on the government through its Ministry namely the Ministry of Education and its local representative the is District Assemblies to provide for the necessary infrastructural needs for education of the population in the area of authority as provided for by Section 2 Subsection (2) of Act 778as Amended.

Notably to mention Section 4 of Act 778 as Amended provides for the role of the District Assembly social welfare where a child fails to go to school. This section reads;

  • Where a Child does not attend a course of instruction in compliance with subsection (1) the parent shall, in the first instance, appear before the social welfare committee of the District Assembly for the Appropriate action.

And Section 1 of Act 778 as Amended reads;

  • A child who has attained school going age shall, at the basic level, attend a course of instruction as laid down by the Minister in a school recognized for that purpose by the Minister.

The above is to the effect that the District Assemblies Social Welfare have a duty to ensure parent or guardians do not preventtheir child from enjoying their right to education as guaranteed by the supreme laws of our land. Have they lived up to this Duty?

As we recognize International Day for Street Children today April 12,2018 may our government through its Ministry and local assemblies live up to the duty imposed on them by the laws of our motherland so we may be celebrants of Children Day only and not the opposite.

For Education is a tool for producing a scientifically literate population, tacklingthe environmental causes of low productivity; and for producing knowledge to harness Ghana’s economic potential…!!!

Long live every Child. Long Live Ghana..!!

Koiwah Koi-LarbiOfosuapea, 0501451986

(Fellow – Center for Constitutional Order)

Source:

http://theheraldghana.com/education-the-right-of-every-child/

 

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Africa needs a revolution in education

Africa/April 17, 2018/by ISS Today/ Source: https://www.dailymaverick.co.za

Access to education must be markedly improved if Africa is to catch up with global averages. By Jakkie Cilliers and Stellah Kwasifor. 

While education worldwide, especially for girls, has improved, the gap between Africa and the rest of the world is wide and the continent doesn’t appear to be catching up. In fact, it is falling further behind.

From 1960 to 2015, the gap between the average number of years of education obtained by African adults aged 25 and above and that of the rest of the world increased from two to three years. Today African adults have, on average, five years of education while the rest of the world has around eight.

Globally the disparities are large. Adults in North America and Europe have 13 and 11 years respectively, while those in South Asia have seven years. Education levels are improving everywhere, but more slowly in Africa than anywhere else.

Source: Barro-Lee

Quality of education aside, countries now take less time to improve average years of education than in the past. Whereas it took around 17 years to increase average education levels in poor countries by one year in the 1960s and 70s, it now takes around 11 years. However while the rate of progress has generally sped up, Africa is falling further behind and will continue to do so, in part because of rapid population growth.

There are many well-known benefits of education. First, education affects demography through improved health (it reduces mortality) and reduced fertility rates (there are fewer children per female within childbearing age, meaning parents can better look after their children). In turn, demography affects improved education systems and opportunities in terms of size and characteristics of the school-going age of the population. Slower growth in pupil numbers allows poorer countries to cope with the requirement for more schools, books, teachers and other facilities.

Second, educational gains lead to improved productivity. A more literate and skilled workforce is more productive and can be engaged in higher value-add activities. For example, with grade 12 it may be possible to staff a call centre; with Grades 4 to 6, manual labour is probably the only option.

Third, better-educated people can increase their incomes, thus improving their economic circumstances. The relationship between higher levels of education and income is strong and almost linear. As workers progress from primary to secondary and eventually tertiary education, they are better positioned to increase earnings, sometimes dramatically. Education also promotes equity and democracy. A better educated citizenry can make more informed political choices.

Finally, improved levels of education reduce social inequalities where individuals can progress and be judged based on merit, with less importance being put on their social backgrounds, standing or other characteristics such as religion, race or caste.

Beyond these general positive features, attaining secondary education for females has numerous additional benefits. According to a widely quoted 1995 study by K Subbarao and Laura Raney, completion of secondary education would reduce the total fertility rate among women in developing nations by 26%. By comparison, doubling access to family planning would decrease the total fertility rate by only half that number.

Currently, only 14% of Africa’s low-income female population of the appropriate age group graduate from secondary school. For females in lower-middle-income Africa the portion is 48% and in upper-middle-income African countries it is 57%. The International Futures forecasting system from which these trends are extracted calculates that 122-million Africans are missing secondary school, slightly more than half of whom are female.

