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Tag Archives: Africa
Technical Innovations Improve Education in Africa & More
Technical Innovations Improve Education in Africa
The first high-speed Internet link between national research networks in Sub-Saharan Africa was launched last month when Zambia was linked up to South Africa by a cable passing through Zimbabwe. The link is expected to bring a wide variety of advantages and will be especially beneficial for the education sector and researchers in neighboring countries, who will now be able to link up to the network and participate in global e-learning opportunities. Read it here.
Boycotting Students Close University in Swaziland
Students protesting at Swaziland’s only state university have forced the university to close just eight days after the start of the semester. The boycott began over a dispute regarding scholarships the Swazi government was supposed to grant to students this year. Reports claim 700 people were granted places to study at Uniswa and other colleges in Swaziland but were denied scholarships. Read more here.
Senegal Makes Headway on Gender Equality
Senegal has been working through a historic shift of power that began last March, when the country’s 86-year-old president, Abdoulaye Wade, ceded electoral defeat to his popular rival Macky Sall. Not only has the country transitioned into a new president and new government, but now more women than ever are claiming their spot in public office. In fact, 64 of the 150 new representatives in the national assembly are women, a landmark step towards gender equality. Hawa Ba, Senegal officer at the Dakar-based Open Society Initiative for West Africa, says, “Having this record number of female parliamentarians is excellent not only for women in Senegal but in the entire sub-region.” Read more here.
Higher Education Rates Decline in Cuba
University enrollment in Cuba is down over 25 percent from last year, which has some officials worried. Many attribute the steep decline to the fact that Cuba is in the process of reforming their higher education system. The changes include tougher university entrance exams, encouragement for students to major in the agricultural and technical sciences, fewer enrollment places in the humanities, and more training outside of universities for technicians and skilled workers. Read it all here.
2012 World Education Goals, Illiteracy in Yemen & More
Universal Primary Education by 2015?
Across the world’s poorest countries, desperately poor parents are struggling to get their kids an education that will help them escape poverty. As part of the millennium development goals, the international community responded to this need and pledged to achieve universal primary education by 2015. Despite their intention, government efforts in some poverty stricken nations have done little to reach this goal. Many are now calling for a global children’s fund for education, which would bring together governments, donors, nonprofit organizations and the private sector. Although supporters insist this may be the solution to the global education crisis, critics claim an effort of this scale would require innovative and unprecedented financing solutions. Read it here.
Microcredit Empowers Female Entrepreneurs in Central African Republic
In Central African Republic, one of Africa’s least developed nations, more than half of the country’s population lives below the income poverty line and more than 50 percent is unable to meet basic food needs. However, since 2008 thousands of women in CAR are starting their own business thanks to a microcredit project implemented by UNDP, the UN Capital Development Fund, and local nonprofit organizations in the area. The small loans are intended to help people, especially women, rebuild after years of conflict. Today there are nearly 50,000 people receiving loans and financial services through the program. Read more here.
Instead of Work, More Young Women Head Back to School
Economists say large numbers of workers are dropping out the labor force and most of them are women. For the first time in three decades, there are more women in school than the work force. Many are choosing to pursue graduate degrees in hopes of increasing their job opportunities and growth enrollment for women is significantly higher than men. Read the article here.
Girls and Women Expected to See Progress in 2012
The past quarter century has been full of both challenges and success for girls and women across the world. While the pace of change has been astonishing in some areas, progress toward gender equality has been limited—even in developed countries. The World Bank’s 2012 World Development Report: Gender Equality and Development was recently released and says that progress for the next generation of girls is expected to be seen greatly in the areas of education and healthcare. Download the full report here.
Mexico to Focus on Education in 2012
A recent UNICEF press release shows that Mexico’s 2012 federal budget will focus heavily on providing quality education to children and adolescents, particularly those living in indigenous communities who are often the most marginalized. While Mexico is home to several developed and prosperous regions, there are still those that closely resemble areas in sub-Saharan Africa. The plan proves to be a critical step in improving equity for children in these areas. Read more here.
UNDP Chief Says Social Services Must Reach Girls & Women in South Sudan
While the world’s newest nation has made progress since declaring their independence earlier this year, South Sudan has a tough road ahead. In a recent report, UNDP Administrator Helen Clark says that, “South Sudan has some of the lowest levels of human development in the world.” She went on to say that in order for South Sudan to become a vibrant economy with healthy and educated people, social services must do all they can to reach girls and women. “Only 13 percent of the population has access to basic healthcare, and the ratio of primary school pupils to qualified teachers is a staggering 111 to 1. The maternal mortality rate is three times higher than the average for Sub-Saharan Africa,” she said. “It is imperative that South Sudan is supported now.” Read it here.
