OLPC Nepal/Background

From OLPC
< OLPC Nepal
Revision as of 05:15, 1 August 2010 by GJavetski (talk | contribs) (WFP's Projects in Nepal:)
Jump to: navigation, search

National Education Background

UNICEF Education Statistics in Nepal from 2003-2007 Numbers
Youth (15–24 years) literacy rate, 2003–2007, male 85%
Youth (15–24 years) literacy rate, 2003–2007, female 73%
Percentage of population with phones 12%
Percentage of population that use Internet 1%
Primary School Enrollment Ratio, gross male to gross female (2003-2008) 127:126
Primary School Enrollment Ratio, net male to net female (2003-2008) 78:74
Primary School Attendance Ratio, net male to net female (2003-2008) 86:82


UNESCO Education Statistics in Nepal from 2008 Numbers
Survival rate to grade 5 62%
Primary to secondary transition rate 81%
Pupil/student ratio (primary) 38:1
Public expenditure on education as % of total government expenditure 19%
Literacy Rates for Male Youth (15-24) 85.7%
Literacy Rates for Female Youth (15-24) 73.3%
Literacy Rates for Male and Female Adults Combined 61.9%
Enrollment in public and private primary school 4,418,713
Enrollment in public primary school 3,965, 957
Female enrollment in public and private primary school 2,159,764
Female enrollment in public primary school 1,966, 819

Current Educational Programs

  • The School Sector Reform Plan (2009-2015): The SSRP is a major undertaking by the government and supported by the donors and other stakeholders. Most of the education budget goes to this program. The School Sector Reform Project aims to increase access to and improve quality of school education, particularly basic education (Grades 1-8), especially for children from marginalized groups. The total estimated cost of the project is $2.6 billion USD. There are two components to the Project:
    • The first component of the project is basic education. The primary objective of this component is to ensure equitable access and quality of basic education for all children in age group 5-12, prepare pre-school-age children through Early Childhood Education and Development (ECED) for basic education and deliver basic numeracy and literacy to youths and adults, especially women and marginalized groups.
    • The second component of the project is secondary education. This component aims to improve equitable access to secondary education by financing: (i) the expansion of physical facilities, including classroom construction and rehabilitation, library and laboratory construction, and the construction of schools for children with special needs (CWSN), and (ii) targeted scholarship schemes for dalits, marginalized groups, disabled, girls and children from poor households.

Other Resources

World Food Programme in Nepal

Overview of Food Insecurity in Nepal from the WFP Nepal website:

  • 3.5 million people in Nepal are considered to be moderately to severely food insecure.
  • 41% of the population is estimated to be undernourished (total July 2010 population estimate is 28,951,852)
  • Food insecurity is due to a variety of factors, including:
    • Weak agricultural growth;
    • Strong population growth;
    • High rates of poverty;
    • Geographical isolation; and
    • Inadequate access to health services, water, and sanitation.

WFP's work in Nepal

  • WFP targets the most food insecure, hard to reach, and least supported districts of the Mid and Far Western Hills and Mountains. In 2010, WFP provided support to 2.2 million people in Nepal. Their strategic priorities include:
    • 1. Support the country’s protracted peace and recovery process by reducing hunger and undernutrition;
    • 2. Fostering increased resilience amongst vulnerable communities;
    • 3. Providing humanitarian response to and preparing for increased environmental disasters

WFP's Projects in Nepal:

Assistance for Vulnerable Populations Affected by Conflict, High Food Prices and Natural Disasters:

  • Relief and recovery operations that target 1.6 million people in 2010 (WFP's largest program).
    • Food and Cash for Assets Activities: supports communities in developing resources and enterprises aimed at reducing hunger. Beneficiaries are engaged in projects such as building and repairing roads, irrigation systems, fishery ponds, and cash crop cultivation. Carried out between planting and harvest period when household food stocks are leanest.
    • Micronutrient Supplementation Interventions for Children: WFP provides sachets of micronutrient powder (MNP) to 114,000 young children (6-59 months) of food/cash-for-assets participating households in 25 districts.
  • As of mid-2010, operation has reached 770,000 beneficiaries in 22 food insecure districts

Country Programme: 520,000 Nepalese (including direct recipients and family members) benefit from the following activities:

  • School Feeding & One Laptop per Child: (See above)
  • Girls’ Incentive Programme (GIP): More than 54,000 school girls receive monthly-take home rations of cooking oil as an incentive for regular school attendance. Implemented together with school feeding in 11 Far Western districts and independently in five Terai districts where girls’ school attendance is very low.
  • Mother and Child Health Care: provides monthly, take-home rations of fortified food to 31,000 pregnant and lactating mother adn their children.

Food Assistance to Refugees from Bhutan: In 2010, WFP will provide daily food assistance to more than 80,000 Bhutanese refugees living in Eastern Nepal.

Emergency Operations: Disaster Response in Nepal With field presence in 60 of Nepal’s 75 districts supplemented by air operations in the Karnali, WFP has a unique logistical capacity for providing immediate disaster response. Recent operations include providing immediate relief supplies to 170,000 people following major flooding of the Koshi river in October 2008, and extending food assistance to 700,000 additional persons affected by the severe 2008/09 winter drought. Since 2006, WFP has provided emergency food assistance to over one million people in Nepal.


Food Security Monitoring Armed with personal digital assistants (PDAs) and satellite telephones, 32 field-based staff collect and transmit real-time data on household food security, crop production, and food prices from some of the most remote areas of Nepal. The Nepal Food Security Monitoring and Analysis System (known as NeKSAP when spelt in Nepalese) team in Kathmandu then analyzes the data and develops information on household food security, emerging crises, markets and nutrition from across Nepal. WFP works in close collaboration with the Ministry of Agriculture, the Federation of Nepalese Chambers of Commerce and Industry and the Consumer Interest Protection Forum to produce and ratify reports.

WFP is currently working with the Ministry of Agriculture and Cooperatives (MoAC) to institutionalise the capacity of the system within Government to strengthen national food security monitoring and analysis. The system is expected to be operational in all 75 districts of Nepal by mid 2011. As part of ongoing food security monitoring activities, the NeKSAP team produces quarterly, Food Security Bulletins, Crop Situation Updates, Market Watch updates and early warning information. These reports are disseminated to the Nepal government and throughout the donor and development community in order to provide critical information on food security and on rural livelihood conditions in Nepal. The primary field-level data which are collected are an unparalleled source of factual information and hence exerts considerable influence on the audience’s perception of food security in the country. In addition, the NeKSAP undertakes emergency needs assessments, produces Food for Thought papers and conducts thematic and sector specific studies.



Please visit the Food Security Monitoring System for more reports

WFP Numbers in Nepal
Planned Beneficiaries 2,254,850
Beneficiary needs ($US) 90,543,999
Multilateral contribution donations US$ 1,977,200
USA Donations US$ 1,092,528
Private Donors US$ 478,069
Denmark US$ 71,968

OLPC/OLE's Work In Nepal

History and Deployments: detailed article:OLPC Nepal

The OLPC-Nepal chapter began with two Nepali engineering students. The project was taken over by OLE (Open Learning Exchange), an NGO dedicated to assisting the Government Nepal in meeting its Education for All goals by developing freely accessible, open-source Information and Communication Technology (ICT)-based educational teaching-learning materials. Nepal's original pilot schools included the Bishwamitra Ganesh Secondary School and the Bashuki Lower Secondary School. On April 25, 2008, A total of 135 laptops were deployed to students in grades 2 and 6 in both schools. OLE partnered with the Nepalese Government Department of Education for these deployments. A year later, on April 26, 2009 OLE Nepal deploys nearly 2500 laptops to 26 schools in 6 districts of Nepal. XO Laptops are installed with E-Paath interactive learning activities integrated into curriculum for classes 2, 3, and 6.

Work with WFP In Nepal

As part of the April 2009 laptop deployment, the United Nations World Food Programme helped launch an OLPC pilot project in the Dadeldhura district in partnership with OLE Nepal and the Nepal Government's Department of Education. The initiative deployed 180 laptops to second and third graders and teachers in three government, Far Western Nepal schools. The project also provides Nepali-language interactive teaching and learning materials to primary schools. WFP also provides mid-day meals of fortified wheat-soya blend to 182,000 primary school students living in 11 Far-Western districts.

Related NGO Efforts in Education

World Education: a private voluntary organization, World Education provides training and technical assistance in nonformal education across a wide array of sectors. The organization has a number of education projects in Nepal, including:

  • 1. Quality Education Resource Package (QERP): In collaboration with the Ministry of Education, UNICEF, and local partners, QUERP provides a "toolkit" of materials and activities. The toolkits empower parents, teachers, and students and provide better quality learning materials. QERP addresses many issues, including improved school management, improvement of facilities, and the use of child-centered teaching. Each school that receives a package is provided with games, posters, art materials, brochurs, and modules on priority topics, radio, and a Resource Manual. Initially piloted in 2000 schools, there are plans to expand the use of the QERP to all 26,000 primary schools across the country.
  • 2. Rehabilitation of Children/Youth Affected by Armed Conflict: World Education has facilitated the reintegration and rehabilitation of children/youth formerly associated with armed forces & armed groups (CAAFAG) and children affected by armed conflict (CAAC) as per the Comprehensive Peace Agreement in 2006. With support from the US Department of Labor and UNICEF, World Educatino is providing education support to 1,000 CAFG and 450 vulnerable children to attend formal school or vocational training. In this final phase, World Education will facilitate the provision of continued educational support to self-released CAAFAG and CAAC who need additional support, including to continue school.
  • 3. Brighter Futures Program: One in every three children is a child laborer in Nepal. Working with the International Labor Organization's International Program on the Elimination of Child Labor in Nepal, World Education is aiming to combat child labor through education. Activities are carried out at the local level and policy level with the government and international agencies. This includes provision of non formal education opportunities and the strengthening of community based education.

Other Resources: