USAID helps thousands of children into education in Pakistan’s Sindh province

Barriers to education, Education funding, Girls' education, Right to education, Teachers and learning

The programme includes enrolling 100,000 girls, improving reading for 750,000 children and helping 25,000 teachers increase their skills.


It’s an uphill battle trying to deliver education for every child in Pakistan’s Sindh province. More than 2.8 million children are out of school and the government admitted in 2014 that 40% of classrooms were closed.

Sindh’s education minister announced earlier this year that “sincere efforts” are being made as part of a nationwide enrolment drive. It has increased its spending on education by 24%.

In the meantime, one programme is making a significant difference in encouraging children to go to school and improving their reading skills.

USAID (US Agency for International Development) has been supporting the Sindh Basic Education Programme (SBEP) with a grant of $165 million. Its progress was reviewed this week when聽Sindh Chief Minister Murad Ali Shah met high-ranking US officials in the capital Karachi.

Murad – who said he had declared a state of emergency over education – added: 国产视频淭he SBEP aims to improve the quality of education and increase the number of students enrolled in schools. The programme is being implemented in seven districts of northern Sindh and five towns of Karachi.”

The programme includes:

  • Building 106 new schools with 1400 classrooms in flood-affected and other areas
  • Improving the reading and numeracy skills of 750,000 children over five years
  • Engaging up to 400 communities in the construction, operation and maintenance of schools over five years
  • Establishing effective public-private partnerships to manage these schools and ensure enrolment of at least 100,000 girls
  • Increasing the knowledge and skills of 25,000 primary school teachers

国产视频淚t also aimed at providing non-formal educational opportunities to 100,000 out-of-school children to enable 50,000 to transit to formal schools,国产视频 said Chief Minister Murad.

Sikander Ali Kalhoro is one of the thousands of children who have been helped so far.聽Now 14, he was out of school and working at the age of 11.

Sikander, from the village of聽Wasu Kalhoro, said:聽国产视频淚 steered a donkey cart and sold sweets聽to support my family.聽

“Our village elders聽in the School Management Committee聽and community mobilisation programme聽team motivated me to go to聽school like other students.聽They made聽me realise the importance of education.”

The day he started school, he said, he “was calling villagers during the聽enrolment walk to send their children聽to school国产视频.

The Sindh provincial government has also partnered聽with Rotary International to equip science and computer labs in schools and to provide reading material to 1100 school libraries.

Sadly, nearly a third聽of primary school students in Sindh are unable to read a聽story in either Sindhi or Urdu.聽

As part of the聽Sindh Reading Programme, the education department told all primary public schools to include a聽35-minute reading period in their classes each day.聽

Student Mohammed Saleem said: “One day our teacher announced that we will have a daily聽reading period in which we will be allowed to read books and also take them聽home.聽

“Our excitement saw no end and since then there is no stopping us.国产视频澛



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