Posts tagged literacy

10 Key Facts

I have mentioned some of these shocking facts in my other blogs, yet I want to emphasize ten key facts that you should know, associated with Education:

  1. It would cost $6 billion to provide universal education to the world
  2. An estimated 75 million children of primary school age world wide are currently out of school with partial projections suggesting that at least 29 million children will still be missing out on their right to an education in 2015
  3. Education can be connected to most to many social and economic issues– unemployment, poverty, homelessness, health, rates of incarceration, social assistance, and child well being
  4. Women and girls make up two-thirds of illiterate people
  5. Four of the world’s most populated countries: Bangladesh, China, India and Pakistan which alone account for 61 percent of the world’s illiterate adults
  6. To achieve universal primary education by 2015, more than 15 million new teachers will be needed – three million of them in sub-Saharan Africa alone – requiring massive investment in teacher training
  7. Based on enrollment data, about 72 million children of primary school age in the developing world were not in school in 2005
  8. Nearly a billion people entered the 21st century unable to read a book or sign their names
  9. 22% of adult Canadians have serious problems with reading and comprehension
  10. Children out of education worldwide is 121 million

Sources: Poverty Statisticslogo_en

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Literacy: A Ticket out of Poverty

“I passionately believe that literacy is the most reliable ticket out of poverty,” says Bateman, executive director of Calgary Reads, one of five agencies which will benefit from this year’s Canwest Raise-a-Reader campaign. See full article here.

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I have had the privilege through my job to participate with great organizations like Success By 6 and Canwest Raise-a-Reader.
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Success By 6 is an early childhood development initiative dedicated to providing all children with a good start in life. It helps to ensure that children ages 0 to 6 develop the emotional, social, cognitive, and physical skills they need as they enter school. Low literacy skills are some of society’s hidden handicaps. Statistics show that a shocking 22% of adult Canadians have serious problems with reading and comprehension. Raise-a-Reader is designed to address the issue head-on and raise money and awareness for children and family literacy, building stronger local communities.

Working with such organizations provides a real sense of why this issue is so serious. Think about this. In Canada- a relatively wealthy and thriving country- we are still campaigning to ensure children are getting the education they need. How can we expect those in third world countries to educate their children? Lack of education and poverty is a vicious cycle in developing countries. “People at the lowest spectrum of the economic scale are more concerned with more pressing issues related to their mere survival such as where to find food and money for clothing and shelter. After these basic needs are met, that is the only time that parents can really focus on their children’s schooling.” (Source)

Ultimately, parents in third world countries fail to see the value in education and how it can improve their lives. How can education be spread about education? This is were the vicious cycle returns. Do you know of any solutions to the current crisis?

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