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Robert Gallucci

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The Power Of Educating Girls

Posted: 06/04/2012 11:30 am

Around the world, 35 million girls who should be in primary or secondary school are not; half of them are in sub-Saharan Africa, according to the World Bank. For those of us committed to addressing global poverty, improving education for girls may be the closest thing to a silver bullet.

More education for girls brings well demonstrated benefits for them. Girls with higher levels of education marry later, have smaller families, survive childbirth at higher rates, experience reduced incidences of HIV/AIDS, have children more likely to survive to age five and earn more money.

The benefits of education extend beyond individual students to whole societies. Sixty-five low- and middle-income countries lose approximately $92 billion per year by failing to educate girls to the same standards as boys. A 12 percent reduction in world poverty could be achieved if all students in low-income countries obtain basic reading skills in school, according to the Brookings Institution's Center for Universal Education.

In recent decades, there has been significant progress toward the goal of universal primary education. But participation rates are much lower at secondary levels, especially in developing countries and particularly for girls. Sub-Saharan Africa has a primary school enrollment rate of 77 percent, but secondary level enrollment is only 36 percent. In India, enrollment rates at the secondary level are also very low, at 57 percent, with girls underrepresented. Yet there is a growing demand for qualified workers equipped with twenty-first century skills. In developing countries with large and growing populations of youth, education is key to future economic growth.

Despite increasing demand for secondary education among would-be students and the needs of employers for skilled workers, expanding access to high school for the general population in developing countries, particularly for girls and the most marginalized, is not an easy task. Secondary education is more costly than primary to deliver. But new technologies, including mobile phones and open educational resources, could provide powerful ways to reach under-served populations at low cost. Such technologies could also help train a new cadre of teachers, especially female teachers, who are in short supply. Responsibility for providing education is diversifying with efforts by low-cost private providers complementing those of governments. New public-private partnerships offer real opportunities to expand both girls' access to education and quality of learning.

Partnerships that engage governments, non-governmental organizations, the private sector, and foundations are critical to fostering such innovation. Already, the United Kingdom's Department for International Development is providing $518 million to enroll girls in primary and secondary education, reduce drop-out rates, and make sure girls come away with core skills. The Clinton Global Initiative this year identified education as one of its four focal areas and will seek major new donor commitments. In a new partnership, several private foundations plan to jointly support innovative initiatives that provide learning opportunities and life and livelihood skills for under-served youth, including girls, in East Africa, Nigeria, and India.

More participation and more funding are surely needed. However, funding alone will not educate the next generation of girls. New approaches and new ideas are also required. Progress cannot come fast enough for girls and their communities in the developing world.

 
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08:10 PM on 06/05/2012
Start by banning lslam.....overnight school enrollment of girls will skyrocket.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fran Jaime
Yo Soy 132!
01:41 PM on 06/07/2012
And cults like the one the Duggars are in! You know, the one that favors bearing an endless amount of kids and no education for girls because they are simply "vessels".
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sallybutt45
To thine own self be true.
02:28 AM on 06/08/2012
What are they calling themselves? Quiver something, I watched a documentary about them some time back. Submissive baby makers, kind of like the polygamy people.
10:55 AM on 06/05/2012
Very well written. Topics like this are also discussed in "Beneath the Sky", as I don't think people realize how important it is to provide education to girls in our country and in others.
02:03 PM on 06/05/2012
girls education has been and continues to be advocated by many world institutions and has drastically increased the number of girls enrolled. but people need to realize simply enrolling girls in schools is not going to lead to significant gains, especially when quality from overcrowding exists, along with strong distrust of the western institutions that promote these initiatives. also big institutions, especially the gates foundation, clinton found. and WB consistently promote these increases in technology when technology has proven to not only be costly but ineffective. the one-laptop intiative was a complete failure. we need to support the governments and the teachers that implement basic education and stop looking at expensive quick fixes that are based on the most recent fad.
02:40 PM on 06/05/2012
Well said, because local customs and laws must also change. It is in vain to provide schools for girls if they will be beaten for attending, subjected to violence from others because they attend, or given little in terms of rights or protections based upon their gender and status within that society.
10:40 PM on 06/04/2012
Thank you for posting on this important topic! One of my heros is Greg Mortenson, who co-founded the Central Asian Institute. The incredible organization is fighting terrorism, religious extremism, and sexism with education. As Greg often quotes, "When you educate a boy, you educate an individual. When you educate a girl, you educate a community".
02:09 PM on 06/05/2012
greg mortenson and his organization have been somewhat in hot water over how they use their funds (appears to be more funding geared towards marketing his books than his schools) and the fact that many of his stories may not actually be true (the latter fraud really isnt that big of a deal). it should also be noted that CAI and many organizations like them, appear to care more about the number of schools (so actually building structures) than long term financing and sustainability of these schools. many of the schools that were built have since closed due to a lack continuing to fund and find methods to fund the schools. again this is problematic, and is simply not only a problem with CAI, but many organizations. many organizations seemingly care more about building schools for marketing purposes than actually caring about education. part of the problem is that building a school is "sexy" and easy, actually making sure it works is difficult.
07:50 PM on 06/04/2012
He is quite correct.

