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Educating Girls May Be Nigeria’s Best Hope Against Climate Change

Africa/ Nigeria/ 29.10.2019/ Fuente: www.sierraclub.org.

I will hammer with one hammer!
I will hammer with one hammer!
All day long!
All day long!

THE CALL-AND-RESPONSE IS ENTHUSIASTIC, rising above the sound of a fan whirring furiously in the corner of the room. About 50 women stand in a circle around the song leader, who pounds the air with an invisible hammer. When she gets to the second verse—»I will hammer with two hammers!»—she pumps both arms up and down, and the rest of the women follow. By the fourth verse, their feet have joined in, stomping the ground, and by the fifth, everyone is bobbing their head up and down too. As the song ends, the room erupts in laughter.

It’s a typical day at the Center for Girls’ Education. On this hot, breezeless afternoon in May, in the third week of Ramadan, most of the women are fasting, but their infectious energy gives no hint of this.

The Center for Girls’ Education (CGE) is located in a plain, single-story building on the campus of Ahmadu Bello University, in the northern Nigerian city of Zaria. Its offices are sparse: a big table, a few desks, a couple of computers. For large meetings, everyone sits on mats on the floor. The concrete walls are bare, save for sheets of paper scrawled with motivational messages like «Work Hard, Have Fun, Make a Difference.»

The purpose of today’s meeting is to give some visitors an overview of the organization, and it began with the center’s director, Habiba Mohammed, leading the staff in a «love clap» to make the visitors feel welcome: «[clap clap] Mmm, [clap clap] mmm, [clap clap] mmm, [clap clap] we love you.» Then staff members take turns introducing themselves. When it’s her turn, Mohammed says, «One thing I want you to remember about me is that I am still a girl.»

Habiba Mohammed, wearing a red hijab, acts out birthing pains while girls in the dark background are smiling.CENTER FOR GIRLS’ EDUCATION DIRECTOR HABIBA MOHAMMED ACTS OUT LABOR PAINS DURING A REVIEW OF REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH.

At 50, Mohammed isn’t exactly a girl, but with her friendly, open smile and generous laugh, she exudes youthful energy. Her statement seems meant to convey how closely she identifies with the girls CGE serves.

Over the past decade, CGE has helped thousands of impoverished adolescents in northern Nigeria stay in school or gain the skills they need to enroll. A joint program of the School of Public Health at UC Berkeley and the Population and Reproductive Health Initiative at Ahmadu Bello University, the center operates seven projects made possible by funding from institutions including the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the MacArthur Foundation, and the Malala Fund. Thanks to such philanthropy, the center is growing fast. In 2016, its Pathways to Choice project expanded beyond Kaduna State into two other northern states. Another project, the Adolescent Girls Initiative, aims to reach 30,000 girls in at least three more states by the end of the year through a partnership with the United Nations Population Fund.

«In Nigeria, we have 10.5 million out-of-school children,» Mohammed says. «We are always hoping to help whoever wants to support girls, wherever that person is, even if we have to climb mountains or swim oceans.»

Since its inception, the Center for Girls’ Education has grown to a staff of about 70—nearly all of them Nigerian women, the majority of them Muslim, enabling the organization to fluently navigate northern Nigeria’s culturally conservative, mostly Muslim, rural villages to promote girls’ education. The organization’s local connections have allowed it to shift cultural norms without violating them as it advances the health and well-being of women and girls, and by extension entire communities.

«When a girl has an education, she will make a better person in her home, in the community, and everywhere she finds herself.»

The center’s success has broader implications too, as climate change starts to bear down on one of the world’s most populous nations. A large body of research confirms that when girls are educated, their families and communities are more resilient in the face of weather-related disasters and better able to adapt to the effects of climate change. Educated women have more economic resources, their agricultural plots reap higher yields, and their families are better nourished.

Staff members don’t tend to think about their efforts through the lens of climate change; nevertheless, they are helping to prepare the region to cope with, and try to avoid, the worst impacts of global warming.

