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arlier this month, my older sister graduated from law school. Completing her education at age 44, she is an inspiration not only to her young children, who watched her accept her diploma, but also to me, as the education minister of Sierra Leone. Far too many women and girls have been shut out of education. Every single one of them—no matter their age or background—deserves a chance to learn.

There is good news on this front. A recent publication from the Global Education Monitoring Report, whose advisory board I chair, found that, globally, gender parity in access to education has been achieved. And new data show that even in the poorest countries, girls are outperforming boys in reading, and while boys initially outperform girls in math, girls are catching up by the end of primary school.

But, as the GEM Report notes, we must “deepen the debate,” by recognizing the important disparities and failures that top-line data obscure. For starters, though girls are performing as well as boys in mathematics on average, they remain underrepresented among the top performers in almost every country.

Moreover, while gender parity in access to education has roughly been achieved globally, boys are at a slight disadvantage in many largely higher-income countries, and girls face extreme exclusion in a few poorer countries. In some countries—for example, Ivory Coast, Guinea, and Togo—the gender gap in access to education has remained largely unchanged over time. In others, such as Burkina Faso, progress was interrupted by conflict and displacement. But even in countries that have made progress overall, pockets of exclusion remain.

There is also an important age component to gender disparities in education. In many cases, girls and boys both enjoy access to primary school, but far more boys than girls complete secondary school. In Sub-Saharan Africa, the difference is seven percentage points, which reflects gender norms that force many girls to marry early and drop out of school.

Beyond gender disparities, there are urgent issues concerning education quality. I was appalled to learn that not a single teenager in my home region of Pujehun had qualified for university after completing four years of high school. In fact, it was this revelation that spurred me to commit to identifying the areas where we must focus our efforts to dismantle the remaining barriers to education.

The GEM Report divides such barriers into three categories. The first is situational, encompassing life circumstances like poverty and early pregnancy. The second is dispositional, and covers personal attitudes toward school. The third is institutional, and includes such factors as lack of nearby schools.

Surveys of secondary-school-age adolescents and their parents, cited in the GEM Report, illuminate the barriers that make the biggest difference. In Sierra Leone, respondents overwhelmingly blamed situational barriers, beginning with inadequate resources. Indeed, the inability to cover costs prevents at least 40% of out-of-school adolescents in my country (as well as in Nigeria) from returning to their education.

We are now working to lower this barrier by expanding universal access to education through the Free Quality School Education program, under which Sierra Leone’s government covers not only tuition, but also exam fees, textbooks, teaching and learning materials, sports equipment, and school meals. While this is a good start, more must be done to ensure that everyone who needs help is covered.

Marriage and pregnancy—other situational barriers—are responsible for keeping 10% of adolescents, mostly girls, away from education in Sierra Leone, and 21% in Nigeria. To address this problem, we have already reversed the longstanding ban on visibly pregnant girls and teenage mothers attending school, and established the Sexual and Reproductive Health Taskforce.

Moreover, we have introduced the National Policy on Radical Inclusion in Schools, which aims to ensure that historically marginalized groups—including pregnant girls and parent learners, children with disabilities, children from rural and underserved areas, and children from low-income families—are able to enroll, and remain, in school.

Despite these positive steps, we have a long way to go. And the COVID-19 crisis has probably moved the finish line, because the pandemic, like the Ebola outbreak in 2014, most likely reversed progress on girls’ education.

To undo this damage, and deliver further progress toward universal education, we must directly engage those who are most in need—that is, marginalized children—in our policymaking efforts. In Sierra Leone, this usually means poorer girls living in rural areas, especially those who are pregnant and young mothers. It is not enough for these marginalized young people to be in the room; they must be included in agenda-setting and decision-making processes. To this end, I have established a youth advisory group to inform all aspects of my ministry’s activities.

My sister’s law thesis examined the National Policy on Radical Inclusion in Schools—specifically, the role of the judiciary. I remain hopeful that we can build on our recent efforts, including that policy, to ensure that far more girls can one day earn degrees, just as she did.

Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2022.

About
David Moinina Sengeh
:
David Moinina Sengeh, Minister of Basic and Senior Secondary Education and Chief Innovation Officer of Sierra Leone, is a member of the Global Partnership for Education’s board of directors.
The views presented in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily represent the views of any other organization.

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How to Get Girls into School

Photo by Doug Linstedt via Unsplash.

