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Providing education to girls from remote and rural areas - UNESCO ...

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○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○community. In Viet Nam, China <strong>and</strong> Nepal, boardingschools provide an environment where poor <strong>and</strong>minority children learn <strong>to</strong> socialize with others beyondtheir own community or culture <strong>and</strong>, thus, acquireskills that serve them in later life, in the broadercommunity, or as a link <strong>to</strong> the dominant culture <strong>and</strong>national language. Malawi research claims thatboarding schools strengthen national unity by housingchildren of different ethnicities <strong>to</strong>gether.Provide effective links between the community<strong>and</strong> the larger society. Boarding schools provide acentralized location for learning <strong>and</strong> living that can bean effective link between the <strong>remote</strong> communities oforigin <strong>and</strong> the larger society. Children <strong>from</strong> <strong>remote</strong>communities increase their options for the future bylearning skills that will assist them in contributing <strong>to</strong>their own communities, in adapting <strong>to</strong> the largercommunity, or in bridging the two.Reduce the cost of educating children. Wheresettlements are highly scattered <strong>and</strong> populations aresparse, it can be extremely costly <strong>to</strong> establish <strong>and</strong>operate full-fledged schools. Studies done in Nepalhave shown that it is very costly <strong>to</strong> run schools in thehigh mountains, where the average number ofstudents per school is less than 25. Small schoolsare generally not cost effective in a centralizedbureaucracy. Boarding or residential schools can,therefore, be established where it is not feasible <strong>to</strong>establish <strong>and</strong> operate a small community school. TheGovernment of Nepal is considering establishingresidential schools in the mountain districts bymerging very small schools. Analysis shows thatproviding <strong>education</strong> through boarding schools wouldbe much cheaper than the existing system, where<strong>education</strong> is provided through very small schoolsscattered throughout the districts. While the start-upcost of a boarding school is relatively high,maintenance costs can be kept in check by usingenvironmentally friendly technologies <strong>and</strong> supervisedboarding houses in the community.Disadvantagescurriculum alien <strong>to</strong> the indigenous population.Boarding schools played a major role in the extinctionof indigenous native cultures, languages <strong>and</strong> religions.Boarding schools cause cultural illiteracy. Somebelieve that children attending boarding schools canbecome culturally illiterate. Being away <strong>from</strong> home atan early age means being unable <strong>to</strong> learn manycultural values, beliefs, practices, <strong>and</strong> cus<strong>to</strong>ms thatare needed <strong>to</strong> function effectively in the community.Once these children return <strong>to</strong> their communities, aprofound loss of identity may result.Boarding schools cause a sense of alienation.Boarding schools are physically <strong>and</strong> emotionallyisolating <strong>from</strong> families <strong>and</strong> communities. Childrenstaying in boarding schools can develop feelings ofnot being loved, wanted or cared for. It can havenegative effects on children’s learning achievement<strong>and</strong> growth.Boarding schools may increase the risk of physical<strong>and</strong> sexual abuse. Some studies 1 have reported thatchildren are at higher risk of abuse in boardingschools. Such incidents of physical <strong>and</strong> sexual abusemay never get reported, <strong>and</strong> children live with thepain of abuse throughout their lifetimes.Girls are at risk of pregnancy <strong>and</strong> dropping out.Zimbabwean <strong>and</strong> Nigerian research indicates that<strong>girls</strong> in boarding schools are at risk 2 of becomingpregnant <strong>and</strong> then dropping out of schools. The riskof pregnancy prevents parents <strong>from</strong> sendingadolescent <strong>girls</strong> <strong>to</strong> boarding schools.Children’s growth <strong>and</strong> learning may be harmed.Where sufficient state <strong>and</strong>/or local budgets are notavailable <strong>to</strong> meet the costs of running boardingschools, the health of children is at risk. Under-fundedboarding schools that are not maintained <strong>and</strong>repaired can compromise health as children suffer<strong>from</strong> cold, dampness or coal smoke fumes;insufficient or inadequate food; poor attendance ofteachers; <strong>and</strong> low quality teaching/a poor socialenvironment that leads <strong>to</strong> a poor <strong>education</strong>.Boarding schools are not without problems <strong>and</strong>disadvantages. Critics charge:Boarding schools contribute <strong>to</strong> cultural extinction.Boarding schools are viewed as a threat <strong>to</strong> the child’sculture. In the last part of the 19th <strong>and</strong> the first half ofthe 20th Centuries in North America <strong>and</strong> Australia,boarding schools were a key aspect of policiesfocused at assimilating indigenous children in<strong>to</strong> adominant European-oriented society throughlanguage, lifestyle, <strong>education</strong> <strong>and</strong> religion.Compulsory <strong>education</strong> enforced a culture <strong>and</strong>1A 1999 DANIDA study looking at 25 Distant EducationCentres in Malawi that provide <strong>education</strong> for up <strong>to</strong> 70% ofsecondary students reported that the biggest problems citedby all <strong>girls</strong> interviewed were sexual abuse <strong>and</strong> pregnancies.Institute of Development Studies researchers report on jointstudies with Ministry of Education officials in Ethiopia, Guinea<strong>and</strong> Tanzania, “Home Fac<strong>to</strong>rs: Wary parental views onschooling of <strong>girls</strong>, risk of early pregnancy” <strong>and</strong> “Distance <strong>to</strong>School: Parents fear additionally for the safety of <strong>girls</strong> whiletraveling.”2The use of the word “risk” indicates here perception basedon widely known experience.Policy Brief on <strong>Providing</strong> Education <strong>to</strong> Girls <strong>from</strong> Remote <strong>and</strong> Rural Areas3○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○ ○○

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