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1 MINISTRY OF EDUCATION MINISTRY OF EDUCATION 1 7 7 th th November, 2008 November, 2008
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Page 1: Pakistan Education Plan

11

MINISTRY OF EDUCATIONMINISTRY OF EDUCATION

11

77thth November, 2008 November, 2008

Page 2: Pakistan Education Plan

PART - I

• Constitution of Pakistan

• Organization & Functions

PART – II

• Education Scenario

• Financing

• Education Policy

• Other Programmes

PART - I

• Constitution of Pakistan

• Organization & Functions

PART – II

• Education Scenario

• Financing

• Education Policy

• Other Programmes

ContentsContents

22

Page 3: Pakistan Education Plan

Constitution of Pakistan

Constitution of Pakistan

33

Page 4: Pakistan Education Plan

Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan, 1973 – Article 37-b

“The State shall remove illiteracy and provide free and compulsory secondary

education within minimum possible period”

Concurrent Legislative List:Curriculum, syllabus, planning, policy,

centres of excellence, standard of education & Islamic education

44

Page 5: Pakistan Education Plan

Functions and OrganizationsFunctions and Organizations

55

Page 6: Pakistan Education Plan

Major Functions of Ministry of Education

Under Rules of Business 1973

• National policies, plans and programmes in education. Development of curricula and textbooks.

• International aspects of education.• External examinations. Equivalence of degrees and

diplomas.• Education in the Capital, Federally Administered Areas

and AJ&K.• Financial assistance to educationists and men of

letters.• National libraries.• Boy Scouts and Girl Guides.• Welfare of Pakistani students abroad and foreign

students in Pakistan.

• National policies, plans and programmes in education. Development of curricula and textbooks.

• International aspects of education.• External examinations. Equivalence of degrees and

diplomas.• Education in the Capital, Federally Administered Areas

and AJ&K.• Financial assistance to educationists and men of

letters.• National libraries.• Boy Scouts and Girl Guides.• Welfare of Pakistani students abroad and foreign

students in Pakistan. Continue… 66

Page 7: Pakistan Education Plan

• International exchange of students and teachers.• Foreign studies and training. International

assistance.• Administration of Selective Federal educational

institutions.

• International exchange of students and teachers.• Foreign studies and training. International

assistance.• Administration of Selective Federal educational

institutions.

Act No. X of 1976 provides for Federal supervision of curricula, textbooks and maintenance of standards of education.

Act No. X of 1976 provides for Federal supervision of curricula, textbooks and maintenance of standards of education.

77

Page 8: Pakistan Education Plan

Millennium Development Goals(2001)

1. Ensuring that by 2015 all children, particularly girls, children in difficult circumstances and those belonging to ethnic minorities, have access to and complete free and compulsory primary education of good quality

2. Eliminating gender disparities in primary and secondary education by 2005, and achieving gender equality in education by 2015, with a focus on ensuring girls’ full and equal access to and achievement in basic education of good quality

88

Page 9: Pakistan Education Plan

99

Ministry of Education

Minister

Secretary

DirectorMonitoring Cell

JEACurriculum

Wing

JEAProjects Wing

JEATraining Wing

JEAPolicy & Planning

Wing

Additional Secretary (PMU)

PESR

Legend:PMU : Project Monitoring UnitPESR : President’s Education Sector ReformsSr. JS : Senior Joint SecretaryJEA : Joint Educational Adviser

Sr. J.S.Admn. Wing

Sanctioned Strength

Total number of Officers115

Total number of staff336

Sanctioned Strength

Total number of Officers115

Total number of staff336

Minister of State

Page 10: Pakistan Education Plan

Admn Wing

Atique Ur RehmanSenior Joint Secretary

DS (Admn)Shabbir Ahmed

DSGeneral Admn (GA) & Awards

Askari Mehdi Abidi

SOAdmn-I

Muhammad Khalid Qamar

SOAdmn-II

Support StaffMuhammad Amir

AdministrativeOfficer

Protocol & CouncilMuhammad Iqbal

SOAwards & Coord

Fozia Naseem

SOGA-I

NaseemAhmedKhan

SOGA-II

PNCU, PBSA,PGGA

Rana M. Yousaf

SOAdmn-III

Federal Board& IBCC

Nazir Ahmad(SRO)

DSFinance & Accounts

Asif Mehmood

SOCash & Disbursement

Hameed Niazi

SOFinance & Accounts

Ch. M. Anwar

Accounts OfficerIC/Audit

Shafiq-ul-Islam

FBISE: Federal Board of Intermediate & Secondary EducationIBCC: Inter Board Committee of ChairmenCCO: Central Copyright Office 1010

Page 11: Pakistan Education Plan

Functions of Administration Wing

Recruitment / appointments / promotions / transfers / grant of leave and pension to employees of main Ministry.