Economically, female education increases income of households when women enter the workforce and are gainfully employed. A 2003 study by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisationin 19 countries points out that a country’s long-term economic growth increases by 3.7% for every year that the adult population’s average years of schooling increases. Female education should therefore be a cornerstone of any nation’s strategy to ensure that women are empowered economically, socially and intellectually.

So how does Africa catch up with progress elsewhere?

More rapid economic growth rates would allow African governments to spend more money on education. Improved health care, the provision of water and sanitation and access to modern contraceptives would aid these efforts as they would reduce fertility rates over time. Fewer children would reduce the burden of spreading money too thinly, allowing those who enter the system to do better.

Urbanisation accompanied by improved facilities and services like water, electricity and educational material would promote quality education. Students would be better able to access amenities like the internet to aid learning – a resource that is largely absent and/or expensive in rural regions. This way, efficient education planning by these under-resourced governments can be achieved. More donor aid would also help.

But even more is needed for Africa to close its enduring education deficit compared to the rest of the world.

Given current backlogs and budgets, Africa would simply not be able to build enough schools and train enough teachers at the scale that is required. Neither would it be able to provide resources such as books and laboratories and all the associated support structures needed for functioning schools at that scale.

Some experts say Africa may be able to catch up by tapping into the digital revolution. Direct access to world-class education material should provide some added momentum. But even this requires African governments to invest heavily in the provision of internet access and the means to access such material.

The 2017 United Nations Children’s Fund report on the state of the world’s children points to the potential of information and communication technology to transform education by “expanding access to high-quality educational content, including textbooks, video material and remote instruction, and at a much lower cost than in the past”. The report warns, however, that technology cannot fix education without support from “strong teachers, motivated learners and sound pedagogy”.

Equally important, societies need to recognise the value of education, especially of girls, and provide an enabling environment to ensure gender equity in education. In north-east Nigeria, girls already lag behind boys in attendance, because of cultural barriers, the belief that girls’ education isn’t that important and the determined efforts by Boko Haram to deny education to females.

Whatever the combination of solutions, African governments will need to get serious about improving access to education. More of the same is not enough if the continent is to catch up with progress elsewhere. DM

Jakkie Cilliers is Head of African Futures & Innovation, ISS and chair of the ISS Board of Trustees. Stellah Kwasi is a researcher, African Futures & Innovation, ISS

Photo: Learners in a classroom in Cape Town. 8 May 2018. Photo by Leila Dougan

Source:

https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article/2018-04-16-africa-needs-a-revolution-in-education/#.WtVmVYjwbIU

 

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Nigeria: As History Returns to the Curriculum

Africa/ Nigeria/ 16.04.2018/ From: allafrica.com.

Finally, the future of Nigeria looks a little brighter because the nation has decided to begin to look, again, into its own past.The erstwhile removal of History from the school curriculum, or its so-called integration into that of Social Studies, was a mindless and uncharitable act of disservice to the generation of Nigerian pupils/students to which it was denied, a deprivation of the human need to understand its origin and trajectory in order to chart a worthy and viable course for its continuity. Thankfully, however, History has been restored, and Nigeria is no longer doomed, like the proverbial river that forgets its origin, to dry up and crack in its bed.

As far back as 1999, in a meeting with the then newly elected President Olusegun Obasanjo who had made a reference to the problem of youth violence across the country, one of Nigeria’s historical icon J. F. Ade-Ajayi had made it clear that this problem stems from the lack of the knowledge of history in the Nigerian youth population. A host of other things, both positive and negative, happening in the country now can be better understood and engaged if they were traced back into history. The paucity of a sense of nationalism or patriotism can be directly tied to the lack of a sense of history, for it is difficult, perhaps even impossible, to love a country that one does not know.

Moreover, there is a sense of identity, culture, ownership and responsibility among other things that can be taught or given only through an immersion in the history of one’s people. Once again, therefore, the re-introduction of History as a stand-alone subject in the basic and junior secondary curriculums across the country must be greeted with joy and renewed hope. The government must be commended for listening to the criticisms and pleas of its people on this particular matter and reshaping its policy to suit the reasonable stance of its citizens.

