Inter-province inequality as high as ever: Punjab
dominates education rankings, Balochistan& FATA languish
Islamabad 24
May: AlifAilaan and SustainableDevelopment
Policy Institute (SDPI), launched the fourth edition of Pakistan District
Education Ranking 2016. This year, the report covers all 151 districts across
the country to assess their education scores,
based on levels of enrolment, retention, learning, gender parity and school
facilities.
A new index for School Completeness shows that
only 52% of all government schools in the country have all four facilities
(namely, toilets, boundary walls, running electricity and drinking water). It
also shows that a staggering 81% of all government schools are primary schools.
This essentially implies that that after primary education, children in
Pakistan have very limited opportunities to continue their education.
Speaking on the event: Mr. BalighurRehman-Minister of State for Education and Interior (PML-N)
stated that,“when we were adopting the SDGs, the ministry of education was
actively involved, whether it was in Paris or in Pakistan. We were the first
ministry to establish an SDG cell in our
Dr. ArifAlvi,
Member National Assembly NA-250 (PTI), stated
that, “I commend AlifAilaan in its efforts to link politicians to the state of
education in their constituencies. I believe it is absolutely necessary for
politicians to take ownership of the schools and children in their respective
constituencies at an individual level. I aim to facilitate a deeper interaction
with the parents of school-going children in my constituency in the up-coming
Ramadan so that their issues are heard and they are more involved in the education
of their children”.
MianIftikharHussain,
General Secretary (ANP) stated that,“quality
of education is a moral obligation of the state. It is critical for the
politicians to prioritize their agenda on education”. Talking about the
importance of robust data regime, he noted that there is an absolute need for a
population census to have a reliable baseline for ranking the districts and
tracking the SDG4 targets.
Marc Andre
Franche, Country Director UNDP stated that,
“the district rankings highlight the systematic inequalities among the
districts and the regions in Pakistan. The state of education in the districts of
South Punjab, Balochistan and FATA is worse than some of the sub-Saharan
African countries, while the districts of North Punjab emulate developed
countries like Canada”. He further highlighted the need for constituency level
data on education in order to empower voters to raise more concerted demands
from their political representatives.
The district rankings reflect that Islamabad,
Punjab, Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJK) and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP) all have
relatively better scores on the educationand infrastructure indices. However,
FATA, Balochistan and Sindh are consistently poor performers, relative to the
rest of the country. Though some districts have demonstrated remarkable
improvements, there is little to indicate any major nationwide improvement in
either education quality or the quality of school infrastructure. Some of the
drops in the overall scores may also be explained by a more rigorous and robust
data collection process across the country, especially Khyber Pakhtunkhwa,
Sindh and Balochistan.
The Federal Capital is atop
both the provincial/regional rankings, as well as the district rankings for the
first time with increased learning and enrolment scores.
Likewise, although Punjab’s education score decreased
due to a decline in the retention score, it scored highest in gender parity. It
is important to note that last year the education score of the province
suffered a drop in learning outcomes. However the provincial government
responded to this by re-focusing on the quality of education. Consequently,
this year Punjab demonstrates a slight improvement in the learning outcomes
score. Punjab also continues to provide a superior school infrastructure to its
students, where 93% of the schools have all four basic facilities.
While KP demonstrated improvements in both
enrolment and gender parity scores, the retention rate of the province declined,
consequently affecting the overall education score. On the other hand, the
province is ranked higher at third in school infrastructure score, which
indicates significant improvement. However 50% of its schools still lack the
provision of all four basic facilities.
Balochistan and Sindh continue to suffer the lowest
education and infrastructure scores. Balochistan’s education score has dropped,
movingBalochistan to the last rank. Except for Quetta (which is amongst the top
50), almost half of
the districts of Balochistan rank outside the top 100.
Sindh has the lowest learning
outcomes this year. Moreover,only the six
of its districts are in the top half of the rankings table. Once again, Karachi
is the only district in the top 50. The state of school infrastructure also continues to
suffer, where only 23% schools could be considered complete, having all four
basic facilities.
Azad Jammu Kashmir (AJK) has experienced
the largest improvement amongst provinces/regions with a substantial increase in
its education score.However the infrastructure score
remains critical,withonly 13% of the schools providing all basic facilities to
children (electricity, drinking water, toilet facility and boundary wall).
Although GB’s progress has been
stagnant over the past four years, given the numerous challenges, the region
still managed to show relative improvements with increased education score of
3%. Six out of seven districts of GB continue to stay in the top half of the
rankings. However the infrastructure score remains deplorable, with 50% of the
schools failing to provide basic facilities to students.
The Federally Administered
Tribal Areas (FATA) demonstrate improvement in their education score by 3%,
enabling FATA to outrank Baluchistan. Interestingly
FR Kohat, which was unranked in previous years (due to non-availability of
data), has managed to get the 39th position.For the first time, FATA managed to break
into the top 50, with a remarkable education score in FR Kohat at 72.77.
The quality of education remains the biggest
challenge for Pakistan, as there are only moderate improvements in the score of
learning outcomes - last year from 52.33 to 54.78 this year. The evidence from Islamabad, Punjab and Khyber
Pakhtunkhwademonstrates that strong political commitment can translate into
improved education outcomes. The overall
evidence from across the country however remains stark – and suggests that
Pakistan will need dramatically more political commitment, in all parts of the
country, to secure a decent future for its children.
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