Rules and regulations for appointments, promotions, transfers etc. in main Ministry.

Maintenance of CR dossiers / ICP Charts / declaration of assets of officers of Ministry.

Disciplinary cases, Courts and Wafaqi Mohtasib cases. Administrative and financial matters of Federal Board of

Intermediate and Secondary Education and Pakistan National Commission for UNESCO, Inter Board Committee of Chairmen, Islamabad.

Administrative matters / budget of Education Division. Processing of release of funds and reconciliation of

expenditure.

1111Continue…

Page 12: Pakistan Education Plan

Functions of Administration Wing

Public Accounts Committee, Departmental Accounts Committee, Audit observations and Internal Audits.

Business relating to the Parliament / Cabinet and other organs of State.

Follow-up of President’s and Prime Minister’s Directives. Inter-Ministerial and Intra-Ministerial Coordination. Redressal of public grievances relating to Ministry and its

organizations. Matters pertaining to Pakistan Boys Scouts Association

and Pakistan Girls Guides Association. Presidential Awards i.e. Izaz-i-Kamal, Izaz-i-Fazeelat and

Izaz-i-Sabqat etc.

1212

Page 13: Pakistan Education Plan

Sanctioned Strength/Vacancies (Officers)S.No

.Designation BPS Sanctioned Filled Vacant

1. Secretary BS-22 01 01 -

2. Addl. Secretary (PMU) BS-21 01 01 -

3. Senior Joint Secretary BS-21 01 01 -

4. Joint Educational Adviser BS-20 05 04 01

5. Director (M&E Cell) BS-20 01 - 01

6. Deputy Secretary BS-19 03 03 -

7. Deputy Educational Adviser BS-19 14 10 04

8. Joint Director (M&E Cell) BS-19 03 03 -

9. Deputy Director (M&E Cell) BS-18 05 02 03

10. Assistant Educational Adviser BS-18 33 23 10

11. Senior Research Officer BS-18 05 03 02

12. Section Officer BS-17/18 09 08 01

13. Education Officer BS-17 10 06 04

14. Research Officer BS-17 03 02 01

15. Accounts Officer BS-17 01 01 -

16. Admn. Officer BS-17 01 - 01

17. Private Secretary BS-17 03 03 -

18. Supdt(3)./AAO(1)/ABO(1)ARO(2)/H.Supdt.(1)/ Supervisor Monitoring (4)/Supdt.M&E(4)

BS-16 16 13 03

Total: 115 84 31 1313

Page 14: Pakistan Education Plan

Sanctioned Strength / Vacancies (Staff)

S. No.

Designation BPS Sanctioned

Filled

Vacant

1. Stenographer BS-15 29 29 -

2. Asstt. Incharge BS-15 04 04 -

3. Steno typist BS-12 64 62 02

4. Assistant BS-11 69 67 02

5. Accounts Assistant BS-11 02 01 01

6. Library Assistant BS-10 01 01 -

7. UDC BS-07 19 19 -

8. LDC BS-05 04 04 -

9. Driver/DR BS-04 18 17 01

10. Library/Resource Centre Attendants

BS-04 02 02 -

11. Senior Book Binder BS-03 01 01 -

12. Daftry BS-02 09 09 -

13. Qasid BS-02 03 03 -

14. Naib Qasid BS-01 94 92 02

15. Farash BS-01 05 05 -

16. Chowkidar BS-01 04 04 -

17. Mali BS-01 01 01 -

18. Sanitary Worker BS-01 07 07 -

Total: 336 328 8 1414

Page 15: Pakistan Education Plan

JEADr. S. Fayyaz Ahmad

DEADevelopment Planning

(Vacant)

DEAProject Formulation

& PSDP Sector(Vacant)

DEAEducation PolicyMr. T.M. Qureshi

AEA/EOCoordination, AEPAM

Mr. Javed

AEA/EOElementary, Secondaryand College Education

Projects/PC-I PreparationMuzaffar A. Zia (AEA)

AEA/EOScience, Technical &

Vocational Edu. Projects& PC-I Preparation

Mr. Javed

AEA / RAPolicy FormulationMr. Qaiser Munir

AEA/EOPolicy Implementation

& Evaluation

Program OfficerEFA, Quality Edu.& Other Projects

& PC-IMr. Ajmal Khan (SO)

AEA/EOBilateral

Mr. Farooque AizmAbro

AEA/EOMultilateral(Vacant)

AEA/EO(Vacant)

Mr. Shah Khalid(Web Master)

Mr. Adeel Naik(Multimedia Developer)

DEAForeign Aid

Mr. Habib-ur-Rehman

AEA/EOAnnual Dev.

