Wednesday, 28 September 2011

Girls education - India: Background

India: Background

Economic growth in India has been strong over the past decade, especially in the information technology sector. But significant disparities remain, based on class, caste, gender and geography. The United Progressive Alliance coalition government, which came into power in May 2004, has pledged to emphasize social development as part of its National Common Minimum Programme. It seeks to eliminate some of the inequalities in Indian society by reducing poverty, increasing public spending on education, speeding the delivery of health services, and improving nutrition and food security. With one upper primary school for every three primary schools, there are not enough upper primary centres even for those children who complete primary school. For girls, especially, access to upper primary centres becomes doubly hard.
The gross enrolment ratio in primary education has increased, with much of the growth attributable to increased enrolment of girls. Serious concerns exist with respect to quality of education due to high drop-out rates and poor learning achievements. Although there is improvement in the ratios of girls to boys in primary, secondary and tertiary education during the past decade, they are far from reaching the goal of parity. And girls belonging to marginalized social and economic groups are more likely to drop out of school at an early age.
Several states have undertaken innovations to make schools more child-friendly and in the development of child-friendly assessment tools. Exercises in the assessment of teacher training and teacher effectiveness and the development of teacher performance standards have been supported. A noted success of the girls’ education movement has been the adoption of The Meena Communication Initiative as a learning and advocacy tool by the Ministry of Education at national and state levels.
Barriers to girls’ education
Major barriers to girls’ education include:
  • Many rural children have been left behind by migrating parents or have been sent by themselves into urban areas for education.
  • Basic education is free but not compulsory. Many schools in the south were closed due to political unrest in the 1990s and have yet to reopen.
  • Traditional views that devalue education are prevalent.
  • Turnover of teachers and instructors is high.
UNGEI in action
UNGEI has not been formally launched, but girls’ education initiatives are ongoing.
Key initiatives for girls’ education
  • Addressing school and classroom environments, teaching-learning processes, teacher support and school-community linkages.
  • Education analysis and research.
  • Accelerating the implementation of the communication strategy for girls’ education at the national and state levels and in integrated districts.
  • Administering child-friendly learning assessment tools.
  • Strengthening policy dialogue on issues related to education and stronger service delivery of educational intervention for working children.
Partners
Partners include the Government of India, Australian Government Overseas Aid Program, CARE, European Union, ING-Vysya Foundation, Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency and UK Department for International Development, in addition to other non-governmental organizations, donors and the joint UN system.
UNGEI within other national and international frameworks
Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSPs) and sector-wide approaches to planning (SWAPs); Common Country Assessments (CCAs) and UN Development Assistance frameworks exist at the national level.

Why is girls' education important?

Why is girls' education important?
Why Girls’ Education? The inter-linkages between gender inequalities, economic growth and poverty are the main reasons why girls’ education is a smart investment For developing countries to reap these benefits fully, they need to unleash the potential of the human mind. Educating all their people, not just half of them, makes the most sense for future economic growth.
Systematic exclusion of women from access to schooling and the labor force translates into a less educated workforce, inefficient allocation of labor, lost productivity, and consequently diminished progress of economic development. Evidence across countries suggests that countries with better gender equality are more likely to have higher economic growth.
The benefits of women’s education go beyond higher productivity for 50 percent of the population. More educated women also tend to be healthier, participate more in the formal labor market, earn more income, have fewer children, and provide better health care and education to their children, all of which eventually improve the well-being of all individuals and lift households out of poverty. These benefits also transmit across generations, as well as to their communities at large..

Saturday, 24 September 2011

INTERNATIONAL GIRL CHILD DAY CELEBRATIONS at KGBV URAVAKONDAon 24th September, 2011.

INTERNATIONAL GIRL CHILD DAY CELEBRATIONS at KGBV URAVAKONDAon 24th September, 2011.
On the dais, Smt. G. Rebecca, Special Officer, KGBV Uravakonda, Smt. Srividya, MPDO , Sri Mallikarjuna, MEO, Dr. Sujatha, Civil Asst. Surgeon, Smt. Manjulavani and Kum. Yashoda from ZPHS (Girls) of Uravakonda.
The programme was presided over by the MEO Uravakonda and the importance of Girl Child Education and the problems the Girls facing and the efforts to be made by Society and the individuals was stressed by the speakers.  MPDO extended their support in future for the development of the KGBV.
Cultural activities by the KGBV Uravakonda students were so fascinating.  Prizes were distributed and gifts and sweets were given to each and every student.






THE GIRL CHILD!


The girl child
Washes clothes clean
Irons them neat
Cooks for the family
Cleans the house
Sweeps the compound
The boy child
Cannot be found
His play is far and wide
(By: Julius Chingono)


International Girl Child Day...some facts!

International Girl Child Day : 24th September 2011

24th September 2011 is being celebrated across the globe as ‘International Girl Child Day’ … and what is shocking is …a search on the same topic on any search engine sites and India will have the same result… most headlines screaming out ‘Nothing to celebrate on Girl Child Day’.
Known globally for having one of the worst gender ratios, while earlier one would read up on how young girls were ‘taken care’ of by their parents by giving them away in child marriages,  today determining the sex of an unborn child via amniocentesis and ultrasound have worsened the situation leading to rampant female foeticide.
As per the latest Census for the year 2011, the total female sex ratio in India is 940 per 1000 males and the female child sex ratio is 944 girl children per every 1000 boy children of the same age group. Quite alarming are the figures seen in some of its states and union territories; a table here shows the bottom five states/ Union Territories and their declining female sex ratio
 
Serial No.
 
