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In Bangladesh, primary schools are often neglected, run-down or
non-existent, and the enrolment of young children does not keep
pace with population growth. Schools in the formal education system
are spread out, costly and have rigid hours. Overcrowding, a lack
of educational material and under-trained teachers lead to a high
dropout rate and poor performance. There especially is strong resistance
to educating girls, who typically attend school for less than a
year. The Non-Formal Primary Education Program run by BRAC, a large
Bangladesh non-governmental organization, has established 34,000
schools across the country that provide basic education to 1.1 million
children in Grades 1 to 5, two-thirds of whom are girls. The low-cost
program is designed to meet the needs of students and families by
encouraging class hours that allow children to help out with farm
work or household chores, strong parent involvement, a local network
of schools, continuous training for teachers, a more relevant curriculum,
small class sizes and plenty of time for activities such as singing,
dancing, storytelling and games.
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Families in East Africa find that they have few educational options
for young children, or are limited to religion-based madrasas that
do not offer well-rounded and stimulating pre-school programs. The
highly successful Madrasa Regional Program in East Africa aims to
develop and institutionalize a model for quality, community-based
early childhood education, which contributes in the longer term
to better results for children and higher levels of educational
attainment. The program was started in the early 1980s to enable
poor communities to provide their young children with quality education
through an integrated curriculum, grounded on international expertise
in early childhood education. The children, both boys and girls,
thrive in an active, stimulating and creative learning environment.
The curriculum and schools are highly responsive to parental expectations
that children be socialized into the cultural mores of the community.
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With adult literacy rates of 40% for men and 5% for women in parts
of Pakistan, education is crucial for the future of a country caught
in a cycle of crisis. The AKFC-financed Institute for Educational
Development is addressing this issue by training teachers in child-centered
methods of teaching, and working with the government to improve
its teacher training, curriculum and educational policies. As well,
the Teachers' Resource Centre provides a central forum for information
and discussion on educational issues, as well as advice, materials
and training for teachers, supervisors and school heads who wish
to improve their practice at pre-school and primary levels. The
programs are enhancing the quality of education and learning throughout
Pakistan, and in other developing countries throughout Asia and
Africa.
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