THE CENTER FOR GIRL’S EDUCATION was founded in 2007 by US medical anthropologist Daniel Perlman. Northern Nigeria has some of the highest rates of maternal mortality in the world, and Perlman had been conducting research in and around Zaria on ways to prevent women from dying during childbirth. Maternal mortality is a multifaceted problem, but early marriage has been shown to be a significant factor—globally, complications from pregnancy and childbirth are the leading cause of death for 15-to-19-year-old women. In the communities where Perlman was doing his research, the average age of marriage for females was about 15, and sometimes girls would marry as young as 12.

Perlman found that while most families considered keeping girls in school a viable alternative to marriage, few were willing or able to enroll their daughters past primary school. Nigeria’s government-run schools are free except for registration fees and the cost of uniforms and supplies; for the poorest families, however, these expenses are prohibitive. The quality of education is also notoriously poor. One mother told Perlman that even though her daughter had graduated from secondary school, she didn’t know how to read or write, and the mother had decided not to send her younger daughters. According to Perlman’s research at the time, a quarter of the girls in the communities surrounding Zaria dropped out during the final years of primary school, compared with just 5 percent of boys. Of the girls who graduated from primary school, only a quarter went on to secondary school.

A teen girl in a purple hijab is bending over and writing on a chalkboard during a numeracy class in an out of school safe space.
A TEEN PRACTICES HER NUMBERS.

CGE set up its first program in the village of Dakace, a dusty collection of buildings inhabited by subsistence farmers and day laborers near Zaria. There, the center organized a handful of what it calls «safe spaces»—girls-only after-school clubs where 12-to-14-year-olds work with a mentor on reading, writing, math, and practical life skills. The hope was that with the extra support, girls would improve their academic performance at school, and families would be motivated to keep them enrolled, thus delaying marriage.

At first, the safe spaces were a hard sell. Mardhiyyah Abbas Mashi, an Islamic scholar and the chair of CGE’s board, led the center’s community-engagement efforts in Dakace. She met with thesarki—the village chief—and the local imam to enlist their support. A tall, elegant woman, Abbas speaks with calm authority. «As a teacher in Arabic and Islamic studies, and as a Hausa [the dominant ethnic group in northern Nigeria], I know the culture. I know the religion. So that is why we go to the community and we talk about the importance of girls’ education in Islam,» she says. «The very first commandment that came to the Prophet was to read. In Islam, knowledge is compulsory for you whether you are a man or a woman.»

The sarki and the imam agreed to the plan, but others in the community remained suspicious. Rumors flew: The real purpose of the safe spaces was probably to teach family planning, the point of which, everyone knew, was to get Muslim women to have fewer babies in order to reduce the Muslim population.

The sarki, Saidu Muazu, called a community meeting to address people’s fears. «I made them understand that there are a lot of boys continuing with their education, but girls are not continuing,» Muazu says, «and that when a girl has an education, she will make a better person in her home, in the community, and everywhere she finds herself.» Eventually, a small group of parents agreed to enroll their daughters in the safe spaces.

Amina Yusuf, 22, wears a brown hijab and smiles shyly at the camera.
AMINA YUSUF

Amina Yusuf was one of those girls. Despite having just finished primary school, she could barely recite the alphabet, let alone read a book. At the government-run primary school she had attended, she had been in classes with as many as 300 students. It was chaos. To maintain order, instructors would beat the students with sticks.

By the time Yusuf began attending a safe space at age 12, many of her friends were married. «I thought it was just a normal way of life,» she says. But her mother had received some education as a girl, and her father thought she should as well.

The safe space was held three afternoons a week. Unlike Yusuf’s teacher at school, the mentor knew her by name; if Yusuf didn’t understand a lesson, the mentor followed up with her individually. Plus, the snacks were good.

Yusuf would come home from the safe space and teach her seven siblings what she had learned and also share tips with her mother, like how to keep a clean kitchen so no one got sick. Her parents were impressed. In the past, her father had not paid much attention to her, but now he pointed her out to others, saying, «That’s my daughter.»

Mohammed was a mentor at one of the first safe spaces in Dakace. At the time, she was a teacher at a secondary school. Sometimes she had up to 90 students in a class, and she was also raising eight children. But in her first weeks as a mentor, she was taken aback by how difficult it was to work with the 15 12-year-olds in her safe space. They were unruly, and fights broke out, often for trivial reasons such as someone’s hand accidentally brushing someone else’s. «Whenever I came back home after my safe space, I had terrible headaches,» Mohammed recalls. «I’d think, ‘Should I continue this work? Am I really meant for it?'»