Seventy Percent of Yemeni Women are Illiterate
Yemen is the Arab world’s poorest country, with rates of malnutrition at the third highest in the world, higher than anywhere in sub-Saharan Africa. Many are surviving without basic needs such as food, clean water, and clothing. Amongst this imminent humanitarian crisis, girls and women seem to be enduring the greatest hardship as 70 percent of Yemeni women are illiterate. In a country that has consistently ranked lowest in the Global Gender Gap, young girls are desperate for an education. Read it for yourself here.
Posted in News Bursts
Tagged 2012, Africa, girls' education, Mexico, News Bursts, South Sudan, UNDP, UNICEF, Yemen
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Clinton On Global Economy, Empowerment In Pakistan & More

Global Economy Depends on Women, Says Clinton
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton spoke at the Asian-Pacific Economic Cooperation’s (APEC) Women and the Economy Summit on Friday, where she stressed the importance of women’s involvement in the economy. “By increasing women’s participation in the economy and enhancing their efficiency and productivity, we can have a dramatic impact on the competitiveness and growth of our economies.” Read more.
Women Empowerment Through Social Entrepreneurship in Pakistan
Two young Pakistani women are making a difference for the lives of underprivileged women living in Pakistan. Khalida Brohi, 23, who hails from a tribal area of Balochistan, and Saba Gul, 28, part of Lahore’s upper economic class, are social entrepreneurs who have created innovative programs aimed at empowering women and girls in Pakistan. Read more.
Girls’ Education a Priority in South Sudan for USAID
Education is among the highest priorities for the people of the newly formed nation South Sudan. USAID is on the frontlines of this mission, especially when it comes to educating girls. Over the past five years, USAID has given over 9,000 scholarships in an effort to increase school attendance and also raise low literacy rates. Read more.
UK Launches New Program to Help Poorest Girls in the World
Britain has just launched the Girls Education Challenge, a new program that will help up to a million of the poorest girls in the world get an education. The program will call on NGOs, charities and the private sector in order to find better ways to get underprivileged girls in school. The program will focus on girls living throughout Africa and Asia. Read more.
Posted in News Bursts
Tagged Africa, Asia, Girls Education Challenge, Hillary Clinton, Pakistan, South Sudan, USAID
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Introducing Elizabeth Abshire: AfricAids’s New Executive Director
[ Editor's Note: Today I am wicked excited to introduce you to the newest member of the STF extended family: Elizabeth Abshire. Elizabeth is the new Executive Director of AfricAid, one of our partners in Tanzania, and will be taking over for Ashley Schuyler as she heads back to school. As the researcher for Kisa, I had the pleasure to ask Elizabeth a few questions about her work and hopes for the Kisa Project in the future. Enjoy!]

Elizabeth Abshire, new Executive Director at AfricAid
EA: It was a job posting on the Colorado non-profit job board. I was in a corporate position and looking for a change. My heart was really in Africa already.
STF: You mentioned running your own nonprofit for a few years in Kenya. Where did you first develop a passion for social change? Do you have a special tie or connection to Africa?
EA: I started a non-profit in 2007 that focused on educational opportunities in Kenya, specifically in Kibera which is a large slum area in Nairobi. I have been intrigued by Africa my entire life and finally had a chance to visit in 2007. I could not come home and live my life the same way after that.
STF: We love advocating for girls’ education (obviously). What message about girls’ education would you like to send the world?
EA: This is really the key. Everyone wants to help and there are so many great missions. I believe that many of the efforts treat the systems of poverty. Educating a girl gets to the core and will transform villages, nations and continents.
STF: Running a nonprofit in the US that creates social change in the developing world can be a difficult task. How do you make people in this country care about the issues in the developing world?
EA: It can be challenging, though I’ve found most people care intrinsically if you can slow them down enough to talk to them. It also helps if they’ve had any experience in a third world, developing nation.
STF: What has it been like getting to interact with the girls at the Kisa Project?
EA: Truly amazing! Everyday I am inspired by their dedication, strength, and brilliance. I’ve never seen girls their age who so understand the value of education in the way they do.
STF: What are you hoping to work on and/or make better with AfricAid in the coming years?
EA: I think AfricAid has a wonderful direction and vision. My hope is to extend it across Tanzania and other countries in Africa.
STF: As you are just getting adjusted to your new job, what has been the most rewarding and the most challenging aspects of your journey thus far?
EA: The most rewarding aspect was definitely my trip to Tanzania in May. It was indescribable to see our programs in action and the real difference they made in girls’ lives.
The most challenging has been learning the new organization culture and really focusing on fundraising. In my corporate job I was given a budget to spend, now I need to raise it, too.