Programme (ADP)& Budget UtilizationZahid Ahmad (SRO)

Policy & Planning Wing

1515

National EducationAssessment System

(NEAS)(Prof. S. Kamaluddin)

CIDA Debt SwapMr. Fida Hussain

Khokhar

German Debt SwapMr. Arshad Malik

Page 16: Pakistan Education Plan

Functions of Policy & Planning Wing

Formulation of National Policies, Plans and Programs. Process all development schemes (DDWP, CDWP,

ECNEC). Organize Inter-Provincial Education

Secretaries/Ministers' meetings. Prepare and monitor implementation of PSDP, Medium

Term Plan (MTP) and Perspective Plan (PP). Coordinate release of funds with Finance Div., Planning

& Development Div. and AGPR. Monitoring and evaluating education sector

expenditures. Assist and coordinate with Provincial Education, Finance

and Planning Departments and District Governments to develop education sector plans.

Collection of statistics. 1616Continue…

Page 17: Pakistan Education Plan

Functions of Policy & Planning Wing

Surveys and research studies. Laison with development partners, within

government and foreign donors and institutions. Negotiate external economic assistance. Prepare reports for media, budget speech, Economic

Survey, year book etc. Disseminate government policies, plans, and

programs among all development partners and stakeholders.

Develop and Maintain Ministry’s website. Oversee functioning of Academy for Educational

Planning and Management.

1717

Page 18: Pakistan Education Plan

18

Curriculum WingCurriculum WingJEA

Arif Majeed

DEA(Languages, Religious &

Social Studies)Syed Tajmal Hussain Shah

Urdu Language SectionSyed Tajmal Hussain

English Language Section(Vacant)

Religious Studies Section(Vacant)

Social Studies SectionM. Nasir Khan

(AEA)

DEABasic Sciences

Dr. Tariq Mehmood

Basic Science-IMunawwardin Awan

AEA

Basic Science-IIM. Zulfiqar Jatoi

AEA

Basic Science-IIIM. Hanan Kakar

AEA

Basic Science-IVM. Hanif

SRO

DEASocial Sciences & Learned

InstitutionsMulazim Hussain Mujahid

Social Sciences SectionRiaz Hussain Malik

AEA

History SectionAhmad Gul

Learned InstitutionsSection

Anwar HussanAEA

Cash & AdministrationOf CW

Altaf HussainRO

DEA(Emerging Trends)Aurangzeb Rehman

On NIPA Training

Commerce(Vacant)

Home Economics SectionJaved Saleem

AEA

Emerging Trends Section(Vacant)

Page 19: Pakistan Education Plan

Functions of Curriculum Wing

1919

Curriculum Wing has been empowered through Federal Supervision of Curricula, Textbooks and Maintenance of Standards of Education Act, 1976:

To prepare or cause to be prepared [1] schemes of studies, [2] curricula, [3] manuscripts of textbooks and [4] schedules or strategy for their introduction in accordance with the education policy..

To approve manuscripts of textbooks produced by other agencies before they are prescribed.

To direct any person or agency to delete, amend or withdraw any portion, or the whole, of the curriculum, textbook or reference material.

Page 20: Pakistan Education Plan

Projects Wing

PD: Project Director PO: Project OfficerPM: Project Manager MDA: Mid Decade AssessmentEO: Education Officer ECE: Early Childhood EducationPC: Project Coordinator ARO: Assistant Research OfficerNPC: National Project Coordinator

JEAProjects Wing

M. AKRAM CHAUDHRY

Mr. Abdur RashidDEA

Dr. Muhammad SaleemDEA - II

Mr. Shahid MuqimKhan

DEA - III

Sahibzada NaeemRasool

Project DirectorMadrassa Reform Project

Mrs. Robina Abbasi

Project Staff

Mr. A.D. BhanbhroEO

Cadet Colleges

Mr. Zaheer IqbalAEA

Polytech InstiuteFDE

Khalid MunirKhokhar

ARO (Coord.)

Dr. MuhammadHanif

Project CoordinatorMRP

Mr. Safdar AbbasA.O.

Mr. Jawad MalikLiaison Officer

Sajjad HaiderResearch Officer

Functional Literacy

Dr. M. HanifProject Coordinator

Adult LiteracyECE / MDA

Project Staff Project Staff

2020

Page 21: Pakistan Education Plan

Functions of Projects Wing

Monitoring of projects.

Collaboration between FIUs & PIUs.

Interact with donor

agencies/partners/stakeholders.

