User:GJavetski

From OLPC
Jump to navigation Jump to search
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.

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 Education in Afghanistan

  • UNICEF Country statistics, including Education
  • Education in Afghanistan from Wikipedia
  • OLPC in Afghanistan
  • Notes from Matt's OLPC blog post about visiting Afghanistan:
    • Half (52%) of primary school aged children are enrolled in school. Still, 50% of Afghan girls and 40% of boys don't attend school.
    • In 2001, 800,000 children attended school compared to 7 million today.
    • 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.
    • Teacher student ratios are often as high as 1:50-75
    • Afghan children receive only about half of OECD recommended average school times.
    • Close to 75% of teachers in Afghanistan are illiterate or have an education level of one year greater than the students they teach. **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