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Development Planning and Administration MPA – 403 Lecture 25

This lecture explores the pre-conditions for successful educational programs, analyzes the gaps in educational initiatives in Pakistan, and discusses various issues in the educational sector, including low access rates, lack of confidence in public schools, and gender bias. The lecture also highlights strategies for addressing these challenges and improving the quality of education.

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Development Planning and Administration MPA – 403 Lecture 25

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  1. Development Planning and Administration MPA – 403 Lecture 25 • FACILITATOR • Prof. Dr. Mohammad Majid Mahmood Bagram

  2. Reflections

  3. Some will never see the inside of the school

  4. Educational Planningissues & strategies

  5. Effective Planning………. Creating Success

  6. Where Does Planning Fit?

  7. Putting the Pieces Together…

  8. Small Business Center WorkforceDevelopment Career Management JobLink Everywhere! Continuing Education Customized Training Curriculum

  9. In this age, it is easy to reach outer space or any part of the world within a relatively short time, but it is still a major problem to transmit/get knowledge even to/from our next door colleague.

  10. Education is an instrument of socio-economic and political change for the better. Without education, there is ignorance, and ignorance leads to poverty, poverty leads to disease and disease leads to death.

  11. National Commitments of Pakistan Constitution of Pakistan (1973) State shall be responsible for: “ eradication of illiteracy and provision of free and compulsory education up to secondary level, within minimum possible time” (Article 37-B, 1973 Constitution of Pakistan)

  12. Pakistan`s Commitment 86% literacy to be achieved by 2015 (Ministry of Education)

  13. Human Development in South and West Asia (Source: Human Development Report 2008-09, and UNESCO EFA Global Monitoring Report 2009)

  14. Education Budget in Pakistan: (1995-96 to 2008-09)(Source: Economic Survey, Finance Division – Government of Pakistan, EFA Global Monitoring Report 2008, 2009, and other related documents of Govt. of Pakistan)

  15. PRE-CONDITIONS FOR SUCCESS OF EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS • Vision: • Literacy programs based on an agenda of social change including functional literacy/income generation skills – learners can not be attracted just for alphabets-” Literacy for a cause” • Including post-literacy and continuing education: beyond basic literacy • Leadership: literacy movement demands leadership, not merely the funds • Organizational structure: expertise for training, material development, research & evaluation • Consistent policy and approach

  16. AN ANALYSIS OF EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS IN PAKISTAN • Commitment gap: • Policy Gap: A clear and strong policy on education is missing. • Organizational Gap: Absence of permanent organizational structure – led to coordination gap • Financial Resources Gap: limited financial assistance, and uncertainty about funding • Technical Capacity Gap:

  17. Misery Index Pakistan ranks among the bottom five countries of the world, as far as the public expenditure on education, as a percentage of total public spending is concerned

  18. Misery Index Despite the government’s claims that education is its top priority, public spending on it during 2008-09 is 1.25% of the GDP against the UNESCO-recommended norm of a minimum of 4%.

  19. 15% of government schools are without buildings • 52% are without boundary walls • 40% are without water • 71% are without electricity • 57% are without toilets

  20. Of the millions of people added to the population every year, some only work to earn their livelihood.

  21. Educational Sector of Pakistan ISSUES

  22. Issues in Educational Sector • Low access rate • lack of confidence in the public sector schools to deliver quality education • parents either shift their kids to private schools or absorb additional financial burden by arranging private tuitions. • If neither is affordable the households prefer to have their children drop out from school and join income earning activities. • The average student of the public sector education system cannot compete in the job marketand it leads to social exclusion of the already poor. • Teachers absenteeism, ghost schools, cheating in examinations are a widespread phenomenon. • Primary sufferers are the most poor and underprivileged in the system.

  23. Issues in Educational Sector • Implementation Gap• Mismanagement of allocation and use of resources • Amounts of allocated development funds remaining unutilized. • Lack of planning• Lack of accountability• Lack of constant monitoring

  24. Issues in Educational Sector • Equity in education • There is a divide between the prevalent school structure and differences in levels of infrastructure and facilities, media of instruction, emolument of teachers, and even examination systems between public and private schools. • The rich send their children to privately-run English medium schools which offer foreign curricula and examination systems; the public schools enroll those who are too poor

  25. Issues in Educational Sector • The Gender Bias • starts early within the family • keeps women at disadvantageous position • discriminatory social norms • missing incentives • lack of access to educational institutions • educational expenses • household duties • parental ignorance

  26. Issues in Educational Sector • Quality of provision • Teacher/Pupil Ratio • Qualification of Teachers • Drop Out rates • Course Content

  27. CHALLENGES

  28. A Strategy for Pakistan • A vision: a national framework development • A commitment: political leadership - Ministers, Parliamentarians, and political parties support • Partnerships: joint Federal and Provincial agreements/ coordination/monitoring structures and processes • Guaranteed Financial Resources: Consistent flow of financial resources • Clear Roles and Responsibilities: Clearly spelling out role and responsibilities of Federal Govt., Provincial Govts., and District Govts. • A strong Professional base: An Institute or Resource Centre for technical tasks like training, material development, research etc.

  29. Thank you for your kind attention! • FACILITATOR • Prof. Dr. Mohammad Majid Mahmood Bagram

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