The Ministry of General Education and Instruction
(MoGEI), with support from the Global Partnership for Education (GPE), has
officially launched a four-year project aimed at transforming basic education
in the country.
Kuyok Abol Kuyok, the Minister of General Education and
Instruction, said that the project will enhance basic education and increase
access to quality, inclusive education in both formal and non-formal settings.
“The Government of South Sudan is fully committed to
ensuring that all children can obtain a quality education, this funding from
GPE will provide life-saving educational opportunities for hundreds of
thousands of crisis-affected girls and boys across the country “ Kuyok remarked
in a statement on Wednesday.
Kuyok revealed that the program will directly benefit
over 300,000 learners and reach an additional 600,000 indirectly across 20
counties, including some of the most affected areas in Jonglei, Lakes, and the
Greater Pibor Administrative Area (GPAA).
Christopher Nyamandi, the Country Director for Save the
Children, noted that the education initiative will develop and ensure safe,
inclusive access to quality education for excluded children in the country.
Nyamandi explained that the government-led initiative harmonizes
three key GPE funding streams: The System Transformation Grant (STG), the
Girls’ Education Accelerator (GEA), and the System Capacity Grant (SCG).
“With GPE support, we will reach the most excluded
children, ensuring safe, inclusive access to quality education, even in the
face of climate shocks and conflict. This is an investment in children’s
futures and in South Sudan’s peace and prosperity,” Nyamandi stated.
Through the System Transformation Grant, 250,000
children, half of whom are girls, will receive support, including 3,000
children with disabilities and 1,120 from pastoralist communities.
Additionally, 7,300 teachers will also benefit from the programmer.
The Girls’ Education Accelerator (GEA) will assist 33,000
girls, 2,000 children with disabilities, 1,650 teachers, and 29,500 boys
through special programs such as Accelerated Learning and sexuality education.
Obia Achieng, the Acting Country Representative for the
United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), expressed enthusiasm for the program,
stating it will expand access to quality, inclusive education and improve
learning outcomes for children.
“UNICEF is excited to partner with GPE and other stakeholders
to bring about this significant change for the boys and girls of South Sudan.
Boys, and especially girls, have been shortchanged for too long, with no clear
path to education,” Achieng said.
The $58 million programme, to be implemented by MoGEI and
its partners, UNICEF and Save the Children-led Consortium, comes at a critical
time when more than 2.8 million school-age children, over 70 per cent, are
currently out of school.
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