User:GJavetski: Difference between revisions
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
* [http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/afghanistan_statistics.html#67 UNICEF Country statistics], including Education |
* [http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/afghanistan_statistics.html#67 UNICEF Country statistics], including Education |
||
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Education_in_Afghanistan Education in Afghanistan] from Wikipedia |
** [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Education_in_Afghanistan Education in Afghanistan] from Wikipedia |
||
* [http://wiki.laptop.org/go/OLPC_Afghanistan OLPC] in Afghanistan |
* [http://wiki.laptop.org/go/OLPC_Afghanistan OLPC] in Afghanistan |
||
* Notes from Matt's OLPC [http://blog.laptop.org/2010/05/11/on-afghanistan-1/ blog post] about visiting Afghanistan: o Half (52%) of primary school aged children are enrolled in school. This is a huge increase from 800,000 in 2001 to 7 million today. Still, 50% of Afghan girls and 40% of boys don't attend school. o Schools must operate in “shifts,” the average being three shifts per day meaning that each child generally received only 2.5 hours of school a day. o Teacher student ratios are often as high as 1:50-75 o Afghan children receive only about half of OECD recommended average school times. o Close to 75% of teachers in Afghanistan are illiterate or have an education level of one year greater than the students they teach. o Building more schools, training teachers, providing materials would require 6 fold increase to education (over 1 billion a year) and would take 10-15 years. |
|||
===UNICEF in Afghanistan=== |
|||
o MOE will serve as primary catalyst for OLPC in Afghanistan (particularly essential here). |
|||
• Only MOE can reach children → with 217,000 employees, MOE represents 67% of civil servants in Afghanistan. |
|||
• Budget of $400 million a year; 92% goes to staff and teachers |
|||
o Need to find third party partners: Wardak, Roshan, UNICEF, national businesses? |
|||
o US-Afghanistan’s largest donor- contributes only $90 million annually for education in Afghanistan via USAID |
Revision as of 18:29, 1 July 2010
About Me
My name is Gillian Javetski and I am an intern at OLPC's Cambridge office this summer. I am a senior at Tufts University, where I am double majoring in international relations and community health. I took this past semester off to work at the United Nations Development Programme's HIV/AIDS unit in Geneva. At OLPC, I will be conducting research on UN and international partnerships.
Preliminary Research on UNICEF/other Partnerships in Afghanistan
About Afghanistan
- UNICEF Country statistics, including Education
- Education in Afghanistan from Wikipedia
- OLPC in Afghanistan
- Notes from Matt's OLPC blog post about visiting Afghanistan: o Half (52%) of primary school aged children are enrolled in school. This is a huge increase from 800,000 in 2001 to 7 million today. Still, 50% of Afghan girls and 40% of boys don't attend school. o Schools must operate in “shifts,” the average being three shifts per day meaning that each child generally received only 2.5 hours of school a day. o Teacher student ratios are often as high as 1:50-75 o Afghan children receive only about half of OECD recommended average school times. o Close to 75% of teachers in Afghanistan are illiterate or have an education level of one year greater than the students they teach. o Building more schools, training teachers, providing materials would require 6 fold increase to education (over 1 billion a year) and would take 10-15 years.
UNICEF in Afghanistan
o MOE will serve as primary catalyst for OLPC in Afghanistan (particularly essential here). • Only MOE can reach children → with 217,000 employees, MOE represents 67% of civil servants in Afghanistan. • Budget of $400 million a year; 92% goes to staff and teachers o Need to find third party partners: Wardak, Roshan, UNICEF, national businesses? o US-Afghanistan’s largest donor- contributes only $90 million annually for education in Afghanistan via USAID