Evaluation of projects.

Management and release of project funds.

Implementation of various projects (GoP and

foreign funded).

2121

Page 22: Pakistan Education Plan

Training Wing

JEATraining Wing

Zaeem Ahmed Ch.

DEACentres of Excellence& National Educational

Institutions(Abdul Badshah)

DEANISTE, Libraries &

Fed. College of Edu.(Pervez Iqbal)

DEAFDE &

Private InstitutionsVacant

AEACenters ofExcellence

& Pakistan ChairsAbroad

(Safir uddin)

AEAArea StudyCenters &

Cultural Exchange(Jamil Hashmi)

RONational Institutes

(Raja Irshad)

AEAFed. College of Education,

NSAC, NISTE, CoordMuhammad Aslam Malik

AEA/EOEdu. & Science Societies,

Libraries, PASVacant

AEAF.G. Schools &

Colleges(Yasmeen Haq)

National Cellegeof Arts &

Sh. Zaid SultanIslamic Centre

Dawood Engg. College

AEAPrivate Institutions

& National Edu.Foundation (NEF)

(Saeed Ahmed Mahar)

EOModel Schools/

Colleges(Mrs. Raheela Farheen)Sindh Madrasa-

Tul-Islam

Technical Panel onTeacher Education

(TPTE)(Saeed Ahmed Mahar)

AEAHigher Education

(Muhammad Ismail)

DEAScholarships(Said Ghulam)

AEAForeign Scholarships-

(Fazle-Rehman)

AEAForeign Scholarships-II

(Javed Saleem)

AEAOwn Scholarships(Muhammad Tariq)

AEANCTVET

CPSC, NMST, PIW

2222

Page 23: Pakistan Education Plan

Functions of Training Wing Teacher Training and Education-In-service and Pre-service Training Programmes in collaboration with donors agencies. Science Olympiads and fairs in collaboration with Intel and

universities etc. Foreign and local scholarships. International Cooperation and Cultural Exchange Programs. Coordination / NOC to foreign students for admission in

Pakistan on self finance. Management of educational institutions in ICT. Administrative, financial and legal matters of following

institutions: National Institute of Science and Technical Education,

Islamabad Federal Directorate of Education, Islamabad Federal College of Education, Islamabad Polytechnic Institute for Women, Islamabad

2323Continue…

Page 24: Pakistan Education Plan

National Education Foundation, Islamabad National Museum of Science and Technical Education,

Lahore Colombo Plan Staff College, Manila, Philippine Technical Panel on Teacher Education, Islamabad Dawood College of Engineering and Technology, Karachi National College of Arts, Lahore Sindh Madressah-tul-Islam, Karachi Department of Libraries

Functions of Training Wing

2424

Page 25: Pakistan Education Plan

Monitoring & Evaluation CellMonitoring & Evaluation Cell

Deputy Director (BS-18)Maj (R) Abdul Waheed Khan

DIRECTOR (BS-20)(Acting Director)

Atique Ur Rehman

Deputy Director–1(BS-18)

Mr. Anis Sharif

Joint Director (BS-19)Project Wing

Joint Director(BS-19)

Training Wing

Deputy Director (BS-18)Vacant

Joint Director (BS-19) Policy & Planning/Curriculum

WingLt. Col (R) M. Shakeel Abbasi

Deputy Director–2(BS-18)Vacant

Deputy Director (BS-18)Vacant

2525

Page 26: Pakistan Education Plan

Functions of Monitoring & Evaluation Cell

To monitor induction of modern education in Madaris and the working of NGO’s.

To improve working of various organizations by suggesting measures based on performance.

To identify areas in which performance has been unsatisfactory, alongwith suggestions for improvement.

Keep Secretary / Minister informed on proper observance and implementation of procedures in various departments, particularly financial discipline.

Monitor and prevent losses due to fraud, misappropriation, pilferage, misuse and theft.

Keep Secretary / Minister informed of any activities prejudicial to the public interest and state of discipline and morale of students and employees.

2626

Page 27: Pakistan Education Plan

Deputy Educational Adviser(Monitoring, Evaluation &

Coordination)

Monitoring Expert

7 MonitorsOne of each

ESRthrust area

Assistant IT Expert

7 EvaluatorsOne for each

ESRthrust area

Project Monitoring Project Monitoring UnitUnit

CoordinationExpert

IT Expert(Database,

Programming, Networking)

Financial Expert(Budget, Finance,

Accounts)

Evaluation Expert

Additional Secretary (PMU)Shahid Ahmad

2727

Page 28: Pakistan Education Plan

Functions of PMUPMU will closely oversee all stages and aspects of planning, resource mobilization, monitoring and coordination of all development projects including ESR Programme at Federal, Provincial and District level.

