Girls’ Right to Education programme launched

By: Maryam Usman

ISLAMABAD: The government and the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (Unesco) have launched a three-year programme to provide quality education to girls, especially in the country’s more remote areas.

Speaking at the inaugural ceremony of the Girls’ Right to Education programme on Thursday, Minister of State for Federal Education and Professional Training Balighur Rehman said that despite many challenges the government is committed to improving the standard of education.

The government, according to the minister, would welcome Malala Yousafzai if she intends to return to the country and provide her security.

The $7 million programme is funded under the Malala Funds-in-Trust agreement signed by Unesco Director General Irina Bokova and Balighur Rehman.

“Despite tremendous progress in access to education worldwide since 2000, there is still a long way to go,” Bokova said in a video statement. “Approximately 31 million (55%) girls are out of primary schools worldwide, including 3 million girls in Pakistan.”

She said that the new sustainable development goals (SDGs), that were recently agreed, has fully recognised access to education as a basic human right which is essential for sustainable development.

Unesco representative Vibeke Jensen said that the programme will be implemented over the next three years in 12 districts representing all the provinces and areas of the country.

The aim is to get 50,000 more girls enrolled in primary schools, increase their retention and improve learning outcomes, she added.

The programme, which will be implemented through civil society organisations, aims at supporting the government’s efforts in increasing access and improving the quality of girls’ education in remote districts of the country with low enrolment and poor retention rate of girls at primary level.

“There is a 10% gender gap of net enrollment rate between girls and boys in our country and we have vowed to eliminate this gap while targeting 100% net enrolment rate in the coming years,” the federal minister said.

Published in The Express Tribune, October 9th, 2015.

In an earlier version, the amount $7 million was incorrectly stated as $7 billion. The error is regretted and has been corrected.

Express Tribune

Listen to Malala’s message

By: Talat Masood

The writer is a retired lieutenant general of the Pakistan Army and served as chairman of the Pakistan Ordnance Factories Board

Our leaders have a lot to learn from Malala Yousufzai. She is clearly one of the most powerful messengers in raising awareness about education. “This award is not just for me. It is for those forgotten children who want education”, her words reflect her deep concern for the millions who are out of school. In this hour of darkness, she is a voice of reason and hope. But are we listening? The national and provincial leaderships did congratulate Malala on receiving the Nobel Prize, but Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P), the province of her birth and domicile, was miserly and remains divided over paying her the tribute that she so richly deserves. Initially, the ruling party wanted the resolution to be clubbed with the demand for the release of Aafia Siddiqui, who is in prison in the US on charges of murder. Later, when an MPA from the ANP floated a resolution that Malala’s achievement be recognised, it was trivialised by stating that it is “not a matter of national or provincial interest”. It shows how casual and half-hearted is the support for her in the struggle for education. It is depressing that instead of being jubilant on Malala’s recognition as a global icon, there prevails some sort of collective confusion and inferiority complex in our society about her outstanding achievement. If this is the attitude of the provincial government, how can anyone expect that it will provide her security if ever she were to return?

In sharp contrast, as Professor Emeritus Tahir Andrabi of Pomona College in a recent article in The Wall Street Journal points out, “when Malala accepted the Nobel Prize in Oslo, the accompanying pomp and press coverage helped rekindle a global fascination with the fearless young Pakistani activist”. The struggle and the commitment that she brings with her in promoting education worldwide are unparalleled for a girl of her age.

Malala’s message, along with that of joint Nobel Peace Prize awardee Kailash Satyarthi, goes even deeper by identifying some of the underlying causes that are distracting the two nations and particularly Pakistan from investing in education. The perpetual conflict between India and Pakistan is costing the two countries heavily in terms of forcing them to divert meagre resources to defence and depriving the most critical areas in education, health and development of physical infrastructure. At a time when Narendra Modi is stoking Hindu nationalism and Pakistan is bristling with multiple militant outfits and the Line of Control remains volatile, the sobering call of the young Malala and the seasoned Satyarthi are voices of sanity and calm.

The Taliban hate Malala because they are afraid of the message that she is giving to every child of arming themselves by going to school. The Taliban are clever enough to understand that an educated society would be their greatest enemy, especially so if girls are afforded equal opportunities. The enlightened and liberated mind of a girl will be more powerful than any weapon that the Taliban have in their armoury. It will break the walls of ignorance and prejudice and empower women to be equal partners in society.

It is the fundamental responsibility of every leader to promote quality education. One of the major reasons Pakistan lags behind the rest of the world is the denial of education to millions of children and its low quality. Pakistan’s full potential can only be actualised if the state is able to provide an easily accessible system of education that meets at least minimum global standards. After the promulgation of the Eighteenth Amendment, education has become a provincial subject. As provinces are the primary authority now, they should improve the performance of schools through better management and funding through local taxes and subsidies or through grants from the federal government. Public pressure should be built to ensure universal entitlement and improvement in standards. It is reprehensible that 43 per cent of children in Pakistan are in private schools compared with less than one per cent in some of the Scandinavian countries. Only when the system is fair will we be able to produce quality doctors, engineers, scientists, economists and professionals of other disciplines, generating wealth in the country.

