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1st Summary–highlighting the lack of creativity and motivation in the classroom. What do you see as the most significant obstacles hindering teachers from cultivating creativity? How do you plan to create a classroom environment that not only fosters creativity but encourages intrinsic motivation?

2nd Writing- Special Populations Research Presentation on “GIFTED FEMALES”

  • Continue researching your chosen special/ underrepresented population.
    • With your group, you will create an oral presentation to inform the class concerning your particular population.
    • As a team, you are also required to create an artifact that would be used to inform the public of your topic.
    • This should be informative and provide support to the public concerning this special population.

    Your presentation and artifact should include the following about your special population:
    • Provide an understanding of the development and individual differences of your special needs group
    • How should we create safe, inclusive, culturally responsive learning environments to engage your special needs group?
    • How would the general curriculum be modified into meaningful and rigorous learning activities for your special needs group? (Provide an example.)
    • What would be appropriate learning and performance modifications to enhance acceleration, depth, and complexity in the academic subject matter?
    • How would an instructor/parent help build positive social interactions for this special needs group?

  •  

    Realisation of the equal enjoyment of
    the right to education by every girl
    SUMMARY
    The present report was prepared pursuant to Human Rights Council resolution 32/20. It
    underlines the multiple and intersecting obstacles that limit effective and equal access of girls to
    education and highlights good practices to address those barriers. It also contains recommendations
    on appropriate measures to ensure the equal enjoyment of the right to education by every girl and,
    in that context, eliminate all gender disparities in education by 2030, in fulfilment of the commitment
    made in Goal 4 of the Sustainable Development Goals.
    Image on the cover © UN Photo/ Eskinder Debebe
    Paragraphs
    Page
    1-4
    4
    II. Legal framework and developments
    5-8
    5
    III. Obstacles to girls’ access to education
    9 – 51
    7
    I.
    Introduction
    A.
    Gender stereotypes
    10 – 14
    7
    B.
    Legislation, policies and budgets
    15 – 19
    8
    C.
    Costs
    20 – 22
    9
    D.
    Privatization
    23 – 24
    10
    E.
    Distance
    25 – 27
    11
    F.
    Education infrastructure
    28 – 29
    12
    G.
    School regulations and dress codes
    30 – 31
    12
    H.
    Inclusive and quality learning environment
    32 – 37
    12
    I.
    Child pregnancy
    38 – 39
    15
    J.
    Gender-based violence
    40 – 43
    15
    K.
    Harmful practices
    44 – 46
    17
    L.
    Conflict and situations of instability
    47 – 51
    18
    IV. Girls at particular risk of being left behind
    52 – 55
    20
    V. 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development
    56 – 65
    23
    66
    26
    VI. Conclusion and recommendations
    © UN Photo/ Shehzad Noorani
    CONTENTS
    I. Introduction
    1.
    In its resolution 32/20, the Human
    Rights Council recognized that education was
    a multiplier right that empowered women and
    girls to make choices to claim their human
    rights, including the right to participate in
    public affairs and to participate fully in the
    making of decisions that shape society. The
    Council requested the United Nations High
    Commissioner for Human Rights to prepare a
    report, in close cooperation with all relevant
    stakeholders, on the realization of the equal
    enjoyment of the right to education by every
    girl, to be submitted to it at its thirty-fifth
    session.
    2.
    A note verbale was sent on 11
    October 2016, requesting submissions from
    States and other stakeholders; 35 submissions
    were received.1 Further information was
    obtained from relevant stakeholders by way of
    reports, correspondence and research.
    3.
    Despite universal recognition of the
    right to education for everyone, girls are still
    more likely than boys never to attend school.
    As of 2014, over 32 million girls of primary
    school age did not attend school and it is
    estimated that 15 million girls — mainly those
    living in poverty — will never set foot in a
    classroom, compared to 10 million boys.2
    These disparities have also contributed to the
    fact that women account for nearly two thirds
    of the world’s 758 million adults who cannot
    read or write, and the gap is even wider in
    situations of conflict, where girls are nearly
    two and a half times more likely to be out of
    school than boys.3
    4.
