Somaliland

USAID and Mercy Corps Build and Improve Schools in Somaliland

September 16, 2012   ·   5 Comments

Noradin_Iskool_4

For Immediate Release
HARGEISA, Somaliland, September 16, 2012—Today, the Somali Youth Leaders Initiative (SYLI) with the Somaliland Ministry of Education and Higher Studies launched a five-year program to build and rehabilitate secondary schools in Somaliland. The initiative is funded by USAID and implemented by a consortium led by Mercy Corps, Save the Children, SONYO and CARE International in partnership with the Somaliland Ministry of Education and Higher Studies.

The SYLI education program works with 24 schools across all regions of Somaliland and is designed to decongest schools, add separate sanitation facilities for girls and boys, train more teachers, and improve enrollment, especially for girls. The project will assist 10 schools in the first six months. By the end of the program, over 10,000 new pupils are expected to be enrolled in these schools.

The schools and beneficiary communities were identified through a participatory process under the leadership of the Somaliland Ministry of Education and Higher Studies. The Honorable Somaliland Minister for Education and Higher Studies, Mrs. Zamzam Abdi Aden, presided over the ceremonies, laying the foundation for the Mohamoud Ahmed Ali Secondary School in Hargeisa.

The five-year program will also improve the quality and management of secondary education through the training of teachers, head teachers, and community education committees. It will provide teaching and learning materials and technical assistance to the Somaliland Ministry of Education and Higher Studies at both regional and district levels. The SYLI program is also providing skills training for youth, business start-up grants, and opportunities for civic participation among youth.

Latest statistics show that there are only 63 public and 37 private secondary schools in Somaliland, with an estimated enrollment of 36,000. There are 1,202 secondary school teachers, most of whom are not fully qualified. Most schools operate double shifts because of a dearth of classrooms.
For more information, please contact Carole Douglis, cdouglis@usaid.gov
Or Olad Farah, ofarah@so.mercycorps.org,
Or visit: http://eastafrica.usaid.gov

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Readers Comments (5)

  1. mohamed cheers says:

    Positive Consortium educational projects. Somaliland’s also in urgent need
    for Vocational Trades Technical Institutes like the Burcao/Hargeisa old trades
    Technical know-how before 1991 etc. The Germans are good in these Tech.
    know-hows. Somaliland should also create jobs for these young fresh graduates
    in both the Public/Private sectors. To minimize all sorts of corruptions, the Govt
    should work hard to create general enviorment to improving all Govt Public
    employees wages and incentives on a regular basis. Poor living conditions
    are conducible to all corruptions etc.
    Cheers.

  2. Kayse says:

    That’s all my Isaaqis care about. Donations, handouts, mercy, USAID, Ethiopian injera and they are happy. Anyone who asks for more is a faqash in their eyes.

    • Somalilander says:

      Here you go again, STUPID!

  3. really, this seems a new education institution which will engage the activities of sl minstry of eduaction.

  4. mohamed cheers says:

    What’s Kayse upto these days…same old stuff or new redemptions.
    Just wonder…all good things make him outrageously more crazier!
    Cheers.


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