Male Child Education

Why Male Child Education is still Important in Developing Countries

Male Child Education has been declining in recent years as opposed to educating girls in developing countries which has been the priority of NGOs and charity organizations for many years. The UN highlighted girls’ education in both the 2000 Millennium Development Goals and the 2015 Sustainable Development Goals.  While these goals include a little Male Child Eduction, they call out the Inequality in gender specifically. CAI also singles out girls’ education as an important focus in our mission, noting that girls face higher social and economic barriers to education than boys in the countries where we work.

Why Is Male Child Education Becoming a Low Priority In Most NGOs

These organizations put heavier weight on girls’ education for several reasons, mostly because girls face higher barriers to education than boys around the world. The UN reported that “103 million youth worldwide lack basic literacy skills, and more than 60 percent of them are women.”  Many times families will only have the resources for one or two children to go to school, and often they will send the boys instead of the girls. This has really made These NGOs take Male Child Education as a given and most of them don\’t really think educating boys should be taken much into account.

Global Partnership for Education reports, “Girls are 1.5 times more likely than boys to be excluded from primary school. That’s 15 million girls of primary school age who will never have the opportunity to learn to read and write in primary school, compared to about 10 million boys.”

Educated girls and women are also more likely than boys to share that education with their families and communities, and the children of educated mothers have a 50 percent greater chance of living past age five and a 50 percent greater chance of going to school themselves.

With all this focus on educating girls, many people are left wondering, “What about the boys? Isn’t educating everyone important?” The answer is a resounding yes. Both Male and Female child Education matter in creating global sustainability and peace.

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photo credits: unicef.org

The Benefits of Male Child Education

Close to 30 percent of the students CAI serves are boys. In many of the rural areas where we work, access to education for everyone is a challenge. In fact, education rates in the countries we serve are dire—the adult literacy rate in Afghanistan is only 31 percent, and it jumps to 55 percent in Pakistan, as reported by UNESCO. These countries also have incredibly young populations, so educating as many children as possible means the next generation of leaders will have the skills they need to lead their countries, whether they are male or female.

Another benefit to Male Child Education along with girls is the effect on gender inequality. When boys grow up learning alongside their sisters, they learn that women deserve the same opportunities and respect as men.

“Education provides an important opportunity to engage boys within learning environments to challenge gender inequality and encourage them to view girls as equal partners in education and life,” says a report by UKAID.

CAI board member, Nasrine Gross, has known this for many years. She runs Kabultec in Afghanistan, an organization that provides literacy training to adult men and women. The primary project of the organization is providing free literacy classes to married couples.

In an interview with CAI about the program she says, “I thought if I do just women, most of the men are illiterate too. So in the household, it may not be such an effective way. I said if I do only the husbands then the women will continue to be bypassed. So why not bring both of them? And I knew, another thing, that most Afghan men are not against education with their wives or their daughters or their children. And we’ve never had any problems with them.”

Poverty is always a barrier for For Many Males

For many of these men and boys, poverty is the main barrier to achieving access to education. Sometimes families don’t have enough money to send any of their children to school. The parents are illiterate and may not realize the importance of educating their children. Without help, many of these boys are destined to continue the cycle of poverty and illiteracy, working for the family at a young age instead of going to school. Without the ability to read, they can never read laws, deeds, or newspapers and will rely on the word of others without the ability to see for themselves.

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