最美情侣中文字幕电影,在线麻豆精品传媒,在线网站高清黄,久久黄色视频

歡迎光臨散文網(wǎng) 會(huì)員登陸 & 注冊(cè)

TED|學(xué)校只是開始,接下來(lái)才是女孩們實(shí)現(xiàn)終身成功的辦法

2023-08-14 11:08 作者:I-am-ur-BOSS  | 我要投稿


About the speaker??

Angeline Murimirwa is the CEO of CAMFED, a pan-African movement revolutionizing education for girls.

Why you should listen

Angeline Murimirwa went to secondary school in rural Zimbabwe thanks to support from CAMFED (Campaign for Female Education), a nonprofit whose mission is to eradicate poverty in Africa through the education and empowerment of girls. After she graduated in 1998, she became a founding member and the first elected Chair of the CAMFED Association (CAMA). Far more than your run-of-the-mill alumni group, CAMA is a peer support and leadership network of activists educated with CAMFED support that has since grown to more than 240,000 members.

Murimirwa took on the chief executive role at CAMFED in January 2023, and she now focuses on ensuring the organization remains true to its original mission — all while building capacity for expansion. She won the Yidan Prize for Education Development in 2020 and accepted the Conrad N. Hilton Humanitarian Prize on behalf of CAMFED in 2021.

Angeline Murimirwa?|TED2023? April 2023

You've all heard the story about girls' education.?It goes like this:?To end poverty, educate a girl.?To tackle climate change, educate a girl.?To solve the health crisis, educate a girl.

It seems like girls' education is the closest thing we have?to an actual silver bullet.?There's just one problem.?When you send a girl to school?without radically reshaping the support structures around her,?you're just putting a diploma in her hand.?If she gets that far.?And slotting her right back into a world of poverty and inequality.?What's more,?as one of the few survivors of a system stacked against her,?she'll feel isolated and overwhelmed by all of the expectations?of how her education will somehow change everything.?I remember primary school in Zimbabwe

where a teacher would tell his top pupil to hide in a toilet?whenever the inspectors came?because they would send her home for not paying her levies.?Her experience of isolation,?crouching barefoot in a torn dress?over a pit in a concrete cubicle?only intensified when she received a scholarship to secondary school.?One of the few to get this chance,?she was wracked by guilt.?Her own mom had sold two buckets of maize?to buy her a blanket?and a toothbrush for boarding school.?That meant her family would give up many meals to see her through.?How was she ever going to repay this investment??This girl often thought of dropping out.

Imagine suffering survivor's guilt just for being in school.?Imagine feeling the pressure,?not just to address your own family poverty,?but to be the solution to the world's problems.?To change her trajectory and reap the benefits of girls' education,?we have to lift the burden?placed on the shoulders of each single girl,?the pressure to beat the odds on her own?and to suddenly make the world a better place?for everyone when they do.

I'm excited to tell you?there is a growing sisterhood of educated young women in Africa?who are doing just that.

Thank you.

(Applause)

They know firsthand the complex web of barriers to girls' education?that extends well beyond the school gates.?They have felt the effects of poverty and hunger,?child marriage and teen pregnancy.?And now they are ensuring that vulnerable girls have a sister to lean on?in the classroom and throughout their lives.

Part of the Campaign for Female Education, CAMFED,?these women spearhead a model that helps girls thrive in school?and equip them with the skills and support network?they need to succeed.?Armed with agency and confidence,?girls change the trajectory of their own lives?and together tackle the structural inequality?that holds women back.?We provide girls with financial and material support?for school basics like decent clothes,?notebooks and menstrual products?in a context where one month's supply can cost as much as 20 meals.?We built and nurture a social support network around girls,?community committees that safeguard children,?parents who cook school meals and build safe toilets,?chiefs who tackle child marriage and lift women's voices up.?Crucially, the graduates who join our sisterhood?return to the classroom to accompany girls?on the journey through school to independence.

We've done this for decades and know how successful it is.?These sisters are leaders who lift each other up?and ensure that no girl has to carry the weight of poverty?and expectations on her own.?When you have a job interview,?a sister will lend you a dress.?When you apply for university, a sister will talk you through the jargon.?You know, when you move to a different district,?a sister will introduce you to her networks.?And when you face challenges in your business,?a sister will loan you money?and ask that you pay it forward to another.?When you have a sick family member,?a sister will show up in the hospital.?In some cases,?we have so many sisters show up, they have to be turned away.

(Laughter)

Finishing school is just the start of a challenging journey for a rural girl.?It's the success of women who have gone before her,?who succeeded before her,?that show her what's possible.?And as more girls graduate, that journey becomes easier.

This is not just about a tool to solve the world's hardest problems.?It's a story about communities joining forces in a model?that sees girls' education as the route to agency and leadership.?And the benefits are clear to see.?Our CAMFED association is now?more than a quarter of a million young women strong.

(Applause)

And more than 56,000 members hold local,?national and international leadership positions.?But the most important thing about this sisterhood?is our multiplier effect.?The average member financially supports?the education of at least three more girls.?And as the sisterhood flywheel spins faster and faster,?young women sit at decision-making tables,?change gender norms?and ensure millions more girls benefit.

I know the impact this will have on vulnerable girls?because I was one of them.?Remember that girl hiding from the inspectors?and worrying how to pay back her mom's sacrifice??That was me.?I was one of the first girls supported by CAMFED in Zimbabwe.?And today,?I'm the CEO of the very organization that sent me to school.

(Cheers and applause)

And what keeps me sane and energized?during the toughest of times?is the sisterhood I co-founded, which sits at the heart of our programs.?It’s a safe space where you can show up as you are?and leave better than when you came.?The kind of space all of us need to thrive.

So believe me when I tell you,?girls' education is the silver bullet.?But only, only, if you do it right.

Thank you.

(Cheers and applause)

TED|學(xué)校只是開始,接下來(lái)才是女孩們實(shí)現(xiàn)終身成功的辦法的評(píng)論 (共 條)

分享到微博請(qǐng)遵守國(guó)家法律
房山区| 新化县| 沿河| 略阳县| 襄汾县| 什邡市| 宁河县| 襄垣县| 灵川县| 新龙县| 嘉定区| 会同县| 黑龙江省| 衡水市| 两当县| 牡丹江市| 类乌齐县| 东乡族自治县| 晋宁县| 临西县| 连山| 巴彦淖尔市| 白银市| 卢氏县| 四平市| 大理市| 阳信县| 开化县| 玛沁县| 龙井市| 晴隆县| 牡丹江市| 全椒县| 南木林县| 云霄县| 五大连池市| 平凉市| 兴化市| 梧州市| 耒阳市| 年辖:市辖区|