BSS-12 World Bank approves $510m for improving education sector

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BSS-12

WB-ASSISTANCE

World Bank approves $510m for improving education sector

Dhaka, Dec 19, 2017 (BSS) – The World Bank has approved $510 million for
Bangladesh to improve secondary education system and students’ performance.

The Transforming Secondary Education for Results programme will benefit 13
million students in grade 6-12.

The programme will enhance quality of teaching and learning as well as
improve access and retention of students, especially girls and children from
poor households, said a WB media release.

The credit is from the International Development Association (IDA), the
World Bank’s concessional lending arm. The credits are interest-free and
repayable in 38 years, including a 6-year grace period, and carry a service
charge of 0.75 percent.

The release said to improve quality of education, the programme will
support modernization of curriculum and ensure professional development,
management, and accountability of teachers. It will also support learning
assessments and reform examinations.

“In 1993, the World Bank started supporting the secondary education sector
through an innovative and a globally renowned stipend project that
dramatically increased girls’ enrollment,” said said Qimiao Fan, World Bank
Country Director for Bangladesh, Bhutan and Nepal.

He said today, Bangladesh is among a few low and low middle-income
countries to achieve gender parity in secondary education.

“The next challenge is to improve quality of education and to ensure that
poor children, both boys and girls, complete grade 12,”

The secondary education sector faces several challenges. Less than 70
percent children in primary schools continue to secondary level, and below 60
percent complete grade 10.

The programme will support the government’s Secondary Education Development
Programme. It will implement a system of accountability for teachers as well
as for school management committees.

The programme also has a technical assistance facility, which is partially
supported by a grant from the Global Financing Facility.

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