    Despite progress, in particular in
    primary education, much remains to be done
    at all levels of education and across regional,
    national and subnational levels to ensure that
    every girl has equal right to quality education
    and is not left behind. With gender equality at
    the heart of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable
    Development, in devising laws, policies and
    plans to implement it, States must ensure
    compliance with their international human
    rights obligations.
    UNESCO, Global Education Monitoring Report 2016:
    Gender Review — Creating Sustainable Futures for All
    (2016), p. 15.
    2
    4
    3
    Ibid., pp. 22 and 27.
    © UN Photo/ Eskinder Debebe
    1 The submissions are available from www.ohchr.org/
    EN/Issues/Women/WRGS/Pages/EveryGirl.aspx.
    II. Legal framework and developments
    5.
    The right to education, including its
    equal enjoyment by every girl, is universally
    recognized and guaranteed in many
    international and regional legal instruments.4
    It consists of four essential and interrelated
    principles — availability, accessibility,
    acceptability and adaptability — , which duty
    bearers have the obligation to respect, protect
    and fulfil.5
    6.
    Although the right to education
    is subject to progressive realization, and
    limitations are recognized, international
    human rights standards nonetheless
    impose upon States obligations that have
    immediate effect. For instance, the obligation
    of non-discrimination applies “fully and
    immediately to all aspects of education” and
    “encompasses all internationally prohibited
    grounds of discrimination”.6 Additionally,
    See, inter alia, the International Covenant on Economic,
    Social and Cultural Rights, art. 13 (2); the Convention
    on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against
    Women, arts. 10, 14 and 16; the Convention on the Rights
    of the Child, arts. 28-29; the United Nations Educational,
    Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Convention
    against Discrimination in Education and Recommendation
    against Discrimination in Education; the African Charter
    on Human and Peoples’ Rights, art. 17; the Arab Charter
    on Human Rights, art. 34; the Council of Europe Protocol
    to the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights
    and Fundamental Freedoms, art. 2; and the American
    Declaration of the Rights and Duties of Man, arts. 12 and
    31.
    4
    See E/CN.4/1999/49, para. 50; and Committee on
    Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, general comment No.
    13 (1999) on the right to education, paras.13 and 46.
    States have an immediate obligation to take
    deliberate, concrete and targeted steps, to the
    maximum of their available resources, and to
    move expeditiously and effectively towards
    fully realizing the right to education.7
    7.
    Girls’ equal right to education is
    regularly emphasized in the concluding
    observations on State party reports by human
    rights treaty bodies, with 46 references on
    the subject in 2014 to 2015 alone. Diverse
    special procedure mechanisms have also
    taken up the issue in their thematic and
    country reports and communications. In 2015
    and 2016, 51 recommendations relating to
    girls’ right to education were made to States
    during their universal periodic reviews; 49
    were accepted.8
    8.
    In addition to the agendas of the
    Millennium Development Goals (20002015) and the Sustainable Development
    Goals (2015-2030), numerous non-binding
    political instruments have recognized the
    need to ensure girls’ equal right to education,
    including the International Conference
    on Population and Development (1994);
    the Beijing Declaration and Platform for
    Action (1995); the Dakar Framework for
    Action (2000); the Incheon Declaration and
    Framework for Action (2015); and the United
    Nations Girls’ Education Initiative.
    5
    Convention on the Rights of the Child, art. 2; Committee
    on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, general comment
    No. 13 (1999), para. 31.
    6
    Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights,
    general comment No. 13 (1999), paras. 43-45.
    7  
    See also A/HRC/30/23.
    8  
    5
    © UN Photo/ Milton Grant
    6
    III. Obstacles to girls’ access to education
    9.
    Multiple and intersecting obstacles
    limit the enjoyment of the right to education
    by children around the world. While some
    A.
    GENDER STEREOTYPES
    10.
