Broadcast: May 15,
2003
By Jerilyn Watson
This is the VOA Special English Education
Report.
The United States Agency for International
Development, U-S-A-I-D, has begun
a project to rebuild education in
Iraq. Some Iraqi schools have started
again following the American-led war
in that country.
The project is called RISE, for the
Revitalization1 of Iraqi Schools and
Stabilization of Education. U-S-A-I-D
chose a company called Creative Associates
International of Washington, D.C.,
to lead the efforts. Other organizations
will join the project.
The first duty of Creative Associates
will be to provide schools with materials.
The organization says improving Iraqi
schools will mean improving teaching
and expanding schools. A team will
work with Iraqi teachers. These teachers
then are to train others.
In five areas of Iraq, special projects
will be launched for educating girls.
Other projects will deal with the
needs of older students and young
people who are out of school. Iraqi
organizations based in the United
States will help provide basic services.
Creative Associates received a one-year,
one-million-dollar order to begin
work in Iraq. The company handles
similar projects in other nations
including Afghanistan. U-S-A-I-D says
the goal of the United States government
is to make sure Iraqi children are
prepared for the new school year beginning
in September.
Iraq has about six-thousand schools
for its youngest children. American
officials say many schools were in
poor condition before the war. Others
were damaged during the war, and during
the looting that followed the ouster
of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein.
In the Babel Secondary School for
Girls in Baghdad, for example, most
books, desks, pipes and lighting devices
were stolen or wrecked. All the school’s
new science equipment was broken.
School director Nuria Hatem says the
teaching system and the books must
be changed. She says the influence
of Saddam Hussein and his Baath Party
on school subjects must be removed.
Khalida al Qubaisi directs another
school in Baghdad. Missus Qubaisi
says teachers have been limited in
subject material. She says even writing
work often had to be about Saddam.
Now, she says, students are free to
write about many subjects.
This VOA Special English Education
Report was written by Jerilyn Watson.
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