AfricaFocus Bulletins with Material on Education
August 8, 2017 Africa: Bridge to Education, or to Nowhere?
http://www.africafocus.org/docs17/educ1708.php
"When Liberia's Minister of Education, George Werner, announced last spring that he
was inviting foreign education companies and non-profits to run our public schools,
our country came under the international spotlight, both in Western media and for
education activists. ... Quickly, Liberia was turned into a battlefield between those
who see for-profit 'charter' schools as the solution to the problems that plague
public education across the world, and those of us who point to underinvestment and
poor management as the true culprits." - Mary Mulbah, president, National Teachers'
Association of Liberia
October 27, 2013 Nigeria: Cycle of Violence in Northeast
http://www.africafocus.org/docs13/nig1310.php
The cycle of violence in northeastern Nigeria, confirm two new
Amnesty International reports this month, is fueled by
indiscriminate killings both by Boko Haram and by the Nigerian
military's Joint Task Force (JTF). More than 950 people are
reported to have died while in detention by the JTF in the first
six months of 2013, while Boko Haram has continued deadly attacks
on schoolchildren and teachers.
Sep 21, 2010 Africa: Primary Education Pays Off
http://www.africafocus.org/docs10/educ1009.php
"Simply getting all children into school has a direct positive
impact on economic growth. Then once children are in school,
ensuring that the education they receive is good quality multiplies
the impact ... A recently completed study from 50 countries
established that every extra year of schooling provided to the
whole population can increase average annual GDP growth by 0.37%.
Where the education is good quality, the improvement of cognitive
skills increases the impact to 1%." - Global Campaign for Education
Jul 20, 2010 Africa: Multilingual Education Pays Off
http://www.africafocus.org/docs10/educ1007.php
"Africa is the only continent where the majority of children start
school using a foreign language. Across Africa the idea persists
that the international languages of wider communication (Arabic,
English, French, Portuguese and Spanish) are the only means for
upward economic mobility. .. [But] New research findings are
increasingly pointing to the negative consequences of these
policies ... We recommend that policy and practice in Africa
nurture multilingualism; primarily a mother-tongue-based one with
an appropriate and required space for international languages of
wider communication." - Adama Ouane, Director, UNESCO Institute for
Lifelong Learning
Feb 28, 2010 Africa: Education for All?
http://www.africafocus.org/docs10/educ1002.php
"Many more girls are in school and enrolment rates are on the rise,
due to higher-quality aid and to political commitment in developing
countries. However, these achievements could be derailed by the
global economic crisis ... With 72 million children still out of
school, the world's poorest countries urgently need a global
financing initiative that can deliver the resources to scale up to
Education For All." - Oxfam
Sep 22, 2009 Africa: Reading for All
http://www.africafocus.org/docs09/rfa0909.php
Shortly after sending out yesterday's AfricaFocus Bulletin on the
Global Fund for Education, I received an e-mail from a reader
alerting me to reports from the recent 6th Pan African Reading for
All Conference, held in Dar es Salaam in August. The conference
attracted over 500 delegates from 34 countries, and featured two
keynote addresses by Kenyan author and activist Ngugi wa Thiong'o,
in addition to sharing of research and experience in more than 200
sessions.
Sep 21, 2009 Africa: Global Fund for Education
http://www.africafocus.org/docs09/educ0909.php
"A Global Fund for Education holds the key to delivering on the
world's commitment to education for all by 2015. Evolving current
mechanisms into a more independent, inclusive, and accountable
institution can catalyze the resources and performance needed to
achieve universal education. [Because of the strong effects of
education on other development goals] this would make a major
contribution to reducing global poverty, empowering women, and
promoting economic growth in low-income countries around the
world." - Center for Universal Education
Jun 8, 2009 Africa: Innovative Global Financing
http://www.africafocus.org/docs09/tax0906.php
"Innovative financing ... is no longer in the experimental stage.
It has already produced over $2 billion dollars in three years. But
there is still an enormous need for financing: to ensure primary
education for all, improve maternal health, combat hunger and the
great pandemics, guarantee environmentally-friendly development,
etc. We know that $175 billion is needed every year at the global
level to finance climate mitigation policy. We all know that $35
billion is needed to achieve the Millennium Development Goals in
the health sector alone." - Bernard Kouchner, Minister of Foreign
and European Affairs, France
Apr 29, 2009 Africa: Education on the Brink
http://www.africafocus.org/docs09/ed0904.php
"Investments in education and training were signaled in the G20 Communique as a priority to stimulate the economy - and as a key
strategy to get out of the global recession. However, these warm
words about education were focused on the G20 countries themselves
-- and most of the children out of school around the world are in
low income countries (LICs)." - Global Campaign for Education
May 29, 2007 Africa: eLearning Africa
http://www.africafocus.org/docs07/el0705.php
Over 1200 eLearning enthusiasts from 85 countries are attending the
annual eLearning Africa conference in Nairobi this week. The
countries with the largest participation are the host, Kenya,
followed by Nigeria, South Africa, and Uganda.
May 7, 2007 USA/Africa: More than Just a Mvule Tree
http://www.africafocus.org/docs07/kibo0705.php
"Mrs. Mead's 4th grade class at Pecan Creek Elementary in Denton,
Texas is writing, publishing and selling a book titled "More Than
Just A Mvule Tree" for $5 per copy. All monies will be used to
purchase Mvule trees to be planted in Uganda and maintained by
Ugandan children to fund education thru the Kibo
Group (http://www.kibogroup.org)"
Sep 23, 2006 Africa: Girl Power
http://www.africafocus.org/docs06/educ0609.php
"Girls who complete secondary school are up to five time less
likely to contract HIV than girls with no education," according to
a new ActionAid review of over 600 research studies. But in Africa,
an estimated 22 million girls have never been to primary school.
Apr 27, 2004 Africa: Learning to Survive
http://www.africafocus.org/docs04/educ0404.php
Universal primary education is "the single most effective
preventive weapon against HIV/AIDS," says a new report by Oxfam
International. But donor countries are failing to come up with even
the minimal funds they have pledged to support African countries
under an optimistically named "Fast Track Initiative" to expand
education funding.
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