Main Functions of PMU Ensure timely release of funds to line departments. Evolve Monitoring mechanism to gauge the out-puts/out-

comes of development Projects. To collect quarterly monitoring reports containing physical as

well as financial achievements. To ensure optimum and efficient utilization of the budget. To evaluate achievement of programme objectives and

targets. To suggest and supervise remedial measures to improve

effectiveness and efficiency of the programme.

2828

Page 29: Pakistan Education Plan

2929

Attached Departments

Federal Directorate of Education, Islamabad. Department of Libraries, Islamabad.

Autonomous Bodies

1. Federal Board of Intermediate and Secondary Education, Islamabad.

2. National Book Foundation, Islamabad.3. National Education Foundation, Islamabad.4. Urdu Dictionary Board, Lahore. 5. National College of Arts, Lahore.

Page 30: Pakistan Education Plan

Subordinate Offices

1. Academy of Educational Planning and Management, Islamabad.

2. National Institute of Science and Technical Education,

Islamabad.

3. Federal College of Education, Islamabad.

4. Govt. Polytechnic Institute for Women, Islamabad.

5. Pakistan Academy of Letters, Islamabad.

6. Inter-Board Committee of Chairmen, Islamabad.

7. Sindh Madrassa-tul-Islam, Karachi.

8. Dawood College of Engineering and Technology, Karachi.

9. Pakistan National Commission for UNESCO, Islamabad.

10. Urdu Science Board, Lahore.

11. National Museum of Science and Technology, Lahore.

12. National Educational Equipment Centre, Lahore.

13. Technical Panel on Teachers Education, Islamabad.

14. National Education Assessment System, Islamabad. 3030

Page 31: Pakistan Education Plan

Pakistan Chairs Abroad1. Quaid-e-Azam Distinguished Professorship at Columbia

University, USA.

2. Quaid-e-Azam Studies Chair, University of California, Berkeley, USA.

3. Quaid-e-Azam Fellowship, Cambridge University, UK.

4. Allama Iqbal Fellowship, Cambridge University, UK.

5. Allama Iqbal Fellowship, Humboldt University, Germany.

6. Chair in Urdu and Pakistan Studies, Al-Azhar University, Cairo, Egypt.

7. Chair in Urdu and Pakistan Studies, Ain Shams University, Cairo, Egypt.

8. Chair in Urdu and Pakistan Studies at Kazakh Albai Khan University of International Relations and World Languages, Almaty, Kazakhistan.

3131Continue…

Page 32: Pakistan Education Plan

9. Chair in Urdu and Pakistan Studies, Ankara University, Turkey.

10. Chair in Urdu and Pakistan Studies, Tehran University, Iran.

11. Chair in Urdu and Pakistan Studies, Tribhuvan University, Katmandu, Nepal.

12. Chair in Urdu and Pakistan Studies at Jordan University, Amman.

13. Chair in Urdu and Pakistan Studies at Peking University, Beijing, China.

14. Chair in Urdu and Pakistan Studies at Bapist University, Hong Kong.

15. Allama Iqbal Research chair in Urdu and Arabic, King Saudi University, Saudi Arabia.

Pakistan Chairs Abroad

3232

Page 33: Pakistan Education Plan

3333

1. Central Asia, University of Peshawar, Peshawar.

2. South Asia, University of the Punjab, Lahore.

3. Far East and South East Asia, University of Sindh.

4. Europe, University of Karachi, Karachi.

5. Middle East and Arab Countries, University of Balochistan, Quetta.

6. Africa, North and South America, Quaid-e-Azam University, Islamabad.

Area Study Centres For:

Pakistan Study Centres at Universities of Punjab,Sindh, Karachi, Peshawar, Quetta & Q. A. University

Shaikh Zayed Islamic Centres, University of Punjab, Karachi & Peshawar.

Page 34: Pakistan Education Plan

1. Psychology – Quaid-e-Azam University, Islamabad. 2. Mineralogy – University of Balochistan, Quetta.3. Analytical Chemistry – University of Sindh, Jamshoro.4. Water Resources Engineering – University of Engineering

and Technology, Lahore.5. Arts & Design – Mehran University of Engineering and

Technology, Jamshoro.6. Marine Biology – University of Karachi, Karachi.7. History and Culture – Quaid-e-Azam University,

Islamabad. 8. Molecular Biology – University of the Punjab, Lahore.9. Gender Studies – Quaid-e-Azam University, Islamabad. 10. Geology – University of Peshawar, Peshawar.11. Physical Chemistry – University of Peshawar, Peshawar.12. Solid State Physics – University of the Punjab, Lahore.

