Mar 2, 2020
In January 2020, the Gay Lea Foundation announced a $15,000 grant to CODE, a registered Canadian charity that has been championing every child’s right to literacy for the last 60 years.
The Foundation’s grant will support the Reading Ghana program – helping an estimated 2,000 disadvantaged girls and boys in rural schools in the country’s Ashanti Region. Currently in its fourth year , the six-year program is designed to improve the instructional skills of teachers and provide high quality, culturally relevant reading materials. All program activities are conducted in coordination with the Ghana Education Service (the ministry of education).
Written words are gateways to knowledge, empowerment, opportunity and are the way to a brighter future. Despite the many known benefits of literacy, in sub-Saharan Africa alone, 88 per cent of children (ages 6-14) are not meeting minimum proficiency levels in literacy.
In the past two decades, this West African nation has taken major strides toward democracy and economic development. At the same time, the benefits of stability and growth have not been equally distributed across the country. While efforts to increase children’s access to education by eliminating school tuition feeds and increasing enrollment rates have been successful, the quality of education varies greatly and, in some cases, has declined in rural areas.
CODE has been working in Ghana for over twenty years in close collaboration with their local partner, the Ghana Book Trust. In Ashanti Region, only half of the teachers in rural areas have teaching qualifications and there is little or no access to reading and learning materials – meaning that children are not given the opportunity to practice and develop literacy skills, let alone develop a love of reading and learning.
All too often, students aged 12-14 are dropping out of primary school or failing to advance to higher grades, many due to struggles with fundamental literacy skills. Only 41 per cent of primary level students advance to junior high school and only 11 per cent make it to senior high school. CODE’s Reading Ghana program is improving the quality of education, helping children – especially girls – succeed and stay in school.
A child who can read and write is more likely, as an adult, to break the cycle of poverty, raise healthy and educated children, be an engaged citizen, and contribute to peace and gender equality. Education is transformational.
“My grandmother had no schooling and my mother only finished junior high school (the Canadian equivalent of Grade 8), so she did better, but I will do even better at school,” said Whyteline, a junior high school student participating in the Reading Ghana program (pictured at right). She said she loves school and aspires to become a doctor.
HIGHLIGHTS OF THE 2019-2020 PROGRAM:
“The Reading Ghana program is generating a lot of excitement as students benefit from access to quality learning materials and skilled teachers advancing their foundational literacy skills while realizing greater overall school success,” said Scott Walter, CODE’s Executive Director. “Delivering on this program requires strong partnerships and we are thrilled to have the Gay Lea Foundation joining with CODE to help make Reading Ghana possible.”
ABOUT CODE CODE works to promote every child’s right to read. The Ottawa-based organization has a long track record of delivering successful programing and contributing to a more literate world. In 2018-2019, alone, CODE reached 300,267 children through its literacy programs worldwide. They have provided 3,158 teachers with training and distributed 103,320 books to schools and libraries. They’ve earned the reputation as one of Canada’s leading international development organizations uniquely focused on children’s literacy and education. CODE is honoured to have been named one of Canada’s Top 25 Charities by the Financial Post; received UNESCO’s International Literacy Prize; and, to be recognized as a 4-star charity by Charity Intelligence.
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