Campaign to ensure every girl completes education kicks off

| | Lucknow
  • 0

Campaign to ensure every girl completes education kicks off

Wednesday, 26 June 2024 | PNS | Lucknow

CRY - Child Rights and You, a prominent child rights organisation in India, launched the ‘Poori Padhai Desh Ki Bhalai’ campaign, aiming to ensure every girl completes her education up to Class 12th.

This seven-week nationwide initiative seeks to revolutionise public awareness and societal attitudes toward girls’ education, addressing the millions of girls across India who remain out of school and unable to access secondary and higher secondary education. The campaign kicked off in various districts of Uttar Pradesh and across CRY’s intervention projects in 20 states. It includes mass awareness rallies, signature campaigns, and outreach programmes.

Puja Marwaha, CEO of CRY, emphasised the critical importance of the campaign, saying: “Ensuring higher secondary education for girls is essential for their empowerment and the nation’s development. Targeted interventions are needed to support girls beyond elementary education, including adequate public provisioning, financial incentives, improved infrastructure, community engagement, and robust enforcement of laws against child marriage. Generating mass awareness and social resonance around girls’ education is crucial.”

Soha Moitra, Regional Director at CRY, highlighted the urgency of this initiative, noting the landmark RTE Act of 2009 and the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020, which aims to extend universal, free, and quality education up to age 18. Despite these advancements, the latest UDISE+ 2021-22 data shows that only 58.2% of girls are enrolled in higher secondary education, with one in three girls out of school at the secondary level and one in eight dropping out before completing secondary education.

CRY’s fieldwork in Uttar Pradesh indicates that socio-economic challenges, cultural norms, gender discrimination, early marriages, inadequate school facilities, long travel distances, and safety concerns significantly hinder girls’ educational journeys. These barriers contribute to higher dropout rates and increased vulnerability to child labor, underage marriage, teenage pregnancy, abuse, exploitation, and trafficking.

Sunday Edition

On A Fun Filled Pawcation!

30 June 2024 | Sharmila Chand | Agenda

FROM THE PEN OF A GROUNDED POET

30 June 2024 | Swati Pal | Agenda

Journey to an expanded self awareness

30 June 2024 | Deepak Kumar Jha | Agenda

TANGRA TALES

30 June 2024 | Shobori Ganguli | Agenda

Disappointing Service Mars Fine Dining Experiences

30 June 2024 | Pawan Soni | Agenda

Guruspeak | Do you pray?

30 June 2024 | Sri Sri Ravi Shankar | Agenda