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18/6/2004
African Pupils To Help Out-Of-School Peers

African children who are not attending school will over the next few months be interviewed by youngsters who are, with the aim of expanding enrolment everywhere. On the eve of the Day of the African Child, 16 June, the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) has launched a global survey to help some 121 million out-of-school children.

"We want this project to start a chain reaction, whereby the children and their teachers will not only identify those out of school, but will also commit to getting them enrolled and helping them succeed," UNICEF Executive Director Carol Bellamy said.

The chain reaction will later draw in parents, communities, government ministries and external partners in drives to achieve education for all, she said.

In the Child-to-Child Survey (CTC), teams of schoolchildren would interview out-of-school children to find out why they were not enrolled. Reporting their results, they would call on communities and governments to place education for all at the top of their list of priorities.

The Surveys have already started in Ethiopia and other African countries, including Chad, Kenya, Malawi, Sudan and Zambia, are scheduled to start tackling the problem of getting 24 million African children into schools by rolling out their own versions of the CTC in the next few months.

Plans are also underway to make the CTC a worldwide project, starting later this year with South Asia.

With the African Union-sponsored Day of the African Child focusing on the theme of "The Family," Ms. Bellamy said achieving educational parity for girls would have far-reaching, positive effects including ensuring that families would be healthier and stronger, now and in the future.


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