Mohammed had grown up in a family of three girls and one boy. Her mother had always encouraged her and her sisters to do their best. «In Nigeria, if you have a girl child, people tend to look down on you, thinking that you have not gotten a boy child that will carry the name of the family, but my mother always made us understand that a girl can do what a boy can do,» Mohammed says. «Even when I was married and I was going to school, my mother was always there to support me, helping me in whatever way she could.»

Thinking about this made Mohammed feel a deep responsibility to the girls in her care, despite the challenges of the work. She and the other mentors began meeting regularly to swap stories and advice, in essence forming a safe space for one another. Gradually, the girls’ behavior began to improve.

Over time, the center’s mentors, who are all volunteers, have gotten better at helping adolescent girls with little to no real education. They’ve incorporated movement, storytelling, and singing into their lessons to teach basic literacy and numeracy skills. It has been a quietly radical experiment, this refusal to give up on girls from the poorest families.

Maryam Albashir joined the program as a mentor in 2010 and is now a team leader for CGE’s Transitions Out of School project. «One good thing about working with this center is you learn to accommodate everybody, whether or not you are of the same status, wherever you are from,» she says. «We don’t really have that in our schools in this country. You get spanked; you get punished. However the teachers want to treat you, they treat you. We were supposed to enroll about 30 girls in a school, but the principal rejected them, and her reason was that she didn’t see people of their caliber coming into school. She didn’t give them a chance; she just defined them.»

In Dakace, Muazu says, there has been a big shift in attitudes toward girls’ education. «People within the community started seeing the impact in the girls, so they got impressed. Right now, the number of girls who are in school is more than the number of boys because of the help from the center.»

Girls who have graduated from the safe spaces frequently stay on and become what the center calls «cascading mentors.» Now 22, Yusuf works on a CGE project called the Girls Campaign for Quality Education, which teaches girls how to advocate politically for better access to education. She is enrolled in college and is studying science education. She is not married. «I want to make sure that I marry a man who will allow me to continue my education,» she says.

Perlman believes that the Center for Girls’ Education is succeeding in its original goal of decreasing maternal mortality: According to his research, the age of marriage for girls who participate has been delayed by an average of 2.5 years. But even if this were not the case, he would deem the program a success because of the way it has transformed the lives of girls like Yusuf. His data shows that 80 percent of the girls who went through the program in its first few years went on to graduate from secondary school. Now 70, Perlman still travels to Zaria frequently to collaborate with Mohammed and other staff members on program design and implementation. «Even old white men can be allies,» he likes to say, «as long as they understand that the people who have the problem have the solution.»

NIGERIA IS THE SEVENTH-MOST-POPULOUS nation in the world, with just over 200 million people living in an area roughly twice the size of California. And it’s growing fast—Nigerian women have, on average, five children. By 2050, the country is projected to have the third-largest population, with more than 400 million people, the vast majority of whom will be under the age of 24. Tens of millions of young people will need education and employment opportunities along with basic services like sanitation and clean water. Without these, they will be mired in poverty and vulnerable to extremism in a country that already contends with Boko Haram and other terrorist groups.

Add to this list of challenges the impacts of climate change. Nigeria’s northern border is perched on the edge of the Sahel, the semiarid belt that stretches across the southern rim of the Sahara Desert. By 2050, average temperatures in the Sahel could rise by as much as 2°C. Hotter temperatures will mean drier soil that retains less moisture, and this will make it harder to grow food, especially for subsistence farmers.

Yusuf Sani Ahmed, an agricultural expert at Ahmadu Bello University, says he already sees the signs of climate change in Zaria. «The temperature can be 44 Celsius, which is high, and the streams are becoming drier and drier.» Because the water table is low, he says, there’s less vegetation, and livestock have become thin and malnourished.

Ahmed is on good terms with the herders whose cattle graze near his fields, but he says that shrinking arable land coupled with too much development is exacerbating conflicts between farmers and herders throughout the north; violent clashes are on the rise. «There’s less available land, and also not much is growing because things are drier,» he says. «It is so competitive.»