    Gender stereotypes about the
    role of women as relegated to the family
    sphere underpin all obstacles to girls’ equal
    access to quality education.9 Girls are often
    socialized to assume domestic and care
    responsibilities, with the assumption that
    they will be economically dependent on
    men. The stereotype of men as breadwinners
    leads to the prioritization of boys’ education.
    Stereotypes often dictate different expectations
    for boys and girls, such as completion of
    education and fields of study to pursue.
    Stereotypes are also perpetuated in school
    curricula and materials, which often leads
    to occupational gender segregation, with
    girls less likely to study and pursue careers in
    highly valued professional and traditionally
    male-dominated fields, such as science,
    technology, engineering and mathematics.10
    11.
    Education can contribute to
    dismantling harmful gender stereotypes and
    norms, which have long-lasting and wideranging impacts on all aspects of girls’ and
    women’s lives.
    12.
    El Salvador, Estonia, Lithuania,
    Slovakia, Spain, Mexico and Equality
    Now recognized that gender stereotyping
    was a central challenge to girls’ access to
    education. Burkina Faso, Cuba, France, Mali,
    Mauritius, Nicaragua, Slovenia and Defence
    for Children International emphasized
    their engagement in awareness-raising
    initiatives with parents, families, community
    and religious leaders, and the media with
    a view to addressing harmful views and
    beliefs. Georgia and Ireland reported that
    they had taken specific measures to promote
    careers for women in science, technology,
    See Committee on the Rights of the Child, general
    comment No. 20 (2016) on the implementation of the
    rights of the child during adolescence, paras. 27-28;
    Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human
    Rights (OHCHR), “Gender stereotyping as a human rights
    violation” (October 2013), pp. 8-9.
    9
    UNESCO, Global Education Monitoring Report 2016,
    p. 34.
    10
    of these affect girls and boys alike, those
    highlighted below illustrate specific hurdles
    faced by girls.
    engineering and mathematics. The United
    Arab Emirates highlighted the establishment
    of the Centre for Creativity and Innovation
    for women and girls, with the aim of
    promoting equal opportunities in information
    and communications technology, including
    through training, research and innovative
    applications. Saudi Arabia reported that
    it provided awareness-raising training and
    programmes to limit and prevent infrequent
    school attendance and girls’ dropping out.
    13.
    International human rights standards
    specify that States’ obligation to eliminate
    discrimination against girls and boys includes
    dismantling stereotyping by taking proactive
    measures — in cooperation with girls and
    boys, women and men, civil society, and
    community and religious leaders — to
    promote girls’ empowerment and eliminate
    harmful gender stereotypes in both public and
    private life.11
    14.
    Human rights treaty bodies have
    recommended that States take comprehensive
    measures to overcome gender stereotypes that
    discriminate against and act as a barrier to
    the education of girls.12 Stereotypical beliefs
    among parents, teachers and community
    leaders regarding the importance and value
    of education for girls should be challenged.
    Comprehensive strategies to eliminate
    negative attitudes, practices and stereotypes
    should be formulated, including in the context
    of education, with the involvement of girls.
    They should have clearly defined targets and
    appropriate monitoring mechanisms.13
    11
    See for example, the Convention on the Elimination of
    All Forms of Discrimination against Women, arts. 5 and
    10 (c); the Convention on the Rights of the Child, art. 2;
    Committee on the Rights of the Child, general comment No.
    20 (2016), para. 28; Committee on Economic, Social and
    Cultural Rights, general comment No. 13 (1999), para. 55.
    See CEDAW/C/GRC/CO/7, para. 27 (b);
    CEDAW/C/ALB/CO/3, para. 31; CEDAW/C/BEN/
    CO/4, para. 27 (c).
    12
    13
    See CEDAW/C/BFA/CO/6, para. 32; Committee on
    the Rights of the Child, general comment No. 20 (2016),
    para. 69; CRC/C/IRQ/CO/2-4, paras. 17-18.
    7
    B.
    LEGISLATION, POLICIES AND BUDGETS
    15.