In implementing or executing this very commendable policy, however, the need for vision and responsibility must not be overlooked. History being as long and wide as human reality itself, the study of the history of Nigerian peoples and their connections with the greater world must be emphasized as the core of the new curriculum. The greater portion of school children in the country nowadays, perhaps by virtue of their exposure to the history-laden comics and sitcoms of the West, are conversant with the exploits of such figures as Benjamin Franklin and Joan of Arc while questioningly cringing their noses at the mention of Ovonramwen and Queen Amina. This is not a desirable state of affairs. History, like charity, must begin at home, and it is time for Nigeria to also begin to utilise the products of technology and innovation in teaching its children its own history.

Culture, being intertwined with history, must share in this rebirth. There is thus nothing wrong with the making of cartoons and other animations that tell the stories of Ogun, Sango, Chaka the Zulu, Amadioha and Mandela, all made colourful with toned-down representations of the personages and rites of passage without which these stories will not be complete. Since these children, as research has shown, respond better to visuals, then let them be given visuals.

The history of a people must also be taught in line with the particular vision that that people has for itself. The Executive Secretary, Nigerian Educational Research and Development Council, Prof. Ismail Junaidu, has said that one of the purposes of this policy is the promotion of Afro-Nigerian history so that the challenges of globalisation can be better understood, appreciated and negotiated. This is a goal that is worth pursuing, and the starting point must be for that which is Nigerian/African to be posited as strong and valuable on its own, able to inter-connect with the outside world on its own terms and as an equal. For this task to be achieved, the employment of history teachers (i.e. teachers who actually studied history and are trained to teach it rather than makeshift instructors from perhaps other disciplines) is imperative. If this is taken along with the use of new media, the study of history in Nigeria will know no limitation in its fruits.

In conclusion, the return of History to schools as an independent subject must be recognised also as a clarion call to parents, teachers, and guardians to first take up the responsibility to educate themselves in their own history and then teach their younglings the same. To be practical, the history of particular tribes and clans (which is also very important) is best taught at the level of the family. It is, therefore, time to bring back the culture of an oral transmission of tribal history.

From: http://allafrica.com/stories/201804110187.html

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Uganda: New Curriculum Good, but Beware of Pitfalls

Africa/Uganda/ 16.04.2018 / From: allafrica.com.

The government has rolled out a revised curriculum for Ordinary Level with ambitious reforms that have seen 20 subjects either dropped or consolidated with others to bring down the number of examinable units to 13. Even among the retained subjects, there have been changes. Topics that are deemed irrelevant have been scrapped.

Teachers have expressed reservations on the implementation of the curriculum, saying they were not consulted as the tail-end implementers, which may impede the execution and realisation of the objective.

 But that aside, the most critical reform in the new curriculum, which might bring more challenges than the intended good, is the change of grading system in the final Ordinary Level examinations for the lower secondary learners.

From: http://allafrica.com/stories/201804120152.html

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Kenya: Lecturers’ Strike to Continue as Talks Fail

The National Treasury wants striking university lecturers to withdraw a case they have filed against the salaries commission before talks on their pay demands can begin.

Principal Secretary Kamau Thugge told the National Assembly’s Education committee that the salaries commission could only finalise its job evaluation and create a basis for increasing the lecturers’ salaries and allowances in the 2017-2021 collective bargaining agreement if the case is withdrawn.

«The determination of the offer to the universities will be subject to the recommendation of the Salaries and Remuneration Commission (SRC),» Dr Thugge, who insisted that nothing would be done outside the Constitution, said.

Union officials, university representatives and Ministry of Education officials also appeared before the committee chaired by Tinderet MP Julius Melly, in efforts to end the one-month strike.

COUNTER-OFFER

Despite the directive by Mr Melly that the parties resume talks, each appeared adamant that its conditions must be met first.

University Education Principal Secretary Japheth Ntiba said lecturers should call off the strike and allow negotiations to take place.

He said the SRC is yet to be reconstituted to enable the new commissioners «to endorse the payment bacon».

However, University Academic Staff Union (Uasu) Secretary-General Constantine Wasonga maintained they will only call off the strike once a counter-offer is tabled.