June 5, 2022

While gender parity in access to education has roughly been achieved globally, we must deepen the debate to ensure that women and girls everywhere are not shut out of education, writes education minister of Sierra Leone David Moinina Sengeh.

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arlier this month, my older sister graduated from law school. Completing her education at age 44, she is an inspiration not only to her young children, who watched her accept her diploma, but also to me, as the education minister of Sierra Leone. Far too many women and girls have been shut out of education. Every single one of them—no matter their age or background—deserves a chance to learn.

There is good news on this front. A recent publication from the Global Education Monitoring Report, whose advisory board I chair, found that, globally, gender parity in access to education has been achieved. And new data show that even in the poorest countries, girls are outperforming boys in reading, and while boys initially outperform girls in math, girls are catching up by the end of primary school.

But, as the GEM Report notes, we must “deepen the debate,” by recognizing the important disparities and failures that top-line data obscure. For starters, though girls are performing as well as boys in mathematics on average, they remain underrepresented among the top performers in almost every country.

Moreover, while gender parity in access to education has roughly been achieved globally, boys are at a slight disadvantage in many largely higher-income countries, and girls face extreme exclusion in a few poorer countries. In some countries—for example, Ivory Coast, Guinea, and Togo—the gender gap in access to education has remained largely unchanged over time. In others, such as Burkina Faso, progress was interrupted by conflict and displacement. But even in countries that have made progress overall, pockets of exclusion remain.

There is also an important age component to gender disparities in education. In many cases, girls and boys both enjoy access to primary school, but far more boys than girls complete secondary school. In Sub-Saharan Africa, the difference is seven percentage points, which reflects gender norms that force many girls to marry early and drop out of school.

Beyond gender disparities, there are urgent issues concerning education quality. I was appalled to learn that not a single teenager in my home region of Pujehun had qualified for university after completing four years of high school. In fact, it was this revelation that spurred me to commit to identifying the areas where we must focus our efforts to dismantle the remaining barriers to education.

The GEM Report divides such barriers into three categories. The first is situational, encompassing life circumstances like poverty and early pregnancy. The second is dispositional, and covers personal attitudes toward school. The third is institutional, and includes such factors as lack of nearby schools.

Surveys of secondary-school-age adolescents and their parents, cited in the GEM Report, illuminate the barriers that make the biggest difference. In Sierra Leone, respondents overwhelmingly blamed situational barriers, beginning with inadequate resources. Indeed, the inability to cover costs prevents at least 40% of out-of-school adolescents in my country (as well as in Nigeria) from returning to their education.

We are now working to lower this barrier by expanding universal access to education through the Free Quality School Education program, under which Sierra Leone’s government covers not only tuition, but also exam fees, textbooks, teaching and learning materials, sports equipment, and school meals. While this is a good start, more must be done to ensure that everyone who needs help is covered.

Marriage and pregnancy—other situational barriers—are responsible for keeping 10% of adolescents, mostly girls, away from education in Sierra Leone, and 21% in Nigeria. To address this problem, we have already reversed the longstanding ban on visibly pregnant girls and teenage mothers attending school, and established the Sexual and Reproductive Health Taskforce.

Moreover, we have introduced the National Policy on Radical Inclusion in Schools, which aims to ensure that historically marginalized groups—including pregnant girls and parent learners, children with disabilities, children from rural and underserved areas, and children from low-income families—are able to enroll, and remain, in school.

Despite these positive steps, we have a long way to go. And the COVID-19 crisis has probably moved the finish line, because the pandemic, like the Ebola outbreak in 2014, most likely reversed progress on girls’ education.

To undo this damage, and deliver further progress toward universal education, we must directly engage those who are most in need—that is, marginalized children—in our policymaking efforts. In Sierra Leone, this usually means poorer girls living in rural areas, especially those who are pregnant and young mothers. It is not enough for these marginalized young people to be in the room; they must be included in agenda-setting and decision-making processes. To this end, I have established a youth advisory group to inform all aspects of my ministry’s activities.

My sister’s law thesis examined the National Policy on Radical Inclusion in Schools—specifically, the role of the judiciary. I remain hopeful that we can build on our recent efforts, including that policy, to ensure that far more girls can one day earn degrees, just as she did.

Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2022.

About
David Moinina Sengeh
:
David Moinina Sengeh, Minister of Basic and Senior Secondary Education and Chief Innovation Officer of Sierra Leone, is a member of the Global Partnership for Education’s board of directors.
The views presented in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily represent the views of any other organization.