    Several States have laws and policies
    that curtail girls’ equal enjoyment of the right
    to education.14 Even apparently genderneutral laws and policies can — often owing
    to prevailing social norms — result in girls
    being left out of school,15 such as those that
    fail to provide goods and services targeting
    girls’ needs or that do not explicitly protect
    girls’ rights to make decisions about their
    bodies and life choices. These include laws
    and policies that allow child marriage, permit
    discriminatory school admission criteria, such
    as excluding pregnant girls, and restrict girls’
    freedom of movement. Plan International and
    the National Youth Council of Ireland noted
    that girls’ voices are not always heard, which
    leads to the development of laws and policies
    that do not reflect their views, needs and
    experiences.
    16.
    Repealing discriminatory laws and
    policies and adopting measures to advance
    gender equality that specifically combat
    discrimination in education are critical. The
    adoption of legal and policy frameworks to
    guarantee girl’s equal access to education,
    including in the context of the implementation
    of the Sustainable Development Goals, was
    highlighted by several States, including
    Brunei Darussalam, Burkina Faso, Colombia,
    Cuba, El Salvador, Estonia, Finland, France,
    Georgia, Lithuania, Mali, Mexico, Monaco,
    Montenegro, Qatar, the Russian Federation,
    Saudi Arabia, Slovakia, Spain and the United
    Arab Emirates.
    17.
    Laws and policies must be effectively
    implemented, monitored and evaluated,
    and involve meaningful participation and
    awareness of their rights by girls and boys.16
    18.
    States have an obligation to seek
    international assistance and cooperation
    when their resources are insufficient.
    International partners can provide financing
    and resources, which should be coordinated,
    sustainable and monitored, and effectively
    target girls most at risk of being left behind.18
    19.
    Every girl should have access to and
    be informed about child-friendly, gendersensitive and safe judicial and non-judicial
    remedies when their rights, including to
    education, are violated.19 Without effective
    and comprehensive accountability at the
    national level, all human rights, including the
    right to education, are but hollow promises.
    It is crucial that the right to education
    be justiciable as a legal right and an
    enforceable entitlement.20 National human
    rights institutions could play a stronger role in
    monitoring equal access of girls to education,
    and receiving and adjudicating complaints.21
    Committee on the Rights of the Child, general comment
    No. 19 (2016) on public budgeting for the realization of
    children’s rights, paras. 41-44; CEDAW/C/PER/CO/7-8,
    paras. 13-14; A/HRC/26/39, para. 23.
    17
    14
    OHCHR, “Attacks against girls seeking access to
    education”, Background paper (2015), p. 25.
    OHCHR, Project on a Mechanism to Address Laws that
    Discriminate against Women (March 2008), p. 6.
    19
    Convention on the Rights of the Child, art. 12 (2);
    Committee on the Rights of the Child, general comment
    No.12 (2009), para. 47; A/HRC/26/39, para. 105.
    World Bank, Women, Business and the Law 2016:
    Getting to equal (2015), pp. 4-5.
    15
    16
    See A/HRC/26/39, para. 15; Committee on the
    Rights of the Child, general comment No. 12 (2009) on the
    right of the child to be heard, paras. 105-114.
    8
    Adequate financial resources and direct,
    transparent, gender-sensitive budgeting for
    education is also required,17 otherwise, higher
    out-of-pocket costs and limited available
    spaces will lead to competition among girls
    and boys for places in schools. Compounded
    with gender inequalities and labour laws,
    policies and markets that favour men may, in
    turn, result in prioritization of boys’ education
    at the expense of girls.
    18
    20
    See A/HRC/23/35, para. 58.
    21
    See submission from Honduras.
    C.
    COSTS
    20.
    Girls are more likely to perform
    poorly at school and drop out when parents
    or guardians live in poverty and/or cannot
    afford to pay school expenses, such as school
    fees, textbooks, uniforms, transportation and
    lunches. This is compounded by gendered
    expectations related to domestic and care
    responsibilities, and parental biases towards
    boys’ education for them to have better career
    prospects.
