Mail & Guardian

180m more girls at school than in 1995

But few girls in sub-saharan Africa will complete secondary school — and many may never enter a classroom

- David Moinina Sengeh

These are difficult times. Every single country in the world has been affected by the Covid-19 pandemic. As minister of education for Sierra Leone, I am confronted daily with the challenge of keeping schools open, while making sure children, their teachers and their parents are safe.

In the midst of all this uncertaint­y, a silver lining this week reminds us of what we are capable of when we get our priorities right. Unesco’s new Global Education Monitoring Report on gender revealed the great progress the world has made in making sure more girls are going to school.

The study, which commemorat­es the signing of the Beijing Declaratio­n and Platform for Action, unveiled that 180-million more girls are in school today than two and a half decades ago.

Since 1995, the percentage of girls’ enrolment in primary and secondary education has risen from 73% in 1995 to 89%. Progress in my own region, sub-saharan Africa, accounts for 38% of this increase.

More girls are going to and finishing school than ever before and those in the poorest countries are finally catching up. In primary schools in Sierra Leone, 40% more girls are completing school than in 1995.

While this is positive news, it’s not all cause for celebratio­n. In a context of a pandemic reaping additional tolls on the most marginalis­ed, the report warns that progress over the past decades has failed the most disadvanta­ged girls.

In at least 20 countries — most of them in subsaharan Africa, hardly any poor rural young women will graduate from secondary school. Girls are still the most likely to suffer the most extreme forms of exclusion — they make up three-quarters of children who may never set foot in a classroom.

The pandemic risks setting this progress back further. We know from previous viral outbreaks that girls are disproport­ionately affected. Five years ago, in my country, the Ebola crisis led to an increase in early pregnancy rates as a result of school closures.

A decision was taken at the time to ban all pregnant girls from returning to school and this law took effect just as schools were reopening after the outbreak was under control. This ban had a devastatin­g effect on the most vulnerable girls, many of whom had been forced into early marriage.

My government finally lifted the ban this year, a lesson on how to do things differentl­y during this pandemic. We need to find solutions for the toughest challenges to girls’ education and this includes Covid-19. This applies to all sectors. Recovery packages that do not take education into account are not sustainabl­e.

When girls miss out on an education, the opportunit­y to break the cycle of poverty is lost. The benefits of investing in girls’ education, on the other hand, accumulate. The Unesco report calculates that the daughter of an educated mother will remain in school even longer than her mother.

We have the chance to do better. We can narrow down on the solutions that are known to work.

According to the report, which tracks progress of the education goal in the 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t, there are some key culprits standing in the way of progress. Some are subtle. Women in textbooks are often portrayed in passive, dependent and domestic roles.

A lack of gender-responsive counsellin­g deters girls from studying science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s despite the fact that in most countries, girls are doing just as well as boys in maths.

Other barriers are more explicit: 335-million girls don’t have water, sanitation and hygiene facilities in their schools and for many others, schools are unsafe environmen­ts, where verbal and sexual harassment, abuse and violence prevail.

I would like Sierra Leone to be an example to other countries not only for lifting bans on pregnant girls and young mothers but also for supporting them to return to school. A quarter of girls under the age of 18 in sub-saharan Africa are already mothers. They need our support to continue school and receive an education that empowers them, including to fulfil their sexual and reproducti­ve health rights.

I urge leaders to learn from policies that have worked in other circumstan­ces that will enable them to continue on the path towards gender equality and quality education for all. The Generation Equality Forum, planned for 2021, is tasked with developing a new text that could replace the Beijing Declaratio­n. Those working on this new blueprint for women’s rights must ensure the thread of education weaves through all solutions for the next generation.

Education will benefit from a new emphasis on women’s rights at the forum. Patriarchy and discrimina­tion are at the heart of many education problems. Social assistance and protection programmes that target families with daughters are needed to help girls remain in school.

In Sierra Leone, two new policies on radical inclusion and comprehens­ive safety have taken effect, which aim to bring in an evidence basis that can support girls’ education. This makes the contents of reports such as today’s so important, with internatio­nal best practices based on principles of collaborat­ion, research and action.

They teach us what needs to be done for gender equality in education during these hard times. We must heed its warnings so that we do not let this pandemic roll back progress and fail another generation of girls.

Dr David Moinina Sengeh is Sierra Leone’s minister of basic and senior secondary education and advises the directorat­e of science, technology and innovation. He is a biomechatr­onics engineer , data scientist, an Afrobeat rapper and clothing designer

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