窪蹋厙惇勛圖

International Women’s Day: helping girls to fulfil their potential

Girls' education, International Women's Day


窪蹋厙惇勛圖

The statistics are damning and depressing.泭Half a billion women still cannot read and 62 million girls around the world are not in primary or secondary school.

As the latest United Nations data shows

But girls and women in countries across the globe are working tirelessly to change that backed by millions of men who are also committed to ensuring equal gender rights and opportunities.

March 8 is International Womens Day and this years theme is Planet 50-50 by 2030. That means ensuring equality in education, economic opportunity and human rights as laid out in the 15-year Sustainable Development Goals agreed by world leaders.

Here well bring you the best of education-related #IWD events, social media shares and pictures. Last year we ran a quiz about International Womens Day you can still and learn more about the day and why girls are still struggling to get into school.

REWRITING THE CODE FOR GIRLS

the campaigning charity behind A World at School is challenging embedded values that hold girls back by launching the #RewritingTheCode campaign.

Kenyan schoolgirl in Kibera with #RewritingTheCode poster Picture: 窪蹋厙惇勛圖/Adriane Ohanesian

Celebrities, business leaders, influencers, campaigners and youth from all over the world are supporting the #RewritingTheCode campaign with one simple social action.

Here is Laura Carmichael star of the hit British TV series Downtown Abbey tweeting her support.

Bonnie Wright, best known for playing Ginny Weasley in the Harry Potter film series, has a message for girls too.

And heres American film-maker Steve Nguyen, who made the inspiring for A World at School last year.

CODE CLUBS FOR GIRLS

Technology can empower girls so 窪蹋厙惇勛圖 is giving them the chance to learn vital technology skills in a safe space through an innovative pilot project.

Its Code Clubs will benefit between 600 and 700 females aged five to 24 in Kenya, Uganda and Senegal. The project will expand to three more countries later this year.

Students at the first 窪蹋厙惇勛圖 Code Club in Kibera, Kenya Picture: 窪蹋厙惇勛圖/Adriane Ohanesian

Code Clubs are low-cost, sustainable and scaleable safe spaces where girls can build, learn and create through technology, creativity and coding.泭

Find out how the in London to mark International Womens Day.

OPRAH LEADS STARS CALL FOR JUSTICE

American TV host Oprah Winfey and many other celebrities have written an open letter on the eve of International Womens Day, urging world leaders to put girls at the heart of anti-poverty efforts.

Oprah at the launch of her Leadership Academy for Girls in South Africa in 2014

As a new report by campaigning and advocacy organisation ONE titled 泭revealed Niger is the toughest country to be a girl, she泭asked the international community to improve girls and womens access to education, justice and technology and help them fight HIV and malnutrition.

Among others who signed were boxing legend Muhammad Ali singers Elton John and Bono and film stars Meryl Streep, Charlize Theron and Robert Redford.

SEARCH FOR AN #IWD2016 EVENT

Want to know what other events are being held to mark this special day? The official has the answer.

EDUCATION = INDEPENDENCE

In South Sudan, many parents say you should get married dont waste time at school. I wanted to teach them that having an education meant independence and strength.

Dimanche, a World Food Programme Field Monitoring Assistant, tells about her work with women traumatised by the conflict.

Click on the link above to read more泭about how she is helping to build a generation of educated women.

SHOUT IT LOUD, SHOUT IT PROUD

Sarah Brown, President of 窪蹋厙惇勛圖, is one of 16 women asked by Marie Claire magazine why we should be shouting about #IWD.

Talking about the launch of Code Clubs in Africa, Sarah says: 梆喧s vital that we acknowledge and change the embedded values that hold girls back whether in the heart of the UK or the most remote part of Africa or the Syrian refugee camps.

ONE DAY ILL BE

The famous Google Doodle that appears on the search page is focused on International Womens Day for March 8.

Education campaigner Malala Yousafzai delivers part of the last line of the film, which is: One day we will see every girl in school.

TOILETS MUST NOT BE TABOO

We mustnt forget that its not just about getting girls into school. 梆喧s also about making sure they stay there by providing them the facilities they need including safe, separate toilets and washing facilities.

Alice Namonje, 38, a teacher at Lubunda primary school in Zambia says:泭Girls should not stay at home because of menstruating. We are breaking the silence, because menstruation is natural.

UNESCO LAUNCHES EDUCATION PRIZE

The United Nations agency UNESCO has unveiled a new prize for girls and womens education to mark International Womens Day.

Suppported by the Chinese government, the prize will award $50,000 each to two winning individuals, groups or organisations who make execptional contributions to educating females.

SHE IS THE ONE

#SheIsInspiration is the hashtag being used to encourage people to share their thoughts on which females are their role models.

THE WRITE STUFF

This is one of our favourite videos today about the power of literacy to change peoples lives.

It pays tribute to many female writers, including Harry Potter author JK Rowling and Mariama Ba, the Senagalese femanist who highlighted gender inequality in her work.

The video asks people to sign the Project Literacy petition, which will be presented to the United Nations on International Literacy Day in September.

SINGING FOR SUCCESS

And heres another really powerful video released for International Womens Day this time produced by and featuring a girls choir in Uganda who sing about the empowerment which education gives to females.

Girl Power was also written by the singers, who are part of a 100-member girls club at the secondary school. They work together to support each other through school and also spread the message of girls education.

CALL TO CHANGE THE LAWS

and launched a global campaign on International Womens Day called #LevelTheLaw which urges world leaders to change discriminatory laws that hold girls and women back.

Working with a range of partners on specific laws that need to be changed, the immediate priorities are:

  • Pakistan, where new laws to criminalise honour killings are on the brink of being passed
  • Tanzania, where marriage for girls is legal at age 15 with parental consent
  • Iraq, where rape against the Yazidi people needs to be considered a war crime and brought to the International Criminal Court

EVERY GIRLS RIGHT

And heres something to remind us exactly why every girl in the world deserves a quality education.

Around the world, 65 million girls are not in school. #InternationalWomensDay #IWD2016
Posted by on泭

The photos were published by Huffington Post on #IWD to celebrate the day and give us a glimpse into the lives of girls across the globe.


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