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PUREONE - LIBERIA
Liberia Education Data
|
| Adjusted savings: education expenditure > % of GNI | 1.92 % of GNI |
| Average years of schooling of adults | 2.5 |
| Children out of school, primary | 171,431 |
| Duration of compulsory education | 10 years |
| Duration of education > Primary level | 6 |
| Duration of education > Secondary level | 7 |
| Education enrolment by level > Tertiary level | 44,107 |
| Enrolment ratio > Secondary level | 24.7% |
| Female enrolment share > Primary level | 40.8% |
| Female enrolment share > Secondary level | 41.4% |
| Geographical aptitude results | 73.273 |
| Illiteracy rates by sex, aged 15+ | 43% |
| Literacy
> Definition age 15 and over can read and write |
|
| Literacy > Male | 73.3% |
| Literacy > Total population | 57.5% |
| Primary school girls out of school | 47% |
| Pupil-teacher ratio, primary | 38.27 |
| School life expectancy > Male | 11.7 years |
| School life expectancy > Total | 9.5 years |
| Women to men parity index, as ratio of literacy rates, aged 15-24 | 1.06 |
| 13 Dec 2005 | Accelerated Learning Program Implemented in Liberia - Bong County | 968 KB pdf |
| 13 Dec 2005 | Accelerated Learning Program Implemented in Liberia - Grand Gedeh County | 791 KB pdf |
| 13 Dec 2005 | Accelerated Learning Program Implemented in Liberia - Lofa County | 781 KB pdf |
| 13 Dec 2005 | Accelerated Learning Program Implemented in Liberia - Maryland County | 405 KB pdf |
| 13 Dec 2005 | Accelerated Learning Program Implemented in Liberia - Montserrado County | 543 KB pdf |
| 13 Dec 2005 | Accelerated Learning Program Implemented in Liberia - Nimba County | 1.1 MB pdf |
| 17 Sep 2004 | Learning Spaces Assessment - Condition and Total Pupils | 419 KB pdf |
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13 Oct 2003 |
81 KB pdf |
Current Status of Education Facilities in Liberia County Recovery Information System
Oxfam's
Education Officer Abraham Conneh, remains upbeat about
Liberia's prospects for education. From Yekepa, Nimba County, formerly an iron
ore mining area, he has a Masters in Education and is a poet. '250 teachers are
being trained by Oxfam in partnership with the Ministry of Education...although
primary education is free, children have to pay for junior high and senior high,
and they have to have exercise books and uniforms.' He describes how in
Westpoint, a slum in Monrovia, Oxfam ran a livelihood project so that local
women were able to earn money for making uniforms for schoolchildren, which
usually cost about $10.00. When asked about the obstacles to female education,
Conneh says they include teenage pregnancy, early marriage, poverty, negative
peer pressure, male preference in the family and distance to school. However, in
spite of these barriers, Conneh says, the gender gap is gradually closing: in
2007-08, 664,000 girls compared to 729, 000 boys were in education.
In her acceptance speech of the 2006 Africa Prize for Leadership from The Hunger Project, Africa's first female President, Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, spoke of the progress her government has made so far in female education: 'We also have launched a national girls’ education program that is providing scholarships to girls, recruiting and training more female teachers, and providing literacy training for our market women. On the international scene, we have called for a United Nations agency which has a proper mandate and adequate resources to respond specifically to the needs of women.'
Big task, small budget
A former teacher, Education Minister Joseph Korto of the
Liberia Equal Rights Party works closely with non-governmental organisations
such as Oxfam. His first task in 2006 was to close down fee-paying quack
schools, which employed untrained teachers, and to standardise education. By
2005-06, 3,779 primary schools were already functioning and that figure has now
risen to 4,145. Secondary schools now number 1,252, up from 876 in 2005-06.
However, the national budget for education in 2007-08 was just US$10 mn. and
international funding, which is mainly channelled through NGOs, is still
woefully inadequate to the enormity of the task. Despite that, 1.39 mn. people
(about 48%), ranging in age from 11 to 25, are now getting some kind of basic
education, but the drop out rate is high and less than half go on to secondary
education.
The student-teacher ratio is officially 1:40 but in some cases more like a staggering 1:100, so there is an urgent need to train more teachers. In collaboration with the Monrovia Consolidated School System, Oxfam trains teachers to cope with such large numbers by instructing the quickest students first so that they can then help teach the others. They also use participatory and innovative approaches to ensure teachers provide the quality of education needed among students. National training for teachers is provided by the Zorzor Rural Teacher Training Institute in Fissubu, Lofa County, the Kakata Institute in Margibi County and Webbo Institute in River Gee County. Apart from that, USAID is running a 3-year teacher training initiative with the University of Liberia to help improve national education and teacher training at a cost of $14,999,758.
HIV/AIDS awareness is growing in Liberia but the behavioural changes necessary to stem the rate of infection, officially running at 6%, are not growing alongside it. The long-term presence of UN peacekeepers and aid workers has also been a factor in the increase of HIV among the general population. A 1999 survey (http://mirror.undp.org/liberia/aidshiv.PDF) found that the maximum impact of HIV/AIDS was among soldiers, then marketeers, and then students. The 2002 scandal around UNHCR, when aid workers were accused of demanding sex in return for food, was not unique. Anti-retroviral medicines are not widely available and there are an estimated 36,000 orphans as a result of AIDS. Orphans nationally number around 240,000.
The UN's demobilisation, disarmament, reintegration and resettlement programmes 'didn't succeed too well', according to Abraham Conneh, and many of the 'children associated with fighting forces' (CAFF) have resorted to crime in the streets of Monrovia and elsewhere. The CAFF are of course not young children; those in education are sometimes 25 years-old and 'share a bench' with eleven-year-olds.
Foreign
companies working in Liberia are not really contributing towards education
there. Even Firestone, which has operated in Liberia since 1926, supplies
electricity from its hydro plant to Monrovia's airport only because it requires
a functioning airport for its activities. The company's reputation in Liberia is
as a bad employer, which does not even equip its workers with protective
clothing or pay them properly. It has also been accused of using forced and
child labour. In November 2005, a case was brought against the company by the
International Labor Rights Fund in an Indianapolis court in the USA. It is yet
to be heard. But Liberians rejoice that the President has forced Firestone to
pay 65 years of back tax to the government.
Tens of thousands of Liberians remain abroad, in West Africa, Europe and the USA. After 14 years of conflict, the country cannot immediately absorb and sustain all those who would like to return. President Johson-Sirleaf is seen as doing a good job but Liberia cannot do it alone. As well as basic education, electricity, running water, hospitals are all urgently needed, not just in the rural areas but even in the capital. The international community must also do its part to sustain Liberia's reconstruction.