Sunday, November 22, 2009   05:05 GMT    
 - Africa
 - Asia-Pacific
     Afghanistan
     Iran
 - Caribbean
      Haiti
 - Europe
      Union in Diversity
 - Latin America
 - Mideast &
   Mediterranean
      Iraq
      Israel/Palestine
 - North America
      Neo-Cons
      Bush's Legacy
Agencia de Noticias Inter Press Service
Agencia de Noticias Inter Press Service
Subscribe
Agencia de Noticias Inter Press Service
Agencia de Noticias Inter Press Service
 - Development
      MDGs
      City Voices
      Corruption
 - Civil Society
 - Globalisation
 - Environment
      Energy Crunch
      Climate Change
      Tierramérica
 - Human Rights
 - Health
      HIV/AIDS
 - Indigenous Peoples
 - Economy & Trade
 - Labour
 - Population
     Reproductive Rights
     Migration&Refugees
 - Arts &
          Entertainment
 - Education
 - In Focus
Languages
   ENGLISH
   ESPAÑOL
   FRANÇAIS
   ARABIC
   DEUTSCH
   ITALIANO
   JAPANESE
   NEDERLANDS
   PORTUGUÊS
   SUOMI
   SVENSKA
   SWAHILI
   TÜRKÇE
IPS Inter Press Service News Agency

See picture details
Q&A: It’s Time Students Learned Beyond the Classroom
Mutsuko Murakami interviews DR CAROL MA HOK KA, a noted advocate of service-learning
TOKYO - An increasing number of universities and colleges across Asia today are running a programme called "service-learning," a teaching and learning strategy that has become synonymous with precisely what its name stands for.
MORE >>
 

SWEDEN: 'Freemovers' Get Trapped
By Ida Karlsson
STOCKHOLM - After a spell of sleeping rough at the railway station, Farid has a roof over his head, by way of a small room he shares with five other students.
MORE >>
 

EDUCATION-URUGUAY: Literacy Starts at Home
By Patricia Montero Lafourcade
PAYSANDÚ, Uruguay - "At first I was embarrassed and had a hard time getting involved, but then I started relaxing. I like it a lot, because it helps me share different things with my kids," says María José Jara, a young mother from a poor neighbourhood in this Uruguayan city, referring to an innovative and successful family literacy project.
MORE >>
 

HAITI: A Year After School Collapse, Parents Seek Justice
By Jonah Engle*
PORT-AU-PRINCE - On the morning of Nov. 7, 2008 shortly after 10 a.m. as the second period was beginning, College La Promesse Evangelique, a three-storey cinderblock school in the Nerette neighbourhood of Petionville, fell in on itself.
MORE >>
 

See picture details
LESOTHO: AIDS Orphans get Helping Hand
By Letuka Mahe
MASERU - Fifteen-year-old Ntsebeng Tlokotsi* sighs with relief as she is given 140 dollars. Along with it she receives a bag of maize meal and cooking oil. It is a government handout, and she qualifies for this only because both her parents are dead.
MORE >>
 

See picture details
RIGHTS: Palestinian Women Suffer as Israel Violates CEDAW
By Mel Frykberg
RAMALLAH - Palestinian women continue to suffer abuse and denial of basic human rights at the hands of Israeli settlers and soldiers in the Occupied Palestinian Territories.
MORE >>
 

RIGHTS-MALAWI: Blame Game While Children Suffer
By Charles Mpaka
LIMBE, Malawi - Every morning 12-year-old Thomson Genti and his seven-year-old brother, Chifundo, emerge dirty and wretched from the squalor of their hideout behind the crowded shops in the commercial town of Limbe. It is the start of a day of begging, beatings from the older street boys and insults from passers-by.
MORE >>
 

See picture details
CHILE: Teen Pregnancy, a Problem That Won’t Go Away
By Daniela Estrada
SANTIAGO - Chile currently stands out for its spectacular progress in a number of health indicators, including maternal and child mortality and chronic malnutrition. But these successes obscure an acute social problem that refuses to yield: the steady rise in the number of teenage mothers.
MORE >>
 

See picture details
PHILIPPINES: Children Worst Hit by Economic Crisis
By Stella A. Estremera*
DAVAO CITY, Philippines - "I get an allowance of 50 pesos (about one U.S. dollar) a day, of which 20 pesos (40 U.S. cents) is for fare," says 17-year-old Dana Jane Estrada.
MORE >>
 

See picture details
CAMBODIA: Global Crisis Mostly Bypassing the Young – For Now
By Robert Carmichael*
PHNOM PENH - Mey Chamnan has learned the hard way about the global economic crisis. Both she and her husband were fired from their 50 U.S.-dollar a month jobs in a local garment factory after declining overseas orders caused huge job losses across Cambodia’s garment industry.
MORE >>
 

See picture details
PAKISTAN: Students Want Schools to Remain Open Amid Attacks
By Ashfaq Yusufzai
PESHAWAR, Pakistan - Tiny Spogmay, a Grade 1 student in one of the biggest schools in the violence-wracked North West Frontier Province (NWFP), is deeply disturbed by the government’s decision to shut down educational institutions all over the country in the wake of renewed terrorist attacks, forcing her to stay home.
MORE >>
 

 

<< Back

Next >>

 
RSS News Feeds RSS/XML
Make as home Make IPS News your homepage!
Free Newsletters Free Email Newsletters
IPS Mobile IPS Mobile
Text Only Text Only

Education is the second of the Millennium Development Goals, which include ensuring that all children complete primary schooling. The average primary completion rate has risen from 62 percent to 72 percent, but even at this pace Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia may not reach the MDG target. In spite of this, through education women are improving their chances in many societies: in 2004 girls outnumbered boys at secondary schools in 84 of 171 countries, according to the 2007 World Development Indicators published by the World Bank. At the university level, women do better still, outnumbering men in 83 of 141 countries. Reduction of child mortality rates is associated with education and gender. The bottom line is that education is a boon to development.

Education Graphs - Click to Enlarge
Millennium Development Goals
Children Under Siege
News in RSS
Q&A: ‘Creating Artificial Glaciers Is Simple, Easy and Replicable’
INDIA: ‘Glacier Man’ Vows to Build More Artificial Glaciers
US-INDIA: State Visit by Singh Could Smooth Bumpy Relations
PERU: Fighting Hunger with Native Crops
RIGHTS-CHAGOS: 'My Navel is Buried There'
GENDER-AFRICA: Some Progress Amidst Continuing Challenges
AFGHANISTAN: Insurgents Infiltrate Security Forces
LEBANON: Migrant Women Dying on the Job
POLITICS: U.N. in Final Push for 2015 Development Goals
CLIMATE CHANGE: Health at Risk
More >>
2007 World Development Indicators
IPS is not responsible for the content of external sites