Centres of Excellence

3434

Page 35: Pakistan Education Plan

PART – IIEDUCATION SCENARIO

3535

Page 36: Pakistan Education Plan

Country

Ranking(out of 177 countries)

2005 2006 2007

Iran 99 96 94

Sri Lanka 93 93 99

Maldives 96 98 100

India 127 126 128

Bhutan 134 135 133

Pakistan 135 134 136

Bangladesh 139 137 140

Nepal 136 138 142

Human Development IndexHuman Development Index

Source: Human Development Reports, 2005-06 & 2007-08, UNDP

Source: Human Development Reports, 2005-06 & 2007-08, UNDP 3636

Page 37: Pakistan Education Plan

Sources: Pakistan Social and Living Standard Measurement (PSLM) Survey 2006-07

67%

48%

67%

42%

22%

58%

28%

67%

58%

47%

42%

55%

Literacy Rates

Pakistan: 55%Male: 67%Female: 42%

“The ability of a person who can read a

newspaper and write a simple letter in any

language”

Literacy Definition(As in 1998

Census)

Literacy Definition(As in 1998

Census)

3737

Page 38: Pakistan Education Plan

Educational Institutions by Level

Level Total Public PrivatePre-primary 1,081 287 794

Mosque school 14,123 14,035 88

Primary 122,349 105,526 16,823

Middle 38,449 14,334 24,115

Secondary 25,090 10,550 14,540

British System 281 11 270

NFBE 4,831 2,008 2,823

Inter & Degree Colleges 1,882 1,025 857

Universities 116 59 57

Technical/ Professional 1257 426 831

Vocational 3,059 916 2,143

Deeni Madaris 12,153 354 11,799

Others 3,120 2,241 879

TOTAL 227,791 151,772(67%)

76,019(33%)

Source: National Education Census 2006, GoP3838

Page 39: Pakistan Education Plan

Institutions by Medium of Instruction

Type# of

Institutions

Urdu English Sindhi

Others

Total 227,791 148065(65%)

22779(10%)

34168(15%)

22779(10%)

Public 151,744 103,186

(68%)

3,035(2%)

33,384

(22%)

12,139(8%)

Private 76,047 43,347(57%)

21,293(28%)

1,521(2%)

9,886(13%)

Source: National Education Census 2006, GoP3939

Page 40: Pakistan Education Plan

No. of Institutions, Enrolment, Teaching Staff

Area

Educational

Institutions Covered

Non-Function

al

Enrolment

(Million)

Teaching Staff

Pakistan 227,791 12,737 33.51,356,80

2

Punjab 110,459 2,742 18.3 716,768

Sindh 51,006 7,442 6.6 290,749

NWFP 37,761 1,781 5.2 198,893

Balochistan

10,986 306 1.1 50,893

ICT 1,189 23 0.4 19,387

FATA 5,145 123 0.6 22,079

Northern Area

3,977 128 0.4 15,196

AJK 7,268 192 0.9 42,837Source: National Education Census (NEC), 2006

4040

Page 41: Pakistan Education Plan

Source: National Education Census (NEC), 2006

Enrolment -2005 (Million)Enrolment -2005 (Million)Province/

Area Total Male Female Rural Urban

Pakistan 33.379 18.98157%

14.39843%

19.15957%

14.21943%

Punjab 18.298 9.79554%

8.50346%

10.37457%

7.92443%

Sindh 6.552 3.84459%

2.70741%

2.55139%

4.00161%

NWFP 5.206 3.32264%

1.88436%

3.93676%

1.27024%

Balochistan 1.110 0.713 64%

0.39636%

0.66260%

0.44740%

ICT 0.390 0.208 53%

0.18147%

0.09023%

0.30077%

FATA 0.605 0.440 73%

0.16527%

0.605100% -

Northern Area 0.354 0.190

54%0.16446%

0.28881%

0.06619%

AJK 0.859 0.464 54%

0.39546%

0.65076%

0.20924%

4141

Page 42: Pakistan Education Plan

Deeni Madaris (Enrolment and Teaching Staff)

Area No.