    21.
    Many States indicated that they
    provided free primary and secondary
    education for girls and boys, with some
    covering indirect costs such as uniforms,
    materials, lunches and transportation.22
    El Salvador indicated that it provided
    free education at all levels and had also
    implemented a programme that provided
    free lunches, uniforms and school supplies;
    Mauritius stated that it provided all
    students with free transportation; and
    Oman highlighted that it awarded 500 full
    scholarships annually for higher education to
    girls who completed secondary school with an
    80-per cent grade point average.
    See submissions from Burkina Faso, Colombia, Finland,
    Mali, Qatar, the Russian Federation, Saudi Arabia and the
    United Arab Emirates.
    22
    22.
    Quality education must be
    economically accessible to everyone without
    discrimination, and every girl has the equal
    right to the same opportunities to benefit
    from scholarships and study grants.23 Where
    quality primary education is available
    free of charge, States are also required to
    progressively introduce free quality secondary
    education for all.24 Special temporary
    measures, such as financial transfer schemes
    and programmes that incentivize girls going
    to school, have increased girls’ enrolment
    rates and contributed to changing attitudes
    towards girls’ education.25 Such measures
    should be gender-sensitive, specifically
    targeted to girls most at risk of being left
    behind, and their impact should be carefully
    assessed.
    23
    Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
    Discrimination against Women, art. 10; Committee on
    Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, general comment No.
    13 (1999), para. 6 (b).
    24
    Convention on the Rights of the Child, art. 28 (1);
    International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural
    Rights, art. 13 (2).
    25
    See A/HRC/26/39, para. 37; United Nations Entity
    for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UNWomen), Progress of the World’s Women 2015-2016, p.
    138; submission from Burkina Faso.
    © UN Photo/ Evan Schneider
    9
    © UN Photo/ A Jongen
    D.
    PRIVATIZATION
    23.
    The expansion of privatized
    education may raise the cost of quality
    education and lead to disinvestment in
    public education, which could further
    entrench gender inequality in society.26
    Many private schools have discriminatory
    admission requirements and are profit driven,
    and therefore not universally and equally
    accessible. They do not always follow the
    national curriculum or employ qualified
    teachers; some may not be registered with
    the national authorities or may be privately
    managed with limited government oversight,
    accountability or adherence to national
    prescriptive regulations. All these factors
    can limit girls’ participation in school,
    intensify prioritization of boys’ education and
    perpetuate discriminatory curricula, especially
    when the prevalence of privatized education
    leads to reduced free and accessible public
    education options.27
    10
    26
    See A/HRC/34/27, para. 33.
    27
    See A/HRC/29/30, paras. 35, 57, 116 and 120.
    24.
    States have the obligation to protect
    girls against exclusion from and interference
    by third parties in quality education,
    including private entities and non-State
    organizations such as religious or community
    schools or schools run by non-governmental
    organizations. Even where private education
    systems exist, States remain responsible for
    respecting, protecting and fulfilling every girl’s
    right to education. The Special Rapporteur
    on the right to education called upon States
    to “put in place an elaborate framework of
    regulations that are prescriptive, prohibitory
    and punitive, in order to control private
    providers”, “undertake full-scale investigations
    of fraudulent practices” and “preserve
    education as a public good”.28
    28
    Ibid., paras. 116-132.
    E.
    DISTANCE
    25.
    When schools are far from homes,
    such as in rural and remote areas, the
    likelihood of girls’ non-attendance increases.
    Girls are also particularly affected when
    their freedom of movement is restricted,
    for instance, by discriminatory laws that
    require permission to travel by a male
    relative and/or parents’ reluctance to allow
    girls to travel long distances alone owing
    to safety considerations. Girls in remote
    and rural settings also tend to drop out of
    school more regularly than other girls owing
    to often exacerbated expectations relating
    to childcare, seasonal work or fetching
    firewood and water. Those girls make up
    a large proportion of the national illiteracy
    rate.29 Even when schools exist nearby, the
    quality of education offered may impact girls’
    enrolment, attendance and completion.
    26.
    States can bring education closer to
    home, including by ensuring that education
    plans and policies are sensitive to local
    realities and responsive to the specific needs
    of all children; by implementing alternative
    learning programmes, including the use of
    ICT to deliver courses, where appropriate
    platforms and quality assurance can be
    guaranteed;30 and by providing safe facilities
    for girls attending boarding school and
    affordable forms of transportation to/from
    school.31 The United Nations Children’s Fund
    (UNICEF) highlighted its guidelines for genderresponsive sector planning that was rolled
    out with the United Nations Girls’ Education
    Initiative and the Global Partnership for
    Education.
    27.
    States have an obligation to ensure
    that quality education is physically accessible
    for all girls, including girls in rural and
    remote areas. States should, inter alia,
    improve educational infrastructure in rural
    areas; increase the number of qualified
    teachers, including women; ensure culturally
    appropriate education in local languages
    and safe, affordable and accessible gendersensitive transportation.32
    Submissions from UNESCO, Estonia and the Russian
    Federation.
    30
    31
    29
    Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against
    Women, general recommendation No. 34 (2016) on the
    rights of rural women, paras. 42-43; UNESCO, Global
    Education Monitoring Report 2016, pp. 18-19 and 28.
    (a).
    See CEDAW/C/SLB/CO/1-3, paras. 32 (a) and 33
    32
    Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against
    Women, general recommendation No. 34 (2016), paras.
    43 (e) and 87.
    11
    F.
    EDUCATION INFRASTRUCTURE
    28.
    Girls may be unwilling to attend
    school or discouraged from doing so by
    parents or guardians when schools do not
    provide water, safe and separate toilets/
    changing rooms nor take into account girls’
    particular health needs. Their concentration
    and participation in class may also be
    negatively affected in those circumstances.
    Social stigma around menstruation and HIV/
    AIDS, for example, often leads to additional
    discrimination and may further compel a girl
    to remain at home.33
    G.
    SCHOOL REGULATIONS AND DRESS CODES
    30.
    School admission practices and
    regulations that are not gender-sensitive
    and that discriminate on the basis of sex or
    gender limit girls’ equal enjoyment of the right
    to education, including different admission
    criteria for girls and boys to secondary school
    or higher education or the exclusion of girls
    from physical education and extracurricular
    activities. Girls may risk expulsion, public
    shaming and disciplinary sanctions, including
    flogging, lashing and other forms of genderbased violence, for non-compliance with the
    school dress code; and may be discouraged
    or prevented by parents from attending school
    if they must either wear or remove religious
    symbols.
    H.
    31.
    Under international human rights law,
    a legal ban on wearing religious symbols and
    clothing in schools may be in contravention
    of the best interests of the child principle, and
    the child’s right to freedom of expression,
    education and freedom to practise or manifest
    a religion.33 All children should participate
    equally in adopting and addressing
    regulations such as school dress codes. Cuba
    highlighted the participation of girls and boys
    in the elaboration and application of school
    regulations and the incorporation of a gendersensitive approach to promoting practices that
    foster equality. States should carefully consider
    and closely monitor how dress codes impact
    girls’ access to education.34
    INCLUSIVE AND QUALITY LEARNING ENVIRONMENT
    32.
    The prevalence of explicit and implicit
    discriminatory curricula, textbooks, materials
    and teaching methods can reinforce, foster
    and normalize discrimination. Unqualified
    teachers may push girls into non-professional
    courses, overlook them in classroom
    discussions and be biased towards boys in
    terms of grades, opportunities, praise and
    punishment.
    33.
    Cuba, Estonia, Finland, Mexico,
    Nicaragua, Slovenia and Spain highlighted
    the integration of gender equality in national
    OHCHR, “Information series on sexual and reproductive
    health and rights” (2015); A/HRC/32/44, paras. 68-70.
    33
    34
    Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights,
    general comment No.15 (2002) on the right to water,
    paras. 11-12; A/HRC/33/49, para. 50.
