AFRICA: Girls Get ‘Scholarship Plus’
Mentors. Community involvement. Female role models. HIV/AIDS education. Those may not sound like parts of a typical scholarship program. But then, the African Girls Scholarship Program is not typical.
“I call it ‘scholarship plus’,” said May Rihani, senior vice president and director of the AED Center for Gender Equity. In addition to providing girls with money for school fees, supplies, books, uniforms, and sometimes even shoes, it was important that the program provide the girls with additional support, said Rihani, who has been working to improve girls’ education for 25 years.
The program began last fall and will last for five years in 15 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa. All told, the project will provide more than 80,000 one-year scholarships. Ideally, most of the girls who enter the program will remain part of it for five years, and receive five scholarships.
In order to stay in the program, girls must stay in school and do well. “We know a family’s economic conditions can be a large factor in whether or not girls stay in school.” Rihani said. “But there are also social and cultural issues that play into a family’s decision to allow their daughters to continue their education.”
For example, some girls get married and are forced to drop out of school. Others are required to stay home and care for an ailing adult in the household. That’s why the scholarship program provides so much more than just alleviating the economic burden. “We need to make it the community norm for families to keep their girls in school,” Rihani said.