Exploring Non-formal Education Options Necessary To Ensure Full Literacy: Sardar

1 min read

Non-formal education is the only method through which out-of-school children can receive education. Sindh Education Minister Syed Sardar Ali Shah said this on 23 July 2025 as he addressed as the chief guest a ceremony for handing over gadgets to 500 non-formal education centres established across the province.

The project was accomplished by the School education department with the collaboration of the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA). Shah stated that the Sindh government had launched a serious initiative to address the issue of out-of-school children in the province. He emphasised that this gap could not be filled through conventional education methods alone and non-formal education was the only effective way to help as many out-of-school children as possible receive an education.

He noted that around 1.6 million children were born in Sindh every year, with only 800,000 to 1 million enrolled in public and private schools, while, based on available resources, the government could only educate 200,000 to 300,000 children through traditional measures. Acknowledging these realities, he stressed the need for exploring alternative approaches.

The education minister said that providing digital facilities to non-formal centres would help modernise them and enable continuous contact with centres for online teacher training. He also announced that under the expansion of non-formal education initiatives, 3,000 centres would be established across Sindh, helping 100,000 children complete their education swiftly outside of the conventional system.

School Education Secretary Zahid Ali Abbasi stated in his address that the gadgets would facilitate monitoring of non-formal education centres and allow direct observation of their performance, including student attendance and learning progress.

JICA Deputy Chief Adviser Abid Gul mentioned that the gadgets would make it easier to provide periodic training to teachers in order to keep them updated with modern teaching methods.

Sindh Literacy and Non-Formal Education (LNFE) Director Abdul Jabbar Mari shared that in the first phase of the non-formal education initiative in the province, 500 centres had been established in Jacobabad, Kashmore, Mirpurkhas, Tharparkar and Umerkot, targeting 15,000 children for education. Currently, 16,349 students were enrolled in these centres, with 8,598 being girls, which was a higher number than boys.

He highlighted that these centres had been set up in areas with the lowest literacy rates, with priority given to underprivileged communities, providing education opportunities to children aged 9 to 16 years. He added that with the help of digital gadgets, a managerial information system would be established to record the attendance of teachers and students. At the end of the ceremony, the education minister distributed tablets among facilitators of the non-formal centres and encouraged them for their efforts.

Published in News Daily on 24 July 2025.

Previous Story

Swat Police Arrest 11 In Seminary Student Murder Case

Next Story

Polio Resurfaces In KP, Karachi, Warns NA Panel

Latest from Blog

Polio Resurfaces In KP, Karachi, Warns NA Panel

ISLAMABAD: Resurgence of polio in southern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Karachi is being driven by poor sanitation and repeated failure to vaccinate large numbers of children due to security and operational challenges, National Assembly’s Standing Committee on National Health Services, Regulations and Coordination warned on 24-July-2025. The committee, chaired by MNA…

Swat Police Arrest 11 In Seminary Student Murder Case

SWAT: District police officer Mohammad Umar Khan on 23rd July announced the arrest of 11 individuals, including administrator of an unregistered seminary, in connection with the brutal killing of a 12-year-old student and the systematic abuse of children at the institution located in the Chaliyar area of Khwazakhela here. Addressing…

Obun2 Launches ‘Child Nexus Pakistan’ to Strengthen Child Rights Monitoring

In an important development towards enhancing evidence-based policy and advocacy for children in Pakistan, Obun2, in partnership with the National Commission on the Rights of Child (NCRC), has developed a comprehensive dataset on child rights across the country. This initiative responds to the urgent need for structured, reliable, and regularly updated…

The Children We Sacrifice

Pakistani children aren’t safe. That’s not opinion or exaggeration. It’s the bleak, burning truth we keep looking away from. They’re ignored, exploited, brutalised and abandoned on every possible front. But don’t think for a second the numbers in this piece tell the whole story. For every reported case, dozens vanish…
Go toTop