    12
    29.
    States should ensure that schools have
    adequate and safe drinking water; separate,
    accessible and sheltered toilets for girls;
    and hygiene education and resources for
    menstrual hygiene, with attention to girls with
    disabilities.34
    school curricula, teacher training, revision of
    textbooks and dissemination of information
    on gender equality. Schools on Brunei
    Darussalam provided platforms for girls to
    participate in extracurricular activities.
    34.
    States have an obligation to
    periodically review and revise curricula,
    textbooks, programmes and teaching methods
    to ensure that they do not perpetuate harmful
    35
    See, for example, A/HRC/31/79, p. 47, SDN
    5/2015.
    36
    See CEDAW/C/FRA/CO/6, para. 20; CEDAW/C/
    TKM/CO/3-4, para. 20; communication No. 931/2000,
    Hudoyberganova v. Uzbekistan, Views adopted on 5
    November 2004; communication No. 1852/2008, Singh
    v. France, Views adopted on 1 November 2012.
    37
    See CRC/C/15/Add.240, paras. 25-26.
    gender stereotypes.38 States should ensure that
    human rights education, including on gender
    equality and non-discrimination, is part of the
    core curricula, that teachers are systematically
    trained on gender equality and that girls and
    boys are encouraged to select non-traditional
    fields of study, including through academic
    counselling.39
    35.
    Girls’ equal enjoyment of the right
    to education also involves sensitivity to
    differences in skills, knowledge and language
    competencies, the presence of qualified
    female teachers, who can be role models, and
    the existence of student clubs and mentorship
    programmes.40 States should ensure a gender
    balance among teaching staff and in school
    administrations, including at the senior levels,
    Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
    Discrimination against Women, art. 10; Committee on
    Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, general comment No.
    13 (1999), paras. 50 and 55; Committee on the Rights of
    the Child, general comment No. 1 (2001) on the aims of
    education, para. 10; CEDAW/C/AFG/CO/1-2, para.
    33.
    38
    Committee on the Rights of the Child, general comment
    No.1 (2001), paras. 2-3; Committee on the Elimination of
    Discrimination against Women, general recommendation
    34 (2016), para. 43; Committee on Economic, Social and
    Cultural Rights, general comment 16 (2005), para. 30;
    General Assembly resolution 66/137.
    39
    and the curricula in gender-segregated
    schools should be the same for girls and
    boys,41 so that girls can enjoy the same
    courses and activities, including sports as
    boys.42
    36.
    Comprehensive sexuality education
    is often biased, censored, narrowed to
    biology, age restricted, subject to third
    party authorization or even excluded from
    the school curriculum. However, access to
    comprehensive sexuality education, defined
    as an “age-appropriate, culturally relevant
    approach to teaching about sexuality and
    relationships by providing scientifically
    accurate, realistic, non-judgmental
    information”,43 will ensure that girls and
    40
    See submissions from Alice Saisha and Defence for
    Children International; UNESCO, From Access to Equality:
    Empowering Girls and Women through Literacy and
    Secondary Education, 2nd ed. (2012), p. 33.
    41
    See CEDAW/C/GEO/CO/4-5, para. 27 (d). Plan
    International, Girls’ Learning: Investigating the classroom
    practices that promote girls’ learning (January 2013).
    42
    Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
    Discrimination against Women, art. 10 (b) and (g); A/
    HRC/32/33, paras. 5, 29, 34 and 101 (e).
    43
    UNESCO and others, International Technical Guidance
    on Sexuality Education, vol. 1: the rationale for sexuality
    education (December 2009).
    13
    it is part of the mandatory school curriculum
    and delivered through a holistic approach
    that is gender- and disability-sensitive
    and promotes women’s rights and gender
    equality.45
    37.