Girls’ education plays an indirect but crucial role in helping to alleviate these complex problems. The book Drawdown—a compendium of strategies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions—places girls’ education at number six on its list of the 100 most effective solutions to climate change. Aside from helping communities become more resilient, girls’ education has a significant effect on population growth. «Women with more years of education have fewer, healthier children and actively manage their reproductive health,» the Drawdown researchers say, noting that, on average, a woman with 12 years of schooling has four to five fewer children than a woman with no education.

In a report for the Brookings Institution, Christina Kwauk and Amanda Braga call girls’ education «one of the most overlooked yet formidable mechanisms for mitigating against weather-related catastrophes and adapting to the long-term effects of climate change.» But they also warn that fixating too much on population growth in low-income countries can be fraught with ethical problems. «For one,» they write, «it places the cost for reproductive decisions on girls and women in the Global South while ignoring other anthropogenic factors that contribute to climate.» For example, the average American produces 16 tons of greenhouse gas emissions annually, while the average Nigerian emits only .55 tons.

Ultimately, improving girls’ access to education around the world helps address the strain that an increasing number of people places on fragile resources—for example, arable land and fresh water—in a way that advances basic human rights for women and girls. «If universal education for girls were achieved tomorrow,» Kwauk and Braga write, «the population in 2050 could be smaller by 1.5 billion people.»

When I feel labor pains begin, I go to the hospital!
When I feel labor pains begin, I go to the hospital!

HABIBA MOHAMMED STANDS before a group of about 20 girls in a dim room with mud-brick walls in the village of Marwa, not far from Dakace. She is a guest at today’s gathering, and she leads the girls in a call-and-response about going into labor and giving birth. While she sings, she trembles, grabs her back as if in pain, and doubles over. The girls imitate her gestures, their pink, red, blue, and green hijabs billowing.

This safe space began less than a year ago. The mentor, Khadijah Mohammed (no relation to Habiba), says that when they started, none of the girls could write their names. «Now they can write their names, the name of their community, their parents’ names, and so many other things,» she says. Most of these girls have never been enrolled in school; now they are preparing to take a placement exam to enter primary school. «They have ambitions now,» Khadijah says. «Some of them want to become doctors, some teachers. They have hope for their future.»

Today’s lesson is mostly a review of reproductive health—hence, Habiba’s call-and-response. «How do you know when you are pregnant?» Khadijah asks. «Once you are pregnant, when should you go to the clinic?» The girls talk over one another to answer.

CGE’s safe space curriculum includes a field trip to a medical clinic. For many students, it’s the first time they’ve been to one. Sometimes this is because the nearest clinic is far from where they live. Their families’ low social status can also interfere. «When they go to the hospital, they don’t feel very confident with the workers, so they don’t get what they want,» Khadijah says. On the field trip, the girls talk to nurses, doctors, and women who have just given birth. «Some of [the students] are very shy to the doctor during that visit,» Khadijah says, «but some of them are confident. They ask questions.»

Operating in a religiously conservative area, CGE does not explicitly teach family planning. Nonetheless, the girls who take part in the safe spaces are more likely to use birth control than those who don’t, partly because of the greater exposure to information they receive in school.

In their study, Kwauk and Braga also argue that higher levels of education are associated with strong measures of agency—or, «the ability to make decisions about one’s life and act on them to achieve a desired outcome, free of violence, retribution, or fear.» For this reason, girls’ education complements family-planning services, which on their own aren’t always effective.

Despite the efforts of CGE and other organizations working to advance girls’ education, fewer than one in three girls in sub-Saharan Africa attends secondary school. Advocates say that if some climate-adaptation funds—which are often focused on expensive, highly technical solutions—were delivered to organizations that educate girls, this low-tech, equity-focused response to climate change could rapidly scale up.

But for Perlman, Mohammed, and others at CGE, that isn’t really the point. Their work is, above all, about fostering female agency. The center has flipped the script that usually accompanies Western-led aid and development programs in poorer nations. Female education isn’t an instrument to some other goal—it is the goal, with the broader environment representing a kind of co-benefit. And this is exactly why it works.