State/UT
 
Female sex ration as per Census 2011
1Haryana877
2NCT of Delhi866
3Chandigarh818
4Dadra & Nagar Haveli775
5Daman in Daman & Diu618
The situation is far worse when it comes to the rural child sex ratio in India, with the results for the Census 2011 showing a further dip in the rural child sex ratiodeclining from 927 in 2001 to 914 in 2011. Amongst the Union Territories of the country, the rural areas of Andaman and Nicobar islands registered the highest child sex ratio at 975, and the shocking fact was that the nation’s capital Delhi registered the lowest number at 809. While amongst India’s states, the prevalent rural child sex ratio were highest in Meghalaya and Chattisgarh, both states having registered a rural child sex ratio of 972, Haryana has the lowest ratio of 831.
Reasons behind female foeticide vary from socio economic conditions to personal preferences, religion, dowry, etc with male children being preferred over females. Many religions do not permit a female child to perform last rights of the soul of the departed parent, with many religious places of worship  not even permitting women to enter. According to Manusmriti (the Laws of Manu) an ideal woman is represented as an obedient and submissive person, always needing the care of a male: first father, then husband, then son.
While amniocentesis was introduced in 1975 to enable foetal abnormalities to be detected, the medical tool too was abused by many to determine the baby’s sex. In fact many posters have been found outside clinics NOT JUST VILLAGES BUT INDIA’S METROPOLITAN CITIES shamelessly advertising the slogan ‘It is better to pay Rs.500 now than Rs.50,000  (in dowry) later!’ It is shocking that there’s hardly any stringent action been taken against these clinics.
The Pre- Natal Diagnostic Techniques (Regulation and Prevention of Misuse) Act was enacted by the Government in 1994, and came into effect in 1996. The state of affairs has hardly witnessed any major improvements with many private clinics still providing sex determination test.
In 2007, newspapers reports literally ‘unearthed’ how many of these private clinics were rampantly aborting female fetuses. The story broke out after reports came in of over 40 female fetuses found dumped into an abandoned well. Later over 132 bags of decomposing human remains were found thus exposing the truth. In the words of Dr. Mishra “Femur, skull, forearm – probably. We are pretty sure these are all female, aborted at about five months which is the legal limit,” “You can say it was a hidden mass grave.” Many experts estimate India has lost around 10 million girls in the past 20 years due to female foeticide. The United Nations says an estimated 2,000 unborn girls are illegally aborted every day in India.
While abortions cannot alone be blamed for the highly skewed sex ratio, child marriages leading to early pregnancies and birth related deaths and dowry deaths too are to be blamed for the decline in the female ratio.
Another shocking expose was reported earlier in June 2011, about how baby girls were being ‘converted’ into boys in Indore by the hundreds every year, at ages where they are unable to give their consent by a life-changing operation called genitoplasty, and their tender bodies pumped with hormonal treatment (part of the procedure); a surgery which would ensure a family a boy at just 1.5 lakhs!
There have been cases of divorce if a woman delivers a girl child. Baby girls are abandoned in dustbins and at times, killed at birth, without the mother’s consent.
Another shocking fact is from the many genitoplasty experts of Indore interviews, each of them claim to have converted 200 to 300 girls into ‘boys’.
Something the law has not yet caught up to. While some claim they have done the operation on children whose internal organs do not match their external genitalia, there is no system to monitor the claims made by the surgeons.
From women being thrown out of their marital homes in many cases by the mother in law herself for giving birth to a female child to female infants being found abandoned in dustbins, or denying the girl child a right to education, a s India gets ready to participate in the ‘International Girl Child Day’ this 24th September, maybe we should really think hard and WONDER WHAT WE ARE REALLY CELEBRATING!!
And take a Pledge that by 24th September 2012, we will have made an about turn and finally have something to really celebrate!!

*** Acknowledgement:  http://www.asiantribune.com/news/2011/06/26/india-shocking-expose-%E2%80%9Csex-change%E2%80%9D-operation-baby-girls

Thursday, 22 September 2011

International Girl Child Day - SEPTEMBER 24TH


Around the world millions up on millions of girls continue to remain marginalized. September 24th, International Girl Child Day, looks to bring light to the issues and awareness to the plight of girls across the globe. The fight for equality is far from new, and while historical battles have been fought and won across the globe, they are far from over. Around the globe the girl-child suffers needlessly, as daily struggles are increased by the relentless hold of history and cultural taboos. These battles for gender equality are compounded by the bureaucratic process of governments and politics.

Wednesday, 7 September 2011

Girl Child Education

1.  Understanding the nature of the child and create the child friendly ambiance.
2.  Performing the duties of a teacher as per RTE Act.
3.  As a KGBV Special Officer, set an example of a model leader and enable the staff to perform their duties effectively.