The International Day for the Girl Child: Theme for 2013: Innovating for
Girls’ Education
On December 19,
2011, the United Nations General Assembly adopted Resolution 66/170 to declare 11 October as the International Day of the Girl Child, to
recognize girls’ rights and the unique challenges girls face around the world.
For its second observance, this year’s Day will focus on “Innovating for Girls’ Education”.
For its second observance, this year’s Day will focus on “Innovating for Girls’ Education”.
The fulfilment
of girls’ right to education is first and foremost an obligation and moral
imperative. There is also overwhelming evidence that girls’ education,
especially at the secondary level, is a powerful transformative force for
societies and girls themselves: it is the one consistent positive determinant
of practically every desired development outcome, from reductions in mortality
and fertility, to poverty reduction and equitable growth, to social norm change
and democratization.
While there has
been significant progress in improving girls’ access to education over the last
two decades, many girls, particularly the most marginalized, continue to be
deprived of this basic right. Girls in many countries are still unable to
attend school and complete their education due to safety-related, financial,
institutional and cultural barriers. Even when girls are in school, perceived
low returns from poor quality of education, low aspirations, or household
chores and other responsibilities keep them from attending school or from
achieving adequate learning outcomes. The transformative potential for girls
and societies promised through girls’ education is yet to be realized.
Recognizing the
need for fresh and creative perspectives to propel girls’ education forward,
the 2013 International Day of the Girl Child will address the importance of new
technology, but also innovation in partnerships, policies, resource
utilization, community mobilization, and most of all, the engagement of young
people themselves.
All UN agencies,
Member States, civil society organizations, and private sector actors have
potential tools to innovate for and with girls to advance their education.
Examples of possible steps include:
·
Improved public
and private means of transportation for girls to get to school—from roads,
buses, mopeds, bicycles to boats and canoes;
·
Collaboration
between school systems and the banking industry to facilitate secure and
convenient pay delivery to female teachers and scholarship delivery to girls;
·
Provision of
science and technology courses targeted at girls in schools, universities and
vocational education programmes;
·
Corporate
mentorship programmes to help girls acquire critical work and leadership skills
and facilitate their transition from school to work;
·
Revisions of
school curricula to integrate positive messages on gender norms related to
violence, child marriage, sexual and reproductive health, and male and female
family roles;
·
Deploying mobile
technology for teaching and learning to reach girls, especially in remote areas.
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