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Poverty
is injustice and an abuse of human rights, especially for
children. Liberia has had seven years
of peace, yet educational policies have had no meaningful impact
on learning, or on reducing poverty for the average Liberian,
most especially the children.
This
author believes that education is pivotal in breaking the
vicious cycle of poverty in Liberia, and especially the social
exclusion that is the reality for many children. The author is
convinced that the role of education in our society must be one
of achieving universal primary education and adult literacy.
These twin areas of human development must become central to the
Sirleaf administration’s Poverty Reduction Strategy (PRS),
because it is at these levels of education through which most
poor children and poor adults pass to break the cycle of
poverty.
Children's education and adult literacy are critical
to long-lasting peace, stability and modernization of our
country. Over two-thirds of the population lives in poverty on
less than US$1 a day, with life expectancy still standing at
just 45.
In
most regions of Liberia, thousands of children do not attend
school. With one of the largest budgetary outlays in government,
the Ministry of Education (MOE) has had little or no impact on
the daily lives of children and their families over the past 5
years. Furthermore, the MOE national policies haven’t provided
an environment for productive learning and career building.
Instead, policies have penalized innocent children as a result
of the lack of leadership and clear-cut direction at the MOE.
With the Sirleaf administration aim of reaching universal
primary education by 2015 – one of the Millennium Development
Goals (MGGs), it’s roadmap to national recovery and
sustainable development through the PRS, is in serious jeopardy
of collapse especially in areas like education, health,
sanitation, nutrition, and water where children are impacted
most.
National
Education Policies have yet to provide children and their
families with opportunities to improve living conditions and
livelihood. Families and educators says the national educational
system face a number of challenges, which includes severe
impediments to construction and rehabilitation of schools, even
though the MOE claims it has build and renovated several
thousand school buildings around the country, which no one can
see.
Many
public schools are overcrowded, and in equally poor condition
without adequate equipment, supplies and educational materials.
Village and district leaders says their
areas lack sufficient classroom space to cope with population
growth and density, which many acknowledge forces students to
sit on the ground or on pieces of lumber, with teachers rarely
having desks, chairs or instructional materials.
The
MOE must now initiate and provide a more proactive and
aggressive education agenda to improve infrastructure,
instructions, training and programs for children, and provide
adequate equipment, and supplies to schools across the country.
Also, the MOE must provide professional development training for
teachers’ national wide, because the ministry's teacher
training program is not effective. Over half of the teachers in
Liberia are not qualified to teach the specific subject matter
they now teach. Yet the MOE offers no testing of teachers, and
has no yardstick by which to measure performance across the
country. This author believes that one of the biggest challenges
that teachers and career educators at the MOE have with the
current education plan is mitigating the negative impact that
current learning conditions superimposes on students and their
families.
The
Sirleaf administration is yet to establish an office for
planning and monitoring poverty reduction policies and programs,
which appear to be the reason why there are so many gaps in
orientation, implementation, and follow-up of the PRS, thereby
lack the kind of breakthroughs made by the administration, which
the average person can comprehend.
This
author wishes to suggest that the Sirleaf administration should
align the country’s social sector development with
macro-economic policies and strategies; thereby, linking
debt-relief and human development to the PRS. What the author is
suggesting here is that the Sirleaf administration should
broaden the utilization of its debt relief policies and channel
much needed resources to the education and health sectors. In
the context of macroeconomic programs, special attention needs
to be paid to breaking the poverty cycle of children. The MOE
should adopt systemic changes to enhance and ensure good quality
education for children and robust learning for adults.
Throughout
Liberia, poverty is both a cause and effect of insufficient
access to or completion of education. All over the country,
children are less likely to enroll in and complete school due to
associated costs of attending school, even when school is
so-called ‘Free’. The cost of uniform, fees, supplies,
lunch, distance to school, and transportation are in many cases
beyond the means of many families especially those at the bottom
of the social strata. This means that choices have to be made,
and the choice that is often made is to take a child or several
children out of school. This is the harsh reality on the ground
especially amongst families stranded and stuck with this dilemma
on a daily basis. Also, rampant
poverty is forcing thousands of rural and peri-urban families to
send their children to the city to beg or sell on the streets,
wash cars, push wheelbarrow transport or toil in markets at the
expense of their education. Nearly half of children in rural
areas of Liberia have no access to basic education, according to
UNICEF.
Additionally,
as children who are enrolled in school grow older, the
opportunity cost (their labor and the foregone income it may
entail) becomes greater, thus increasing the likelihood of
families forcing their children to abandon school. This
author’s visit to both urban and rural schools throughout the
country presented an immediate overview and evidence of children
dropping out of school to support themselves or to supplement
strained family income. In most cases, children simply moved out
of their homes to make life by any means necessary. This is
usually the norm for many children in rural and peri-urban
communities. In rural areas for instance, many young men simply
forget about school altogether and take on a wife or two to
sustain life. In almost all cases, the lack of basic education
virtually guarantees perpetuation of the poverty cycle. It
further traps many well intentioned families to the bottom of
the social ladder because their income-earning potential is
reduced, not to mention the potential productivity level of the
country, or the receptivity to change or transformation of the
country, and the burning desire of many to improve the quality
of their lives.
This
author therefore concludes that the lack of education
perpetuates poverty throughout Liberian society, and poverty
constrains access to schooling, thereby suffocating painstaking
progress and gains made by the Sirleaf administration’s
Poverty Reduction Strategy. Notwithstanding, in order for the
PRS to work successfully and bring meaning to the lives of
ordinary people, poverty must be greatly reduced to touch the
lives of children and their families. But, this would require
strengthening and improving the livelihood of families through
employment, training and the provision of basic services,
productive skill sets, and not necessarily through academic
education. For example, a 25 year old individual does not need
to sit in a fifth grade classroom with 9 year old kids to learn
verb conjugations or introduction to basic algebra. He or she
could make better use of his or her time by gaining productive
life-saving skill sets and vocations to improve the quality of
his or her life.
This
author is attempting to draw a distinction between the complex
and often very necessary role education plays in the upward
mobility of improving one’s life, vis-ŕ-vis poverty reduction
and social development. For instance, for many school-age
children in Liberia, education and learning can become a tool
for preparing them to take their rightful place in the society.
Therefore, if the PRS is to become successful, then the Sirleaf
administration must first work towards eradicating poverty
through education. This means improving basic skill sets,
through apprenticeship training, vocational education, and
targeted career development programs. This also means teaching
social skills and etiquettes, promoting proper hygiene practices
and improving sanitation, and teaching environmental health as a
requirement to entering the workplace, employment, and
school.
This
author believes that this view of education would empower both
school-age children and school-going adults by opening avenues
in communication that would otherwise be closed. These avenues
would include expanding personal choices and control over
one’s environment, and provide the basis for acquiring many
other life skills like obtaining access to information through
print as well as electronic media; equipping themselves with
work and family responsibilities; and changing the image they
have about themselves.
Through
this kind of innovation, this author see education strengthening
the self-confidence of both school-age children and school-going
adults to actively and objectively participate in their
respective communities, and maybe participate in national
affairs in order to ‘constructively’ influence social,
political, economic and environmental issues in those
communities.
Francis
Nyepon is Country Director of the West African Children Support Network (WACSN),
and managing partner of DUCOR Waste Management in Liberia. He is a policy
analyst and Vice Chair of the Center for Security and Development Studies, and
serves on several boards of humanitarian, environmental and human rights
organizations in the United States and Liberia. He can be reached at
fnyepon@Gmail.com.
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