Key indicators and data on alphabetical literacy centres and
women’s basic training centres in the Republic, 2000/01
Indicator
The Republic
as a whole
Urban areas
of the Republic
Rural areas
of the Republic
Number
Percentage
Number
Percentage
Number
Percentage
Total number of
alphabetical
literacy centres
for women
795
100
262
33
533
67
Total number of
students
45 668
100
17 077
37
2 859
63
Males
7 687
100
2 030
26
5 657
74
Females
37 981
100
17 047
40
22 934
60
Source: Report on the findings of the Periodic Education Survey of 2000/01, Department of Planning, Ministry of Education.
247. Difficulties facing the education process: Despite the efforts of the State to develop and modernize education and teaching, a number of difficulties stand in the way of those efforts:
The difficulty of matching the requirements of the education process with the speed of the growing demand within society for education, given the limited economic resources available, in addition to the high growth in population, which stood at 18.3 million in 2000 and has a young age composition; it is estimated that 48.8 per cent of the population are in the 5-15 age group. This population composition is a burden on society, increasing as it does the need for essential social services. The basic school provision, for instance, is inadequate to cover the growing social demand; 2,058,095 children, most of them female, are outside basic education and constitute a considerable obstacle to development in view of the implications for literacy, as is visible from the following table:
Table 16
Rates of enrolment in the basic education stage compared with
the population in the 6-14 age group
6-14 age group
in 2000
Numbers enrolled
in 2000/01
Rates of enrolment
(percentage)
Children outside education
Females
Total
Males
Females
Total
Males
Females
Total
Males
Females
3 105 603
5 959 603
2 185 278
1 216 230
3 401 508
64.26
35.76
100
668 722
1 389 373
Source: Report on the findings of the Periodic Education Survey of 2000/01, Department of Planning, Ministry of Education.
The highly dispersed population, which has made its mark on the course of development in basic education, as the competent authorities have been obliged to rely on school arrangements that promote no improvement in the quality of education. Such arrangements include combined classes and one-teacher schools, both of which are commonplace, in addition to which many basic schools are unfinished and do not offer the facilities needed to encourage girls to enrol in or continue with education;
The large size of Yemeni families;
The lack of desire which families show for girls’ education; data indicate that 42 per cent of girls in the 6-15 age group are not enrolled in education, a result of the absence of social intermediaries whose role it is to deepen awareness of the importance of girls’ education;
The imbalance between quantity and quality; emphasis has been laid on the quantitative expansion of education in order to meet demand, while quality has been neglected, leading to a decline in the quality of education in general;
The ceiling placed on financial allocations for recruitment, which makes it impossible to take on all those graduating from education colleges, particularly in subjects suffering a shortage of teachers;
The poor preparation of teachers at the basic education stage and the lack of any worthwhile on-the-job training programmes;
The failure of school social services to perform the role entrusted to them and the lack of qualified personnel in that area.