«Something has really taken place to make people better,» Mohammed says, «and it is helping more girls to be able to have the support of their parents to allow them to continue schooling and to really achieve something with their life.

Source of the notice: https://www.sierraclub.org/sierra/2019-6-november-december/feature/educating-girls-may-be-nigerias-best-hope-against-climate

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Programación del Portal Otras Voces en Educación del Domingo 23 de junio de 2019: hora tras hora (24×24)

23 de junio de 2019 / Autor: Editores OVE

 

Recomendamos la lectura del portal Otras Voces en Educación en su edición del día domingo 23 de junio de 2019. Esta selección y programación la realizan investigador@s del GT CLACSO «Reformas y Contrarreformas Educativas», la Red Global/Glocal por la Calidad Educativa, organización miembro de la CLADE y el Observatorio Internacional de Reformas Educativas y Políticas Docentes (OIREPOD) registrado en el IESALC UNESCO.

 

00:00:00 – Cientos de profesores ticos protestaron contra políticas lesivas

http://otrasvoceseneducacion.org/archivos/313343

01:00:00 – David Fernández de Arriba: “El cómic como herramienta didáctica presenta un lenguaje muy atractivo para los alumnos, en clase funciona muy bien”

http://otrasvoceseneducacion.org/archivos/312953

02:00:00 – Educación superior pública puede cubrir solo el 51% de la demanda en Ecuador

http://otrasvoceseneducacion.org/archivos/313357

03:00:00 – Condiciones para reformas educativas exitosas

http://otrasvoceseneducacion.org/archivos/313346

04:00:00 – Estados Unidos: El acoso escolar te pasará la factura… por 313 dólares

http://otrasvoceseneducacion.org/archivos/313362

05:00:00 – Otros 10 libros que todo docente debe leer

http://otrasvoceseneducacion.org/archivos/312672

06:00:00 – Libro: Violeta Parra, 100 años. Cuaderno Pedagógico (PDF)

http://otrasvoceseneducacion.org/archivos/313462

07:00:00 – Chernobil educativo en Cataluña

http://otrasvoceseneducacion.org/archivos/313376

08:00:00 – Libro: El aprendizaje en la infancia y la adolescencia. Claves para evitar el fracaso escolar (PDF)

http://otrasvoceseneducacion.org/archivos/313474

09:00:00 – “Ser un buen docente significa sacar a la luz lo mejor de cada alumno”: Rosa María Espot y Jaime Nubiola

http://otrasvoceseneducacion.org/archivos/313454

10:00:00 – Manual: Educación Inclusiva y de Calidad, Un Derecho de Todos (PDF)

http://otrasvoceseneducacion.org/archivos/313470

11:00:00 – Cómo gestionar el ESTRÉS DOCENTE con éxito

http://otrasvoceseneducacion.org/archivos/312975

12:00:00 – ¿En qué países pasa más tiempo la gente leyendo?

http://otrasvoceseneducacion.org/archivos/313372

13:00:00 – 10 mejores universidades del mundo #infografia #infographic #education

http://otrasvoceseneducacion.org/archivos/313458

14:00:00 – España: Las Universidades sufren un ‘tijeretazo’ de 9.500 millones de euros entre 2010 y 2017

http://otrasvoceseneducacion.org/archivos/313433

15:00:00 – Seis Contradicciones de la Reforma Educativa de la 4T

http://otrasvoceseneducacion.org/archivos/313368

16:00:00 – Chile: Trabajadores acusan que quieren mercantilizar la educación preescolar

http://otrasvoceseneducacion.org/archivos/313438

17:00:00 – Cinco canales de Youtube para estudiar Biología

http://otrasvoceseneducacion.org/archivos/312979

18:00:00 – Libro: Perspectivas decoloniales sobre la educación (PDF)

http://otrasvoceseneducacion.org/archivos/313480

19:00:00 – ¿Cuál es el secreto de los grandes maestros?

http://otrasvoceseneducacion.org/archivos/313443

20:00:00 – Muchos mitos: Docentes y tecnologías digitales (Video)

http://otrasvoceseneducacion.org/archivos/313488

21:00:00 – Sistema educativo del reino unido #infografia #infographic #education

http://otrasvoceseneducacion.org/archivos/313495

22:00:00 – Keleher reaparece con una columna sobre la pobreza en Puerto Rico y el efecto en los estudiantes

http://otrasvoceseneducacion.org/archivos/313451

23:00:00 – Ecología para niños. Libro infantil digital para educación ambiental. Pdf gratis

http://otrasvoceseneducacion.org/archivos/313492

En nuestro portal Otras Voces en Educación (OVE) encontrará noticias, artículos, libros, videos, entrevistas y más sobre el acontecer educativo mundial cada hora.

ove/mahv

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Surge in demand for schools leaves councils struggling to cope

By: Richard Adams. 

