http://www.dawn.com/wps/wcm/connect/dawn-content-library/dawn/news/pakistan/19-an-illiterate-nation-hh-06


An illiterate nation 
Dawn Editorial 
Friday, 22 Jan, 2010 
 
Girls from the troubled Swat valley attend a class as the army rebuilds their 
school which was blown up by Taliban in Matta, Pakistan. Militants are 
targeting mostly girls schools as they are against females' education. - Photo 
by AP. 

UNESCO'S Education For All Global Monitoring Report 2010 places Pakistan fourth 
on the regional list of countries with the highest number of adult illiterates. 
Along with India and Nepal, this is also the country where women are twice as 
likely to be illiterate than men. 

Indeed Pakistan has performed poorly on all four indicators used to compute the 
EFA development index: universal primary education, adult literacy, gender 
parity and equality, and quality. Amongst the contributing factors identified 
by the report is the fact that Pakistan spends less than 20 per cent of its 
budget on education, the growth of political movements hostile to girls' 
education and persistent poverty. Using Pakistan's example, the report points 
out that literacy receives insufficient attention "and is often not 
incorporated into wider poverty reduction strategies". 

This indictment of the state of education should come as no surprise. The 
country's education sector has suffered serious neglect over the decades and 
become characterised by piecemeal policies, insufficient funding and 
inefficient planning. Despite the efforts, no meaningful improvement has been 
seen in primary school enrolment figures, while high levels of poverty and 
child labour also play a significant role in hindering access to education. 

Matters have been made worse by recent political developments. In Swat, for 
example, the Taliban destroyed more than 100 girls schools between 2007 and May 
2009; and a 2008 Taliban-issued 'ban' on girls' education led nearly 1,000 
schools to either close down or stop admitting girls, while fear led to the 
withdrawal of 120,000 girls from schools. The path to rectifying this situation 
lies in improving the country's law and order situation, investing in the 
education sector and instituting poverty alleviation efforts that prioritise 
education. Unless a cohesive strategy is set into motion now, it is difficult 
to see how Pakistan can avoid having yet another generation's progress impeded 
by illiteracy.


Tags: education in pakistan,unesco,literacy,illiteracy 

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke