Fatoumatta Bah Barrow, First Lady of the Gambia; Claudiana Ayo Cole, Gambia’s Minister of Basic and Secondary Education; Dr. Mary Joy Pigozzi, Executive Director of EAA’s Educate A Child programme; Dr. Shahid Mahbub Awan, UNICEF Gambia Acting Representative; and students at the launch event.
Doha: The global education foundation, Education Above All (EAA) and its partner Unicef, with support from Qatar Fund For Development (QFFD), and in collaboration with the Government of Gambia, launched a project to ensure that every child under the age of 18 that has missed out on a primary education is enrolled in school and receiving a quality education.
The launch took place in the presence of Fatoumatta Bah Barrow, The First Lady of The Gambia, Claudiana Ayo Cole, Gambia’s Minister of Basic and Secondary Education, Dr. Mary Joy Pigozzi, Executive Director of EAA’s Educate A Child programme, and Dr. Shahid Mahbub Awan, Unicef Gambia Acting Representative.
EAA’s Educate A Child programme partnered with Unicef in The Gambia to enrol and retain 66,765 out of school children and adolescents into quality primary education and the Ministry of Basic and Secondary Education will implement the three-year project across the country. The goal of this project is to ensure that all the remaining OOSC in the country are enrolled in quality primary education, thus helping the country achieve Zero Out of School Children.
The project will employ several innovative strategic interventions including, community engagement to drive demand for education services, cash transfer programmes both as an incentive and to ease financial burdens, and the provision of bicycles to students who have to travel long distances to school, to encourage attendance. Furthermore, there will be collaboration across different ministries to identify, enrol and monitor the country’s hardest-to-reach OOSC. Quality improvement will be supported through increased teacher recruitment, targeted teacher training and the provision of learning materials. To further encourage access, new disability-friendly classrooms and gender-sensitive toilets will be constructed.
“Children everywhere, irrespective of their gender, socio-economic standing, physical and mental abilities and other factors, have the same fundamental right to quality education,” said Gordon Jonathan Lewis, Unicef Gambia Representative. The Zero Out of School Children in The Gambia project, the latest to join EAA’s Zero OOSC: Educate Every Child initiative, will also ensure that adolescents who missed primary school have another opportunity to return to school through non-formal alternative learning pathways that lead to certification and transition to upper primary school.
The project will be implemented in close collaboration with communities and schools to ensure that every eligible child, no matter where they live in the country, can benefit from a quality primary education.
Mary Joy Pigozzi, Executive Director of EAA’s Educate A Child programme, said, “ Reaching Zero out of school children is essential because we have promised education for all for more than a decade and have not been able to deliver it at scale. If successful, this project will demonstrate that it is possible to find every child and make universal education a reality.”