Covered

No. of Refusal

s

No. for which Data Collected

EnrolmentTeaching

Staff

Pakistan 12,979 826 12,153 1,549,242 58,391

Punjab 5,459 159 5,300 674,281 24,977

Sindh 1,935 119 1,816 312,693 11,951

NWFP 2,843 275 2,568 336,983 12,058

Balochistan

769 99 670 65,597 2,891

ICT 77 15 62 10,557 657

FATA 135 43 92 14,162 481

FANA 1,193 39 1,154 88,540 3,160

AJK 568 77 491 46,429 2,216

Source: National Education Census (NEC), 2006

4242

Page 43: Pakistan Education Plan

Drop-out Rates

Class 11-12

Class 9-10

Class 6- 8

Class 1-5

0.076

1.311

3.074

12.480

Enrolment1999-2000

Dropouts 1999-2000

Dropouts 2004-05

0.708

1.479

3.323

14.829

30.14%

22.41%

24.5%

53.0%

0.023

0.294

0.753

6.614

15.7%

15.68%

15.9%

31.3%

0.111

0.232

0.528

4.641

Total: 16.941 Million Total: 7.684 Million Total: 5.512 MillionTotal: 20.339 Million

Total children eligible for enrolment (5-16): 44.340 millionChildren who did not enroll (5-16): 24.001 million

Enrolment2004-05

Class 11-12

Class 9-10

Class 6- 8

Class 1-5

Source: 1. National Institute of Population Studies, 2004-05, 2. NEMIS, M/o Education. 4343

Page 44: Pakistan Education Plan

No Boundary Wall

No DrinkingWater

No Electricity No Toilet No Building

53,481(33%)

46,766(29%)

81,633(50%) 9,776

(6%)

57,216(35%)

PAKISTANMissing Facilities

Source: National Education Census (NEC), 2006

Total schools upto Middle level160,798

Total schools upto Middle level160,798

4444

Page 45: Pakistan Education Plan

Public Schools in Union CouncilsPublic Schools in Union Councils

Pakistan Punjab Sindh NWFP Baloch. AJK FANA

Number of Union Councils

6,438 3,446 1,108 998 567 196 111

No. of Union Councils without Boys High School

2,080(32%)

1,170(34%)

386(35%)

247(25%)

225(40%)

20(10%)

32(29%)

No. of Union Councils without Girls High School

3,919(61%)

2,014(58%)

780(70%)

619(62%)

374(66%)

45(23%)

87(78%)

No. of Union Councils without Boys Higher Sec. School

5,880(91%)

3,215(93%)

993(90%)

816(82%)

567(100%)

178(91%)

111(100%)

No. of Union Council without Girls Higher Sec. School

6,053(94%)

3,243(94%)

1,046(94%)

911(91%)

567(100%)

175(89%)

111(100%)

4545

Page 46: Pakistan Education Plan

Computer and Science Labs in High SchoolsComputer and Science Labs in High Schools

Punjab Sindh NWFP Baloch.Total

Pakistan

Total number of high schools

13,152 4,608 2,723 670 21,153

Without Computer Labs

4,030(31%)

1,362(29%)

1,256(46%)

476(71%)

7,124(34%)

Without Science labs

1,527(12%)

832(18%)

511(19%)

356(53%)

3,226(15%)

Without Science Teachers

1,143(9%)

---247(9%)

86(13%)

1,476(7%)

4646

Page 47: Pakistan Education Plan

FinancingFinancing

4747

Page 48: Pakistan Education Plan

Recurring Budget of Ministry of Education

Demand Description 2007-2008 2008-2009

29-Education Division

Main Secretariat, M&E Cell, Curriculum, Education Policy, Attached Depts, International Organizations ISESCO, UNESCO, etc. (Mostly pay and allowances)

532,011 546,228

30-HEC 15,766,425 15,766,425

31-Education

Autonomous Bodies, Pakistan Schools & Chairs Abroad, Private Educational institutions, National Educational Institutions, Sub-Ordinate Offices, etc. (Mostly pay and allowances).

676,922 734,204

32-Federal Government

Education Institutions in the

Capital and Federal Areas

Pay & allowances of teaching personnel in Federal Schools & Colleges. 1,800,248 2,058,105

Total 18,775,606 19,104,962 Total Ministry of Education 3,009,181 3,338,537

(Rs. in thousand)

4848

Page 49: Pakistan Education Plan

Development Budget of Ministry of Education

Total number of projects 97

Approved 90

Total budget Rs. 6200 million

Releases in the 1st quarter(July – September 2008)

Rs. 36 million

Page 50: Pakistan Education Plan

Financing

YearRecurrin

g Developme

ntTotal

% of GDP

Private

Sector

% of GDP*

2000-01 69.5 6.4 75.9 1.82% 16.8 2.22%

2001-02 70.4 8.5 78.9 1.79% 22.0 2.28%

2002-03 79.5 10.4 89.9 1.86% 26.3 2.41%

2003-04 94.3 30.0 124.3 2.20% 31.1 2.75%

2004-05 106.6 33.3 139.9 2.13% 36.0 2.67%

2005-06 128.9 41.9 170.8 2.21% 40.7 2.74%

2006-07 160.0 56.6 216.6 2.48% 45.5 2.96%

2007-08 191.0 65.0 256.0 2.44%

(Rs. billion)

* % of GDP including Private sector budget.Source: Demands for grants, Budget books of Govt. of Punjab, Sindh, NWFP, Balochistan & AJ&K. Federal Ministries/Divisions, District Governments.

