Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Goverment committed to improving education standards in the country

Written By:The National,    Posted: Tue, Mar 29, 2011


Prime minister Raila Odinga says struggling developing countries can transform the lives of their young populations by encouraging them to attain an education.
On his first official visit to Dubai, Odinga said on Monday that Kenya was striving to create an enabling environment for public-private partnerships, and that meant having a well-schooled population as a baseline to work from.
"The future belongs to the nations that give the best education to their children," said Mr Odinga, who also announced plans to build the first Gems Education School in Africa in the capital, Nairobi.
The Dubai-based Gems Education network provides education to more than 100,000 students from 151 countries.
It is the first education group to partner with the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (Unesco) to improve training methods.
"Kenya wants to join the league of those nations who will claim their positions in the world because they believe in education," said Odinga.
"Our development agenda Vision 2030 aims to transform Kenya from a struggling third world economy to a middle-income economy."
The international school will open in Nairobi by September next year for students aged between 3 and 18.
Gems is investing about Ksh 4.2 billion shillings in the school that will be offering British curriculum-based education.
Kenya has several international schools offering the British, American and International Baccalaureate curricula.
"We want to develop a knowledge-based economy that will give our citizens the opportunity to realise their potential," Odinga said while outlining plans to increase literacy levels and provide quality education in the country.
"To increase the transition from primary to secondary schools and from secondary to higher education is a gigantic task, and not easy for public based programmes. That's why we are calling for participation with the private sector."
Mr Odinga toured Dubai's Wellington International School and met students who had visited Kenya on school projects.
"I would like to see similar institutes set up in Kenya and I want to be a partner to ensure that this investment succeeds in our country," he said. "I'm here to express our confidence and show the complete commitment of the government of Kenya," he added.
The Gems group also signed a teacher training partnership agreement with Unesco to improve the standards of teaching in the developing world.
Hans d'Orville, Unesco's assistant director general, said training and support were crucial to addressing concerns of a shortage of quality teachers globally, gender parity and the need to reach out to female students.
"Education provides the key to our future," he said. "States cannot do it alone, nor are international organisations enough for tackling complex global challenges. What is required is innovative, far-reaching partnerships between the public and private fields."
The Gems network will work with Unesco to identify specific countries and design training programmes that promote the knowledge of female students in maths, science and technology.
"We have 10,000 colleagues who have the skills to go and make a difference," said Vikas Pota, the chief executive of the Varkey Gems Foundation, a charity set up last year to provide scholarships and mentoring to underprivileged children.

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