STF: She’s the First is all about taking pride in being the “first” — just asmany girls we sponsor are the first in their family to graduate. What are you the “first” to do?
EA: I’m the first in my family to start a non-profit — and to leave the corporate world to run one!
Thanks so much for the interview, Elizabeth! We look forward to seeing the positive growth and change that will surely come to Kisa in the months to come!
Posted in AfricAid's Kisa Project
Tagged Africa, elizabeth abshire, kisa, Kisa Project, new director, tanzania, The Kisa Project
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White House Invites She’s the First to Web Chat — on Tuesday!
She’s the First received an honorable invite from the State Department to participate in a global web chat this Tuesday — will you join us?
The conversation is inspired by First Lady Michelle Obama’s trip to South Africa, where she gave the keynote at the US-sponsored Young African Women Leaders Forum. The goal of this web chat is to connect youth leaders in Africa & the US. Together, we can meet the world’s shared challenges — HIV/AIDS, education, and violence against women, to name a few.
To follow the First Lady’s trip, read the White House’s blog. Below, find the web chat details, and a video of her keynote address…we’ll be in the discussion, tweeting as it happens (use hash tag #YoungAfrica) — hope you can be there, too!
EVENT DETAILS
First Lady’s Young African Women Leaders Forum:
Global discussion with Tina Tchen and Jocelyn Frye
Tuesday, June 28 at 11:00 EST
Video webchat: https://statedept.connectsolutions.com/youngafrica
Audio-only: https://statedept.connectsolutions.com/audioonly
Posted in Events We Attend, Founder's Updates
Tagged Africa, First Lady, Michelle Obama, South Africa, Webchat
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Social media in Africa, Scholarships in Ghana, Dowry in Kenya
Africa’s new generation is using social media to push change
Enter the “Cheetah Generation,” a group of grassroots movers and shakers ready to reshape the state of their continent by utilizing the world of social media. Hungry for change, these young innovators are seeking to turn around the all-too-common story that gets told whenever Africa comes into conversation: a war-torn, impoverished continent. Opportunities are brewing as these young go getters make their voices heard via Twitter and other powerful social networking tools, standing up for the country they are proud to call home. Read more here…
School ‘pays dowry’ to save girls from childhood marriage
It is not uncommon for a girl born into a Kenyan tribe to be booked for an early marriage at birth. However, a school in Kenya’s Rift Valley is working to aid the destructive practice of child marriage to keep the Maasai girls in school longer. The Naning’oi Girls Boarding School, opened by Childfund International, offers to “pay the traditional dowry of livestock or gifts that is usually paid to a young girl’s father by her future husband.” The alternative dowry system is an attempt to prevent the girls from goin through things they are too young to handle: child marriage, early pregnancy, female genital mutilation and her becoming an outcast in her society when she becomes pregnant before marriage. Read more here…
WFP gives scholarship to 129 girls
A total of 129 girls from three regions in Ghana will benefit this year from a scholarship given out by the World Food Programme to prevent school drop-out rates. This initiative is meant to improve the state of equal access to education while closing in on Ghana’s completion of Millennium Development Goal 2, at the 80% mark in 2008. Part of the program includes a takeaway for girls who attend school over 85% of the time: a package of cereal, vegetable oil, and iodized salt for their family. Read more here…
Posted in News Bursts
Tagged Africa, Cheetah Generation, Ghana, kenya, News Bursts, World Food Programe
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Girls’ Ed in Asia, Progress in Pakistan, and the Girls’ Education Movement
Greatest Way to Fight Poverty in Asia: Girls Education
Across east Asia and the Pacific, 74.5 million women are illiterate. UNESCO said past research had found that each additional year of average schooling raises annual gross domestic product growth by 0.37 percent. An added year of school increases girls’ eventual wages by 10 percent, reduces the probability of infant mortality by 10 percent, and decreases female fertility rates by 10 percent.
Girls Education Stressed for Progress in Pakistan
‘Empowerment Through Girls Education in Contemporary Muslim Societies’ conference held on Tuesday, by Oxfam in collaboration with Pakistan Coalition for Education (PCE) and Dubai Cares, said that the future of the country depended on its ability to deliver education to the children, particularly girls. Read more here.
UNICEF-Supported Clubs Bring Girls Back to School in Africa
Girls’ Education Movement clubs are significantly improving the situation in the local community. The GEM club here helps to provide students with notebooks, pens and school uniforms. Part of the money is generated by the students themselves, who manage a garden and sell the crops. Read more here.
Posted in News Bursts
Tagged Africa, China, Girls' Education Movement, News Bursts, Pakistan, UNICEF
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