Gender: early socialization: Boys and girls - Two of a kind?
Technical Presentation: Gender and Girls Education
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Transcript of Technical Presentation: Gender and Girls Education
Gender and Girls’ Education
Sustainable Development Goal 4:
• By 2030, ensure that all girls and boys complete free, equitable and quality primary and secondary education leading to relevant and effective learning outcomes
• ‘Leave no one behind’
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Closing the gender gap in schools: one of the biggest education successes since 2000
52 million fewer girls out of school
© UNICEF/NYHQ2015-2131/Grile
No country in sub-Saharan Africa has achieved gender parity in both primary and secondary education
In Africa16.7 million girls are out of school in the region, 9.3 million of which will never set foot in a classroom
© UNICEF/NYHQ2015-0770/Bindra
In Sub-Saharan Africa, 75 percent of girls start primary school but only 8 percent finish secondary school
Staying in and completing school remains a challenge
Poorest girls are being left behind
Rural students, especially girls are further behind
Gender discrimination holds girls back
• Child Marriage• Early pregnancy• SRGBV• Household work
Ugandan adolescent girls still at risk
2/3 of all new HIV
Infections58% suffered sexual
violence
1 in 4 girls is married
1 in 4 girls has at least 1 child
What works for girls? Considerations for Uganda
• Address costs especially for rural girls – Ensure education must be free – really free
• Make every year count – – Start on time; target transitions
• Focus on adolescent girls and their issues; – Work to eliminate child marriage, reduce early
pregnancies and end SRGBV
• Support teachers to address gender inequality; build women education leaders
•
A journey toward gender equality in education