Hello everyone! It’s been a while since we have posted on the blog
due to the crazy busy wedding season. The team at Pi Studio is in full swing
and is working day and night to give you the best content that enhances your
thought spectrum.
Yesterday we visited Hyderabad to attend and photograph the All
Parties Educational Conference organized the NGO Alif Ailaan. It was conducted
in the Mumtaz Mirza Auditorium of the Sindh Museum and was attended by students
and notable dignitaries.
We did not know before this conference that how alarming the
educational situation is in Sindh. The facts we learnt from the conference, has
made us realize that this situation needs immediate work so that the future of
the children of Sindh can be secured. The following is a brief listing of the
facts in the brochure provided by Alif Ailaan:
- Half
of all children in Sindh are not in school (i.e. 6.1 million children out of 12 million children).
- More
than half (3.4 million or 56%)of the children out of school are girls.
- The
government supply of education is inadequate (47,934 government schools are in
Sindh, of which 91% are primary schools and 1% are higher secondary schools).
- There
are too many children dropping out of school (approximately 0.5 million
children out of 0.72 million children enrolled in Class 1 drop out by class 6).
- The attendance
is low i.e. 67% compared to other areas in the country whose attendance is
about 80%.
-
Learning
outcomes are poor i.e.
·
59%
of class 5 students cannot read a story fluently in Urdu or Sindhi,
·
75%
of class 5 students cannot read a sentence fluently in English and
·
71%
of class 5 students cannot do simple two-digit division.
- Educational spending is not rationalized i.e. Tharparkar contains 0.8% of the total children in Pakistan but has the largest number of government schools in the country (around 3% of all the government schools).
- Where
schools exist there condition is abysmal. Across Sindh, 77% of government school
buildings are in an unsatisfactory condition, according to the Education Department,
whereas elsewhere in the country this figure does not exceed 50%. The following
are some details:
· Almost
half of all government schools in Sindh are missing the basic facility of a
toilet,
·
Three
in five government schools in Sindh have no drinking water,
·
One
of every three government schools in Sindh is without electricity and
·
Only
one in seven government schools in Sindh has a boundary wall.
- There
is a serious problem of ghost schools. According to the recent survey of non-functional
and ghost schools by the Supreme Court of Pakistan, there are at least 6,152 non-functional and ghost schools in Sindh. Thus, every 7th school in
Sindh is either a ghost school or non- functional.
Moreover, 3 out
of every 4 non-functional or ghost schools in Pakistan are in Sindh / Thatta
and Tharparkar have the highest number of non-functional and ghost schools in
Pakistan (897 and 858 respectively.)
A famous teacher addresses the conference
The above facts are a slap on all
our faces my friends! We all are to blame for this state of education and we
all must work to resolve this. Let us all make a pledge that we all will
contribute to the betterment of education in our country!
Pakistan Zindabad!
For the pictures please click here
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