Camfed Annual Review 2016 - an unstoppable human revolution

Today Camfed releases its Annual Review 2016. With its CAMA alumnae network — projected to grow to 100,000 this year — it is more than halfway towards its five-year goal of supporting one million marginalised girls in rural Africa through secondary school.

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The best way to tackle poverty, inequality, youth unemployment, overpopulation, instability, forced migration and climate change is the education of girls, and Camfed has the incontrovertible data to prove that securing girls’ right to education changes everything.
- Lucy Lake, CEO

Camfed writes:

Our approach provides hope, and has become a reference point for what’s possible in the urgent drive to achieve the UN Sustainable Development Goals.

Over the past two years, Camfed has supported 542,079 girls at secondary school by building a base of local activists, which lies at the heart of our model. The young women in Camfed’s CAMA alumnae network have become a powerful movement of rural philanthropists, who ‘plow back’ the benefits of their education into their communities. Each CAMA member, on average,  supports two more girls to go to secondary school, evidencing the multiplier effect of girls’ education. This unique network now numbers 84,675 and will grow to 100,000 in 2017.

"With the right kind of support, even the poorest and most disadvantaged students can make good progress through secondary school."

These remarkable milestones build on an unprecedented uplift in learning outcomes among the most marginalized girls in Tanzania and Zimbabwe, which Camfed has achieved through a multi-dimensional program supported by the UK government’s Girls’ Education Challenge. In addition to covering girls’ school-going costs and training teachers to deliver psychosocial support to vulnerable children, the program saw alumnae return to schools as mentors, role models and ‘Learner Guides’, delivering a uniquely tailored study and life skills curriculum. The results showed that with the right kind of support, even the poorest and most disadvantaged students can make good progress through secondary school, and that supporting students’ self-development and life skills in tandem with a focus on the core curriculum raises their achievements, builds academic confidence, and cuts dropout rates. Marginalised girls in Tanzania, for example, improved their math exam results by 146%, while girls in comparison schools achieved only a 2% increase.

2016 also saw the first 567 Learner Guides achieve a tailored vocational (BTEC) qualification developed in partnership with Pearson to open up new pathways to teacher training and employment for young women after graduation.

Camfed’s results have been widely recognized by education policy influencers, including the University of Cambridge’s Research on Equitable Access & Learning Centre and the Brookings Institution, a US-based think tank whose research confirms girls’ education not only as key to global poverty eradication, but as the most effective intervention to mitigate climate change.

“Our approach unlocks the transformative potential of girls’ education. The young women in CAMA now lead on program delivery and innovation, and galvanize community resources in support of more girls,” says Lucy Lake. “But 28 million girls in sub-Saharan Africa remain out of school. The consequences of their exclusion can be seen in early pregnancy, child marriage, and the risks to physical and mental health that ensue. We hope that everyone who reads our annual review will join us. Together we are an unstoppable human revolution.”


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