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Progress towards the development target of achieving gender parity in education by 2015 may be inconsistent, but there are noteworthy successes. What do they teach us about addressing child labour and exploring interaction between early education and women’s empowerment?
A chapter in UNESCO’s 2003 Education for All Global Monitoring Report synthesises a wide range of international experience. Highlighting the policy changes that have been important in pioneering states, where rapid progress towards Education for All (EFA) has been made, it focuses on women as active agents of transformation of education systems that discriminate against gender.
It is vital to understand child labour, while meeting the needs of working children and addressing concerns of their parents, in order to allow children to enter and perform well in classrooms. The need for children to work is one of the most important causes of under-enrolment in school. Measures to reduce or remove the need for child labour are required to boost enrolment among girls and boys. Offering pensions to the elderly can have an indirect effect on reducing child labour.
UNESCO makes a powerful case that school feeding programmes help schoolgirls. Bangladesh’s national Food for Education (FFE) programme illustrates how food incentives – provided as meals or snacks at school or dry food rations to take home – can significantly increase the enrolment and retention of girls in school. In India there is evidence that in areas with school feeding programmes, early primary school retention rates for girls are higher than for boys. UNESCO warns, however, that these ‘successes’ may be accompanied by deteriorating quality – girls attracted by Bangladesh’s FFE have found themselves in huge classes.
Early childhood care and education (ECCE) is supportive of gender balance in primary education. The informal, learner-centred and activity-focused learning in pre-schools enables girls to subsequently survive the more formal teacher-centred learning they encounter in school.
Among the dozens of innovatory schemes that could be applied in other countries are:
UNESCO stresses the crucial role of states in promoting EFA but also highlights the need to:
Source(s):
‘EFA Global Monitoring Report 2003’ UNESCO chapter four, November 2003, Full document.
Funded by: Jointly by UNESCO and bilateral agencies
id21 Research Highlight: 20 May 2004
Further Information:
Ulrika Peppler Barry
EFA Global Monitoring Report Team
c/o UNESCO
7, place de Fontenoy
75352 Paris 07 SP
France
Tel:
+33 1 45 68 21 28
Fax:
+33 1 45 68 56 27
Contact the contributor: efareport@unesco.org
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'Going into a decline? Assessing global aid flows to education'
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'The missing 65 million: getting girls into school'
'Class struggles: the challenges of achieving schooling for all' Insights
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