Thousands of pupils in England denied place at their preferred secondary school

Councils across England are struggling to keep pace with rising numbers of applications for secondary school, leaving thousands of pupils without a place at any of their preferred schools.

More than 600,000 families across England and Wales were told on Friday which secondary school their children would go to in September – but in many areas there was disappointment, with shrinking proportions receiving their first choice.

According to some estimates, as many as one in four families did not get their first preference in England. Labour blamed the government policies that took the power to create new schools away from local authorities.

The problem appeared most acute in London, the south-east and other big cities such as Bristol and Birmingham, where the twin impacts of the post-2006 baby boom and population inflows have been most keenly felt.

Nick Gibb, the schools minister for England, said: “This government is determined to create more choice for parents when it comes to their children’s education and we have created 825,000 school places since 2010, and are on track to see that number rise to a million by 2020.”

But Angela Rayner, the shadow education secretary, said: “In the years ahead, more and more children will miss out on a secondary school place unless we urgently provide new places across the country. The Tories have made it harder for councils to act on their legal obligation to provide new school places, with an inefficient free schools programme making it harder for them to create new places where they are needed.”

In Greater London, less than two-thirds of children received their first preference of school as the total number of applications rose again. This year 95,300 requests for places were received by the 33 London boroughs, compared with about 80,000 five years ago.

The number of families in London who failed to received a place at any of their named choices rose by 12%, with 7,250 either offered another school or unallocated.

Nickie Aiken, the leader of Westminster council and the London councils’ executive member for schools, said London’s boroughs had provided a preferred place for 92% of applicants. “It is vital that all children in London have access to a high-quality education, and London boroughs are working with their local schools to respond to increased demand across the capital,” she said. “We are also committed to working with central government to continue our good work in addressing school place pressures.”

Lambeth supplanted Hammersmith and Fulham as the hardest borough for parents to obtain their first choice, with just 55% doing so this year. Havering had the highest proportion of first-choice allocations with 77%, while rising demand for places in Newham caused a fall in the percentage of first choices being filled from 70% to 65%.

In the south-east, Essex county council reported a fall in the numbers gaining their first preference – to 84%, down from 88% two years ago. The fall was in spite of three new secondary schools opening in September.

A similar picture was seen in Birmingham, where the increasing number of children moving from primary to secondary school led to the proportion getting their first preference dipping below 70%. The number of those without any of their choices jumped by 40% to more than 850.

In Bristol, nearly 500 of the 5,000 families applying for a secondary school place didn’t receive any of their named choices and were allocated an alternative by the council, while only 72% of applicants received their first preference.

Outside the big cities, many local authorities could boast of first-choice allocations above 90%, including Devon, Cumbria, Somerset and the East Riding of Yorkshire, where the councils reported that 94% of families had received their first preference.

In Cardiff, the proportion receiving their first choice rose to 88%. That figure could rise if some families turn down places at community high schools in favour of faith schools.

Source of the article: https://www.theguardian.com/education/2019/mar/01/surge-in-demand-for-schools-leaves-councils-struggling-to-cope
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Dreams of the daughters: how a school in Zambia is tackling education for girls

By: Julia Rampen. 

George Mumbi lives in rural northern Zambia, where umbrella-like trees cast shadows on the red earth and there are few roads. The unusual thing about George is that he sent his daughter to secondary school. In Zambia, high schools charge fees, and in George’s community of subsistence farmers most families plough what money they have into educating their sons. But George’s daughter was among those teenage girls who set off from their homes in the bush and began the long journey to boarding school.

