'Education in
Burkina Faso' is structured in much the same way as in the rest of the world; primary, secondary, and higher education. Education is technically free and officially mandatory until the age of 16.
Primary and secondary
Only 40% of all
primary school-age children were enrolled in
1996 and only 9.2% of
secondary school-age children.
School conditions are usually reasonable with very basic equipment. Legally the size limit for one class is sixty-five students, but in many
rural areas classes are much bigger because of the lack of schools. If a school is full, children may get turned away and will have to try again the next year.
School session
A
week runs from Monday to Saturday, with the schools being closed on Thursday. Burkina Faso has a
national curriculum. The subjects taught include Production, where children may learn to plant
maize and
trees or keep
chickens, on school land. They have a break between noon and 3pm.
Higher education
As of
2004 there are two main
universities;
The Polytechnic University of Bobo-Dioulasso which focuses primarily on applied sciences like
agriculture, and
University of Ouagadougou. The first private higher education school was established in
1992. Supervision rates are different from one school to another. At the University Ouagadougou there is one teacher for every 24 students, while at The Polytechnic University of Bobo-Dioulasso they have one teacher for every three students.
Administration
The University Ouagadougou and Bobo-Dioulasso are comprised of five levels of decision making: the board of directors, the university assembly, the university council, institutions, and departments.
Influencing factors
★ The number of actual schools (for primary)
★ A shortage of qualified instructors (for higher education)
★ Families have to pay for school supplies and school fees
★ Families have very low income
★ By sending a child (or children) to school it is limiting the money being earned for the family
★ Many families are only able to send one child to school leaving the others to earn money for the
family. They usually send the
eldest, abled, male.
★
Language barrier. Education is mainly conducted in
French, which only 15% of Burkinabè can speak, rather than in first languages of the country.
Literacy rate
According to
UNDP the overall adult
literacy rate, without reference to which language(s), is 21.8% (
male 29.4%;
female 15.2%).
[1]
References
Notes
1. UNDP, ''Human Development Report 2006'' "Burkina Faso"
Sites
★ MapZones
Burkina Faso Education. Retrieved Oct 27, 2004.
★ U.S. Department of State
Background Note: Burkina Faso. Retrieved Oct 27, 2004.
★ Oxfam's Cool Planet
Education in Burkina Faso. Retrieved Oct, 27, 2004.
★ Guenda, Wendengoudi
Burkina Faso Higher Education Profile. Retrieved Oct 28, 2004.
External links
★
''WikiEducator'', "ICT4Africa/Country Report Burkina Faso"