The world is going through a revolution in education and spectacular progress has been made that has broken social barriers and provided equal opportunities to millions globally. Our leaders, being half-educated at best, are unable to comprehend the enormous transformational power of education. The PML-N’s project of providing financial resources to the poor so that they could earn a respectable living by starting small businesses or owning a taxi is a good one, but it should not end here as the real enabler that can transform society is education. Pakistan currently ranks 113 amongst 120 countries of the world, with only a 56 per cent literacy rate. According to the World Bank, Pakistan has seven million out-of-school children and two-thirds among them are girls. This is happening despite the fact that parliament, in 2010, passed a constitutional amendment making it mandatory for all children between the ages of five and 16 to attend school. Even by South Asian standards, which are one of the more deficient in the world, Pakistan is at the bottom. No country can bear the burden of such a large percentage of the population being unable to read or write in the present global setting. Pakistan remains exploited by the ruling classes that deny the majority of its population the economic opportunities that open up with education. Our leaders are afraid that if education spreads, then it could become an economic leveler and a precursor to a social evolution. The universalisation of education through a national curriculum that is commensurate with generally accepted standards can transform Pakistan. If Pakistan claims to be a democratic and just society, then it must ensure the spread of education to all tiers of society. This would also be the best way of complimenting Malala’s noble mission.

Express Tribune

Punjab to name college after Malala

MINGORA: A schoolteacher hailing from Gujrat in Punjab has decided to establish a college in the name of Malala Yousafzai.

Speaking at a press conference in Swat Press Club on Thursday, schoolteacher Ihsanul Haq said that he had intended to set up a college in Jalalpur area in Gujrat, which would be named after Malala Yousafzai.

“Establishing a college is aimed at promoting education and provide education opportunities to the girl students on international level,” he said. He said that progress and prosperity of the country was in educating the nation and no country could achieve economic stability without educating the people. “Malala Yousafzai’s steps for promoting girls education in the region are appreciable,” schoolteacher Ihsanul Haq added.

The News

25 girls’ schools upgraded to middle level in Balochistan

QUETTA: Save the Children with the financial support of The Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands has successfully implemented the Balochistan Education Programme (BEP) in collaboration with the provincial education department.

The geographic focus of the programme, over the last five years, were three provincial districts Mastung, Killa Abdullah and the provincial capital.

Under this programme, 25 girls’ schools have been upgraded from primary level to middle level, 10 girls’ schools have been upgraded from middle to high level, 105 early childhood education centres have been developed, 200 schools have been provided with washrooms, boundary walls, water tanks, flooring and renovation.

Moreover, the BEP also provided support to the education department to enhance its plan, budget and management capacities through the establishment of education management information systems (EMIS) in the three focused districts.

Besides, 1,100 teachers have been trained on child-friendly teaching methodologies, child protection, positive discipline, disaster-risk reduction, school health and nutrition and child-focused health education.

Furthermore, 300 teachers were also trained on the national curriculum of early childhood education. The government officials were also trained on education of leadership management and the faculty of Provincial Institute for Teacher Education (PITE) was trained on peace education and emergent literacy and math.

Under “BEP, Literacy Boost: an innovative”, evidence-based action research was piloted in 20 schools and communities of the provincial capital wherein 24 teachers were trained on pedagogies of basic reading skills while numeracy boost action research was piloted in 18 schools and communities to enhance the capacity of 18 teachers on number and operations, measurement and geometry. Dutch Ambassador Marcel de Vink, Education Secretary Saboor Ahmed Kakar and representatives of other civil society organisations attended the event.

Giving a detailed presentation on the achievements of BEP, Save the Children Manager Education and Child Development Haroon Rasheed Kasi briefed the audience about the successful implementation and milestones of BEP.

“The construction of science and computer laboratories in the 10 upgraded girls’ schools along with the training of teachers and 300 secondary grade students of these schools on information communication technology is a major step towards providing quality and modern education to the girls of Balochistan,” he said. “Education and development are for everyone. Education drives a country forward. It brings growth, prosperity and development at all levels of society, to men and women, young and old. It is also an essential sector in Pakistan and Netherlands, for a very long time, has been supporting the women and girls’ education,” Dutch Ambassador Marcel de Vink said.

Provincial Education Secretary Saboor Khan Kakar appreciated the efforts of Save the Children to support girls’ education and thanked the Dutch government for their technical and facial support. During the closing ceremony, students from various schools presented plays to express their feeling in order to show the impact of the Balochistan Education Programme. With their performances, they highlighted the importance of school health and nutrition activities and stressed that cleanliness was an integral part of a healthy and successful school life.

Key stakeholders of the Balochistan Education Programme were also presented shields to appreciate their coordination, support and contribution.

Daily Times

Report on girls education launched

LAHORE: The annual report of Plan International Pakistan (PIP), a child rights non-government organisation, titled ‘Pathways to Power Creating Sustainable Change for Adolescent Girls’ claims that denied education; forced into marriages and subjected to violence; no one bears the brunt of poverty more than girls.

The launch ceremony and a seminar on the achievements of Early Childhood Education campaign were held at a hotel on Thursday. Education Minister Rana Mashhood, Population Welfare Minister Zakia Shahnawaz, Acting-PIP Country Director Imran Shami, PIP Advocacy Manager Safdar Raza, Directorate of Staff Development (DSD) Programme Director Ehsan Bhutta, MPAs Lubna Faisal, Raheela Khadim Hussain, Dr Alia Aftab and Shameela Aslam addressed the seminar while members of civil society, journalists, and students of different universities and community members from Layyah, Muzafargarh and Rajanpur Districts attended it.

The PIP’s ‘Because I am a Girl’ campaign calls for girls education to be prioritised by world leaders; provision of quality secondary education to girls be a major focus of international action; funding for girls education to be increased; bringing an end to child marriages; an end to gender-based violence in and around schools; and allowing girls and boys to participate in decision-making and inspire those with power to take action.

Mashhood said that the government was giving priority to ECE campaign in the province. He said that by establishing over 1,100 ECE centres in the province, Punjab was far ahead of other province in giving attention to ECE goal.

Shahnawaz called for meaningful participation of girls and women in nation-building efforts.
Shami demanded investment in girls’ education with focus on the ECE and bringing violence against girls to an end. Bhutta emphasised the need for scaling up the ECE model introduced by the PIP.

Daily Times