Ignorance is NOT bliss.

Naturally, the men in the countries that would benefit the most from an educated female population are quite aware of the threat a literate woman represents to their tribal society. That is why they do every thing they can to put a stop to it. Bombings, murder, rape, acid in the face...you name it, they do it.

Not to go off topic but can anyone name the religion that pervades those countries?
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VA Jill
I'm not perfect and neither are you
04:14 PM on 06/04/2012
The Baha'i have it right. The belief there is that if you can educate only one child, it should be a daughter, because she will, God willing, be the mother of sons and be able to educate them.
02:56 PM on 06/04/2012
expaning education for girls is more complicated, more difficult, and at times more problematic than the writer would let on. UPE in many underfunded, low-developed countries has flooded schools, enlarging class sizes, and where conflict had ruined past generations education, also limits the amount of decent teachers available. in countries such as sierra leone, world bank policies, the promotion of upe, etc, have led to large increases in enrollment, and put huge strains on teachers, who due to shortfalls in spending (partly due to lack of funding by wb and limits set on spending by the imf) are not paid. this has drastically decreased the quality of education. further, this constant promotion of policies and actually ethics/gender rights by the WB and similar institutions has led to substantial mistrust and anger by many natives, who rightly see these organizations push their own agenda onto regions that dont necessarily bring the results the writer states. further, in countries like SL the promotion of female education has undermined the very important role women play in the domestic life. this domestic work is even more important in rural regions, where jobs arent available and there is no electricity/running water. Dont get me wrong, i promote female education, but at times it appears the WB (especially) promotes their own attitudes without looking at the current situation on the ground and taking into account what the people want (including women).
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altheschrod
I'm pedaling hard.
01:11 PM on 06/04/2012
Everything here is true, but I would especially stress the importance of educating girls from Islamic nations. Their mothers and grandmothers have had to tolerate male domination and pseudo-religious "rules" of conduct for women way too long, and education is the one possible way for them to change that.
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kapalabhati
Lokah Samasta Sukhino Bhavantu
12:49 PM on 06/04/2012
Many, I included, believe that educated mothers can prevent radicalized sons. Sadly, as I see funding for education and humanitarian efforts shrinking by the minute, I hold little hope.
12:42 PM on 06/04/2012
Thank you, Mr. Gallucci! Educating girls and women truly changes the fortunes of children and families. Yet, here in the U.S., we continue to run headlong into attitudes of disbelief --- a point of view that claims that the drive for gender equality is "over" and that we should not continue to emphasize the need for educational opportunities for girls and women. Quite the contrary, even domestically, girls do not have the same robust opportunities for full educational participation in many schools, and in urban public schools, the situation is often disastrous. At Trinity Washington University, where we have specialized in women's education for more than 100 years, we educate more than 1,000 women from the District of Columbia, and so many of our students are experiencing true educational empowerment for the very first time. Their achievements have a great impact for good on their families --- which, by the way, helps to address the educational achievement gap for boys and young men in the city as well. Along with other historic women's colleges, we seek to inspire our graduates to take their education to the world through the broad range of global women's education initiatives and service opportunities. Articles like Mr. Gallucci's focus our attention even more urgently on expanding our outreach. Thank you!
01:24 PM on 06/07/2012
In the US, over 60% of college degrees go to women, right? Are you working to address that to help young males?

(I completely agree with the original point educating young girls in the 3rd world is key to bringing them out of poverty).
12:33 PM on 06/04/2012
Agree with what you say, but what we need to do is encourage more male teachers as well as more female students. That is the only way wages and respect for this field -- and any other typically dominated by females such as nursing, librarianship, social work -- will ever increase. Until men enter these fields in increasing numbers, and girls and young women are encouraged to become engineers *and* see and interact with female role models who are in engineering and other technology-based fields, women will never see financial and social equity.
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Brown Buddha
Throwing pebbles into the ocean
11:56 AM on 06/04/2012
Mr. Gallucci,
thank you for bringing a great topic to the forfront for many to ponder. The lack of educaiton for girls is a very big problem in Nepal as well. it seems that many girls who should be in secondary schools are either getting ready for their marriage, quiting schools to work in family farmsm, or sometimes a far more sinister outcome for thier as they are stuck in brothels in India and other countries. Thankfully there seems to be a feworganizations working to correct that. I was happy to see organizations like rukminifoundation.org and nepali children's education fund working to fix this injustice. However, as you have mentioned this remains a huge problem for the many countries around the world.