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Nigeria Has The Most Children Without Schools - Education - Nairaland

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Nigeria Has The Most Children Without Schools by omo9ja1(m): 1:27pm On Jun 11, 2013
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-22803632

MOST CHILDREN OUT OF SCHOOL
Nigeria
Pakistan
Ethiopia
India
Philippines
Burkina Faso
Kenya
Niger
Yemen
Mali

The global figure for the number of children without access to schools has fallen to 57 million, according to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation.

But the improvement is unlikely to be enough to meet the millennium pledge for primary education for all by 2015.

These latest figures are for 2011 and are a fall from an estimate of 61 million missing school in 2010.

Unesco's director general Irinia Bokova says: "We are at a critical juncture."

Each year there is a monitoring report from Unesco measuring the world's progress towards the goal of universal primary education - with recent years showing a stagnation after early gains.

But these latest numbers provide a more up-to-date picture, ahead of a United Nations meeting on how to give fresh impetus to efforts to get all children into education.
This update also shows that aid for basic education has fallen by 6% and that most of the major donors have cut their funding in the past year. It means that the UK is now ranked by Unesco as the largest direct donor to basic education.

The US had previously been the biggest donor, but it has cut its budget while the UK has continued to increase its spending, leaving the UK as the biggest donor in 2011.

Germany, Australia and Norway have also increased their donations, but there have been budget cuts from France, Japan, the Netherlands, Norway and Canada
Global pledge

The pledge for universal primary education made by world leaders in 2000 seems increasingly likely to be missed - and there are already discussions about setting new post-2015 targets.

There had been a previous target set in 1990 to achieve this by 2000. When this was missed the goal had been moved forward to 2015.

These latest mid-year figures do show some progress, but part of this is because previous estimates have been revised. The actual progress is about 2 million fewer children missing school, according to Unesco.

More than half of the children missing out on school are now in sub-Saharan Africa. The last annual report showed that in some countries, including Nigeria, the problem is getting worse rather than better.

In contrast, in south and west Asia there have been considerable gains, cutting the numbers of out-of-school children by two thirds in two decades

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