    International human rights
    mechanisms have clearly established that
    everyone has a right to education on sexuality
    and reproduction that is comprehensive, nondiscriminatory, non-biased, evidence-based
    and scientifically accurate and takes into
    account the evolving capacities of children
    and adolescents.44 In the context of ensuring
    the equal right of girls to quality education,
    States are obligated to provide education on
    sexual and reproductive health, ensure that
    Convention on the Rights of the Child, art. 24 (2) (f);
    Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination
    against Women, art.12 (2); Committee on Economic, Social
    and Cultural Rights, general comment No. 22 (2016),
    paras. 9 and 49 (f); A/65/162, para. 75.
    44
    45
    Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights,
    general comment No. 22 (2016) on the right to sexual and
    reproductive health, para. 47; Committee on the Elimination
    of Discrimination against Women, general recommendations
    No. 24 (1999) on women and health, para. 18; Committee on the Rights of the Child, general comment No. 20
    (2016), para. 61; Committee on the Rights of Persons with
    Disabilities, general comment No. 3 (2016) on women and
    girls with disabilities, para. 40
    © UN Photo/ John Isaac
    14
    boys can make informed decisions about
    their sexual and reproductive health. It is
    key for the empowerment of every girl and
    for combating harmful practices, unwanted
    pregnancies and sexually transmitted
    infections, including HIV. Many States,
    including Colombia, Cuba, El Salvador,
    France, Mexico and Nicaragua, recognized
    the importance of comprehensive sexuality
    education.
    © UN Photo/ Shareef Sarhan
    I.
    CHILD PREGNANCY
    38.
    Prohibitive laws or regulations often
    deny pregnant girls access to school on the
    premise that girls stop being children once
    they become pregnant. They are also often
    not provided with adequate support and
    services during their pregnancy nor after they
    give birth. Mexico recognized the challenges
    that pregnant girls faced and provided grants
    to enable pregnant adolescents (12 to 18
    years) to complete their education.
    J.
    39.
    Every girl has the right to remain
    in school when she is pregnant and to be
    reintegrated into school, including through
    publicized non-discriminatory laws and
    policies, after she gives birth.46 Stigma and
    bullying by students and teachers must be
    addressed so that they have a safe learning
    environment in schools.47 States should ensure
    that childcare facilities, breastfeeding rooms
    and counselling are available to pregnant and
    nursing girls, including on school premises.48
    GENDER-BASED VIOLENCE
    40.
    Girls are often subjected to genderbased violence on the way to/from and
    in school, including sexual harassment,
    assault, abduction, psychological attacks
    and bullying, perpetrated predominantly
    by male students, teachers and community
    members, but also by women and girls, often
    with impunity. Such violence may target
    girls who attend school or girls, parents and
    teachers who promote gender equality and
    girls’ right to education. Documented cases of
    attacks against girls accessing education, in
    particular in the context of violent extremism,
    are on the rise around the world. Yet, few
    46   
    Joint general recommendation No. 31 of the
    Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against
    Women/general comment No. 18 of the Committee on the
    Rights of the Child (2014) on harmful practices, para. 69
    (a).
    47
    Submission from Defence for Children International.
    Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against
    Women, general recommendation No. 34 (2016), para.
    43 (g).
    48
    15
    41.
    School-related gender-based
    violence often leads to girls’ removal from
    school owing mainly to concerns for their
    “marriageability” and attitudes relating to
    so-called honour.50 Such violence commonly
    leads to trauma and stigmatization, and
    sometimes pregnancy, which significantly
    curtail the victim’s access to education.
    42.
    Various measures have been taken
    to address this issue, including confidential
    school monitoring and reporting mechanisms;
    child-friendly courts; public registers of sexual
    offenders and prohibition from working
    with children; capacity-building for law
    enforcement officials; and rehabilitation
    services for victims.51 UNESCO highlighted
    the “Global guidance on school-related
    gender-based violence”, which provides
    useful approaches, methodologies, tools and
    resources to address school-related genderbased violence.
    49
    See A/HRC/26/39, para. 105; A/HRC/33/29,
    paras. 23, 27, 30, 35 and 64.
    16
    43.
    States have an international legal
    obligation to take appropriate and effective
    measures to protect girls against all forms of
    gender-based vio

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