Pages

Wednesday, June 23, 2021

Hornby in 2050

 Hi bloggers i am going to take about hornby in 2050.


The people in my group are... Dani Toby.

The project we are making is... Have i thing how hornby change in 2050.

I have contributed by...I give my pencil and i gave my sat.

My next steps are... To help the group.

Friday, June 11, 2021

Africa school life

Hello

 

I am doing are Africa school life on my blog-post whit one of my friends and my classroom doing the something

  1. In Africa it is hard to get into a good educational school
  2. Almost 60% of children in sub-Saharan Africa between the ages of 15 and 17 are not in school.
  3. Girls are much more likely to stay out of school than boys. Nine million girls between the ages of about 6 and 11 in Africa will never go to school at all, compared to six million boys.
  4. There are over 72 million kids in Africa that don't attend school.
  5. UNICEF partnered with the LEGO Foundation to establish an online training platform that reached 150,000 teachers in South Africa in 2016 alone.
  6. The rate of gross enrollment in tertiary education in sub-Saharan Africa is the lowest in the world, sitting at only eight percent as of 2014. This is far lower than the gross enrollment of the second-lowest country, Southern Asia, which is at 23%, where the global average is 34%.
  7. Sub-Saharan Africa opposes Eastern Europe and Central Asia when it comes to gender disparity in education among urban areas. The latter tend to see a higher level of both educational attainment and literacy among females, while sub-Saharan Africa sees the opposite. In a study by UNESCO, men in Ghana had over two more years of education than women.

These facts about education in Africa are only the beginning of the information available. Studies have shown that school enrollment rates in 11 African countries between 1999 and 2012 increased by at least 20%. However, issues continue to remain that result in children dropping out of school. Quality and accessibility of education in Africa must be resolved before the situation can improve. UNESCO warns that “without urgent action, the situation will likely get worse as the region faces a rising demand for education due to a still-growing school-age population.”


It is widely accepted that most of Africa education and training programs suffer from low-quality teaching and learning, as well as inequalities and exclusion at all levels. Even with a substantial increase in the number of children with access to basic education, a large number still remain out of school.

11 Facts About Education Around the World | DoSomething.org