«If they give us the counter offer today, we will return to class by Monday,» he said.

JOB EVALUATIONVice-chancellors committee chairman Francis Aduol, however, blamed the National Treasury and the Ministry of Education for the stalemate.

Prof Aduol said the talks had collapsed after the ministry failed to authorise the universities to give an offer to the lecturers and other staff.

«Even if they give us a counter-offer of zero per cent, we will present it to the lecturers. But they have not done so,» he said.

A report on staff audit, he said, was available for the government to use to give lecturers an offer.

Dr Wasonga said a job evaluation that was done by SRC should not impede the provision of a counter-offer by universities and the government.

NEGOTIATIONS

He told the committee that the Employment and Labour Court, in a 2016 case involving nurses, ruled that job evaluation by the SRC should not be linked to collective bargaining.

«The SRC, in a letter to Uasu dated March 18, indicated that the government had not sought its advice on the parameters for negotiations of the CBA,» he said.

Uasu asked Parliament to direct the government to present a counter-offer and engage in negotiations so that the deal could be signed.

The union also wants the Education ministry and the National Treasury to nominate representatives to sit in a joint committee with Uasu to facilitate negotiations to «overcome the many bureaucratic layers involved».

PAYROLL AUDIT

Lecturers are demanding Sh38 billion for the four-year deal.

However, Dr Thugge insisted that the ministry must carry out a payroll audit to establish the actual number of university employees and the cost of their compensation.

«The State Department should also conduct a financial audit on the expenditure and revenues, including the internal controls in the universities in order to establish how funds released from the Exchequer and those generated internally, are applied and accounted for,» he said.

From: http://allafrica.com/stories/201804130185.html

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Crowdfunding : Desafío Zambia 2018. Un proyecto para la ayuda de 200 niños

Zambia/14 de Abril de 2018/cinconoticias

Con el nuevo proyecto “Desafío Zambia 2018” se intenta evitar que los niños de Kasiya (Zambia) caminen 12 kilómetros diarios en su trayecto al colegio, un recorrido largo y peligroso en el que están expuestos a los ataques de animales.

La asociación sin ánimo de lucro Quijote Team de Albacete ha emprendido este proyecto junto a la ONG Kubuka, con el propósito de construir una vivienda para que los profesores puedan quedarse allí, dotar de energía solar fotovoltaica tanto la casa como las aulas y suministrar material escolar y mobiliario para el colegio.

Daniel Romero, cofundador de Quijote Team, ha explicado que necesitan recaudar 20.000 euros para lograr los objetivos propuestos. Por esta razón se han abierto varias vías de financiación.

La mejor manera de participar en el “Desafío Zambia 2018” es a través del sistema de crowdfunding que han lanzado conjuntamente la ONG y la asociación desde el día 14 de febrero hasta el 15 de junio del presente año. Está disponible en el siguiente enlace: https://www.migranodearena.org/reto/18095/desafio-zambia-2018-todos-con-los-ninos-de-kasiya.

Como una manera de incentivar las donaciones, Quijote Team ha organizado un sistema de recompensas en el que clasifican a las personas según las aportaciones que hayan realizado.

Los “Dulcinea” son lo que aportan menos de 30 euros y serán recompensados con una foto del colegio dedicada desde Kasiya. Los “Sancho Panza” realizan donaciones  entre 30 y 50 euros y recibirán una postal experimental sorpresa y una foto dedicada. Quienes puedan realizar una aportación entre los 50 y 100 euros obtendrán el título de “Don Quijote”, la foto dedicada, una postal, una pulsera y una invitación a un evento organizado por la asociación.

También piensan recolectar fondos por medio de eventos recreativos. En el “Game Night” realizado el pasado 20 de marzo, donde los asistentes participaron en juegos de inglés, consiguieron recaudar 400 euros.

La otra vía de financiación contempla la colaboración de empresas a través de un programa de patrocinio. Comenta Daniel Romero que las empresas pequeñas y medianas son las que más se solidarizan y las que más apoyan estos proyectos.

Fuente: https://www.cinconoticias.com/desafio-zambia-2018-un-proyecto-para-la-ayuda-de-200-ninos/

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