Pricilla is one of four children we will be following over the next three years to learn about their education journey; their challenges and hopes. We will hear about...
They are #borntolearn, like all children. Their stories demonstrate their commitment to learning and what we have to lose if we don鈥檛 invest in their education.
Financial difficulties are a serious obstacle to learning. In Ghana, two-thirds of the cost of education is picked up by households, with only a third covered by the government.
Households account for almost US$4 of every US$10 spent on education in Africa
The good news is that more children are accessing education in Ghana every year, with faster improvement than in many of its neighbouring countries. The percentage of children completing primary school in the country increased from 57% in 2000 to 77% twenty years later.
I want my daughter to go to school and become someone big in society, a big status person.
The recent report Born To Learn recommends that new resources be injected into the system to help families get the best from their education. It recommends new funding mechanisms for basic education including (i) a dedicated basic education funding mechanism similar to the Ghana Education Trust; (ii) a results-based payment element to drive a focus on efficiency and outputs rather than inputs.
In Born To Learn , we recommend that:
- All children are provided with school meals, as they cannot learn if they are hungry.
- Governments and their development partners engage communities to expand and institutionalize school canteens.