Parents in rural districts often prefer their children to live on campus, rather than walk several hours a day or rent alone near the school. They have less control over the journey to boarding school itself. In Kasama, a city in northern Zambia, trains packed with students can be delayed for hours or even overnight. It was on one of these journeys to school that George’s daughter became pregnant. “That’s why she dropped out of school,” he explained, through a translator.

“If you educate a woman, you educate a nation.” In the past two decades, this Ghanaian proverb has become the blueprint for international aid. The commitment to girls’ primary education was enshrined in the UN’s Millennium Development Goals. The UK’s Department for International Development runs the largest global fund dedicated to girls’ education. The charity Campaign for Female Education has produced research showing that for every year a girl is educated at secondary level, her earnings go up, her chances of contracting HIV go down and she will marry later. And if donors are still not persuaded, there’s the promise that she will “resist gender-based violence and discrimination, and change her community from within”.

The message is an irresistible blend of pragmatism and feminism. But while in Zambia most girls receive a basic education, fewer than half go on to secondary school. The biggest issue is fees. But even when this obstacle is removed, there are still additional challenges for girls.

I recently visited Peas Kampinda Secondary School, a short drive outside the sleepy town of Kasama. The school is the result of a partnership between the educational charity Peas (Promoting Equality in African Schools) and the Zambian government. When parents in the local area heard that there was to be a free high school, which would also serve lunch, the prospect sounded so good that they worried there was a catch.

At Peas Kampinda, girls are treated equally. The student body is 51 per cent female, including a cohort who board on campus. But nevertheless, teachers at Peas are aware that expectations are different at home. One girl used to turn up late, while her brother appeared on time. “She was given extra housework compared to the boy,” said Chola Kunda, one of the school’s female teachers, smartly dressed in a black skirt, white blouse and earrings. “After talking to the parents, the situation has changed. That girl is now coming to school on time.” Not only that, but the girl’s parents now ask the brother to clean the house as well. “There’s gender equality in the home,” Chola told me.

Girls who rent rooms nearby face a different kind of challenge: stigma from the locals. “They perceive them as prostitutes,” Chola said. Again, the school intervened, holding meetings with the community to encourage acceptance of the girls.

A girl’s future is even more likely to be set off kilter through teenage pregnancy. At Kampinda, during a student debate, I watched teenage girls stand up in front of a hundred of their peers and argue against sex education in schools. “When a person starts learning about sex, they are going to be concentrating on that subject,” one girl railed. Both sides, though, seemed passionate about the same issue: preventing teenage pregnancies. “No wonder we have poverty in our country,” one defender of sex education lamented. “Because of early marriages and teen pregnancies.”

Zambia is a deeply Christian country, and it is rare to see a school or municipal building that lacks a framed portrait of Jesus. This makes it harder to carry out simple intitiatives such as distributing contraceptives. Legal abortion is difficult to access, and Claire Albrecht, a local aid worker, has encountered many girls who have turned to traditional medicine rather than drop out of school. But such methods are risky. “There was a girl in a village where we stayed. It was her third time, and she died.”

Schools such as Peas Kampinda have had success encouraging young mothers to return to education. But for some girls, dropping out seems the easy option. “I went to school when bullying was at its peak,” Chola recalled. It was an entrenched system that she described as “hell. A lot of people left school because of it.”

But Chola’s older sister was paying for the fees. Having frequently been pulled out of school herself to take care of her siblings, she urged Chola to stick with it. Now 32, Chola is a strong advocate of the Peas child protection policy. “A teacher in this school is very empowered and concerned about protecting children in school,” she said. There is also zero tolerance of corporal punishment.

In the playground at Kampinda, meanwhile, the girls in which so much hope is invested eat their lunch, laugh about boys and ask me questions. “I want to be a surgeon,” one said. “I want to be a lawyer,” another told me. “I want to be a pirate,” a third said with a smile. The girls, mostly boarders, are glad to be at a school where the older years can’t force them to do chores and the teachers won’t beat them up. They have dreams of travelling after school, to neighbouring countries, even to London. “There is a lot of housework [at home], so it’s better we stay here,” said Patience Kabwe, one of the boarders. “We don’t have much time to do that – it’s just half an hour of sweeping. Most of the time we spend studying.”

