The Educational Resilience of Children in Urban Squatter Settlements of Kathmandu
Nepal is a partner to the international commitment to achieve the goals of Education for All (EFA) and Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) by 2015. Efforts have been made through the EFA National Plan of Action 2003-2015 and School Sector Reform Pr...
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Format: | Publications & Research |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
Washington, DC
2015
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2014/01/23992412/educational-resilience-children-urban-squatter-settlements-kathmandu http://hdl.handle.net/10986/21540 |
Summary: | Nepal is a partner to the international
commitment to achieve the goals of Education for All (EFA)
and Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) by 2015. Efforts
have been made through the EFA National Plan of Action
2003-2015 and School Sector Reform Program (SSRP) to achieve
the EFA goals and the MDGs. Over the last few years, Nepal
has demonstrated progress in some of the indicators related
to children s participation in school. The Department of
Education (2012) has reported that the primary education Net
Enrolment Rate (NER), Grade 1 Net Intake Rate (NIR), Grade 5
Survival Rate (SR), and Dropout Rate (DR), are 95.3, 91.2,
84.1, and 5.2 percent respectively. However, it will be
difficult to close the bigger gaps of 4.7, 8.8, 15.9, and
5.2 percent of the NER, NIR, SR, and DR respectively by
2015. The challenge lies in the large number of school-aged
children who do not attend formal primary schooling.
Likewise, a significant number of students repeat grades and
those promoted may have low achievement. Realizing this
bleak educational scenario, Nepal has been focusing more on
access to quality education for the children of economically
marginalized people through equity measures (scholarships
and incentives). These children belong to the poorest groups
(Wagley, September 2013, The Himalayan Times), such as the
disadvantaged and the deprived communities of urban squatter
settlements. Many reasons have been identified for the
phenomenon of out-of-school children, including poor family
economic conditions, an unfavorable school environment,
socio-cultural beliefs and traditions, parents not
recognizing the importance of education, inaccessible
schools for children with disabilities, parents
unwillingness, corporal punishment and children s domestic
responsibilities (Scheuermann 2013). Other factors listed as
contributing to primary level dropout are violence in school
such as corporal punishment by teachers (Nepal, DoE 2010),
children s domestic responsibilities, and an unfavorable
school environment (Nepal, DoE 2012). In this context, in
particular, children in urban squatter settlements face more
severe adversities and risks as most are deprived of
government services because of a lack of official national identification. |
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