Community Demands Upgrade Of Girls Elementary School

1 min read

SAHIWAL: Local residents, enrolled students, and teachers of village 58/5-L in Sahiwal tehsil have demanded upgrade of the Government Girls Elementary School to a high school.

Up to 243 girls are enrolled in this school, established in 1962 and located in rural Union Council No 17. This council encompasses eight villages with a combined population of over 35,000, and the village of 58/5-L itself has more than 7,000 residents.

The surrounding villages served by this school include 51/5-L, 49/5-L, 59/5-L, and 48/5-L, along with several others that feed into the school.

Currently, there is no high school for girls in the entire union council.

Jahanzeb, local social and political activist, said that after completing elementary education up to grade 8, girls have to travel six to seven kilometres to pursue their matriculation degree.

Many rural parents hesitate to send their daughters such distances due to inadequate public transportation and safety concerns.

“As a result, more than 50 percent of girls are left with only a middle school certificate,” he claimed.

Three senior students — Misbah, Zainab, and Shanzay — expressed their desire to enrol in matriculation and higher education but feel their opportunities end at the middle school level.

They mentioned that girls’ mobility to far-off places is a major concern for their families.

Riaz, village lumberdar, said villagers had repeatedly petitioned and filed written applications to elected representatives from the PML-N for the school’s upgrade, but their requests have not been addressed.

Dawn has seen various applications submitted to the Secretary of School Education and the former Education Minister, as well as to Pir Imran Shah, a four-time consecutive MNA of the area, all signed by the village community, advocating for the school’s upgradation. However, no concrete action has been taken.

A senior female teacher from the school said the school occupies a 17-kanal area, divided into two parts. The existing building, which has five rooms, is situated on eight kanals, while an additional eight-kanal plot remains vacant, where an upgraded school building could be constructed.

She stated that the current space was insufficient for 243 students, forcing most classes to be held in the school’s verandas and courtyard.

Currently, the school employs 14 teachers, including a headmistress, along with four non-teaching staff members.

Muhammad Ikram, education CEO, informed Dawn that he recently submitted a list of 100 schools for potential upgradation in district Sahiwal. However, sources say that the school in village 58/5-L is not included on that list.

“The department will conduct a feasibility study before considering any school for upgradation,” the CEO added.

Last year, over 12 schools in Chichawatni tehsil were upgraded, with fifty percent of them being girls’ schools.

Published in Dawn, September 29th, 2024

Previous Story

How to Make Education Expenditures Count for Children in Pakistan

polio-drop
Next Story

Another Polio Case Surfaces In Pishin

Latest from Blog

‘Missed Diagnosis Costs Lives of 13,000 Kids with Diabetes Each Year’

Islamabad:An estimated 26,000 children and teenagers develop Type 1 diabetes in Pakistan every year but 13,000 or nearly half of them do not survive, health experts warned on December 15, saying that delayed diagnosis and the unavailability of life saving insulin are costing hundreds of young lives across the country.…

LoI Inked to Protect Child Health, Well-being

Islamabad: The Ministry of National Health Services, Regulations and Coordination has signed a Letter of Intent (LoI) with Unicef to join the Children’s Environmental Health Collaborative and the Partnership for a Lead-Free Future. The officials said many children in Pakistan were exposed to lead at levels that adversely affected their…

Polio Shame

EVERY announcement of a vaccination campaign reflects Pakistan’s recognition of the polio problem and a resolve to defeat the crippling virus. Health Minister Mustafa Kamal has launched the final nationwide polio drive of 2025 with the goal to immunise over 45m children. The minister said that the number of polio…

Govt approves Rs21.8 Billion for Improving Learning Environment in Schools

PESHAWAR: The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government has approved Rs21.8 billion for strengthening school-level service delivery, improving learning environments, and addressing longstanding gaps in infrastructure and human resources at public sector schools. These approvals form part of the government’s broader education reform agenda being implemented under the good governance roadmap, according to…

Education – Opening Doors

Pakistan’s education system has long suffered from a chronic absence of structured career counselling, forcing students to make life-altering academic choices at the tender age of 14 or 15, often based on parental pressure, peer influence or sheer guesswork. Against this backdrop, the Inter Board Coordination Commission’s decision to allow…
Go toTop