Source of the notice: https://www.newstatesman.com/world/africa/2019/01/dreams-daughters-how-school-zambia-tackling-education-girls

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Paula Tesoriero: Inclusive education produces better outcomes for all

Oceania/ New Zeland/ 21.11.2018/ Source: www.nzherald.co.nz.

All children in New Zealand bring diverse backgrounds and needs to their education and every child deserves to have those differences acknowledged meaningfully. So it was disappointing to read last Wednesday’s editorial in this newspaper, «One in five pupils now need help with learning disorders«, which implied these children were a problem in schools.

Inclusive education means all children can attend the school of their first choice and receive the support they need to thrive alongside their peers – everyone is welcome and all students learn in a way that suits their individual needs. The system needs to change to fit individuals and not the other way around.

Internationally, it has been found that learning which benefits all students not just some, produces better outcomes for all. A 2017 review of 280 studies from 25 countries found clear and consistent evidence that inclusive educational settings can confer substantial short- and long-term benefits for students with and without disabilities. These include stronger skills in reading and mathematics, higher rates of attendance, reduced behavioural problems, and increased likelihood of students completing secondary school.

Disabled people make up 24 per cent of the population, but disabled children are not getting a fair go in the education system. That is a huge chunk of New Zealanders we are letting down. I continue to hear stories about disabled children being discriminated against in the classroom or not being able to access the resources they need.

Multiple reviews and reports over several years have shown the education system is not working for disabled students. Significant outstanding issues for the system include under-resourcing, a lack of good accountability mechanisms, lack of data and options and a lack of training and support for teachers. We’ve known this for a long while, New Zealand just has not addressed these issues meaningfully and comprehensively.

All this can result in low aspirations, discrimination, an underlying expectation that disabled students should be segregated or siloed or that they are taking resources away from others. Many children and their families have experience of the frustration of just wanting to access a quality education and having to fight for inclusion.

The Ministry of Education is leading big educational reforms at the moment. The recent announcement of 600 learning support co-ordinators in classrooms by 2020 is a small step in the right direction. But it does not go far enough.

I am really hoping these reforms shift the system-level issues. This is a critical time for our education system and the impact our system will have on future generations.

Rather than talking about young disabled people being the problem, New Zealand needs to make the most of these reforms and talk about how we create an education system that is fit for purpose for all children.

Source of the notice: https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=12162766

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Bumpy kickoff to Sierra Leone’s free education program

Africa/SierraLeone/26.09.18/Source: www.africanews.com.

Some two million children in Sierra Leone went back to school on Monday in a key test of the country’s landmark free education programme for primary and high school students.

It was a key election pledge of President Julius Maada Bio, who took office in early April. Bio has said he will donate three months of his salary to the scheme, which covers school fees and supplies.

Schools were packed on Monday and some pupils were unable to get in due to a lack of space.

“We turned down 30 percent of the kids seeking admission at our school due to lack of sitting accommodation. We will not exceed the teacher-pupil ratio of 50 per class,” said Florence Kuyembeh, principal of a girls’ secondary school in the capital Freetown.

But outside, one mother was in tears after her child was turned away for lack of places.

“I’m very disappointed with the free education (scheme). The school failed to admit my kid to the school of her choice due to lack of space,” Safiatu Sesay told AFP.

And others had concerns about just how much of the costs the government was actually going to cover.

“We are happy for the free quality education but the government had promised during the election to provide our children with books, uniform, shoes and school buses but they only paid for school fees,” another parent called Idrissa Kamara told AFP.

Last week, Finance Minister Jacob Jusu Saffa said the government had paid the fees for 1.1 million children in nearly 3,500 schools and would be picking up the tab for another 158,000 pupils.

Despite vast mineral and diamond deposits, Sierra Leone is one of the world’s poorest countries and half of the population over the age of 15 is illiterate, according to a UNESCO2015 report.

It is trying to recover from the social and economic fallout from a long civil war, and more recently, an outbreak of Ebola which killed 4,000 people between 2014 and 2016.

But its economy remains fragile and corruption is widespread.

Source of the notice: http://www.africanews.com/2018/09/19/bumpy-kickoff-to-sierra-leone-s-free-education-program/

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