5050

Page 51: Pakistan Education Plan

(Public Sector)(Public Sector)

1.2

1.4

1.6

1.8

2

2.2

2.4

2.6

2.8

Education Expenditure as Percentage of GDP

5151

Page 52: Pakistan Education Plan

EDUCATION BUDGET AS % AGE OF GDP (2005-06): SOUTH ASIA

Country Percentage

Iran 4.7

India 3.8

Bangladesh 2.4

Maldives 7.5

Nepal 3.4

Pakistan 2.21 (05-06)2.44(07-08)

Source: EFA Global Monitoring Report 2008

5252

Page 53: Pakistan Education Plan

5353

Education budget as % age of total Government budget

Source: Pakistan Economic Survey 2007-08 and Financing of Education in the Public Sector MoE, January 2008.

Year %age2000-01 11.7

2001-02 11.2

2002-03 10.0

2003-04 13.2

2004-05 12.5

2005-06 12.2

2006-07 12.9

2007-08 11.5

Page 54: Pakistan Education Plan

Education PolicyEducation Policy

5454

Page 55: Pakistan Education Plan

Challenges Weakened Governance

Fragmentation Lack of Clarity in Inter-Tier Relationships

Poor Quality of Teachers & Managers Quality of curriculum, textbooks & exams Low level of literacy Out of school children Dropouts Public Private Partnership In-adequate financing Gender Equity Poor monitoring & evaluation Imbalance in primary, middle & secondary

schools Inconvenient school location

5555

Page 56: Pakistan Education Plan

SALIENT FEATURES OF NATIONAL EDUCATION POLICY

• Universal and Free Primary and Secondary Education• Promotion of Equity• Minimum National Standards• Relevance to Labour Market• Sector Planning• Financial allocation of 7% of GDP by 2018• Encourage Private sector• Link Allocations to Definition of Free Education• Improve Planning, Management and Implementation

Capacity• Donor Harmonisation• Overcoming Fragmented Governance

5656Continue…

Page 57: Pakistan Education Plan

• Bridging the Public Private Divide• Improved Examination System• Introduction of Early Childhood Education (3-5

years) & inclusive education.• Achieve the MDG goals. • All Primary schools shall be upgraded to Middle

level• Well developed plan for expanding school

facilities.• High priority to reducing drop out rates • Improved school environment• Career Counselling at higher secondary level• Develop national literacy curriculum • Enhance qualifications for employment as

teachers5757Continue…

Page 58: Pakistan Education Plan

• Pre-service & in-service teacher training• Accreditation and certification of teachers • Merit based teacher recruitment, professional

development, promotions & postings• Curriculum development • Competitive publishing of textbooks and learning

materials• District Education Boards to be established for

managing schools• Separate management & academic cadres

5858

Page 59: Pakistan Education Plan

i. Highlights of New Scheme of Studies:

a.a. ‘‘Islamiat’ as an integrated subject in Classes I-II. Full-fledged subject from Classes III to XII. ‘Ethics’ for non-Muslims.

b. Advanced ‘Islamic Studies’ in Classes IX-XII as an elective subject.

c. General Science compulsory from Classes IV-VIII.

d. Pakistan Studies compulsory upto Class-X. Advance Pakistan Studies as Elective for Classes XI & XII.

1. Policy Reforms Undertaken

5959Continue…

Page 60: Pakistan Education Plan

Highlights of New Scheme of Studies

e. History, Geography compulsory in Classes VI-VIII. Includes history of sub-continent upto 1947. Post 1947 in Pak Studies.

f. Computer Literacy compulsory for Classes VI-VIII. ‘Computer Science’ elective subject in Classes IX-X and a Group in Class XI-XII.

g. Choice of Arabic / Other Languages, Drawing, Technology, Home Economics, Agriculture in Classes VI to VIII.

h. Medical Technology Group (6 subjects) in Classes XI & XII.

6060

Page 61: Pakistan Education Plan

ii. Review of Curriculum:

a. Curriculum being updated in view of new Scheme of Studies, challenges of modern world and job market.

b. Curriculum for 24 core subjects notified. Implementation from 2009. Total subjects 81.

6161

Page 62: Pakistan Education Plan

iii. New Textbook Policy:

Main features are: improved quality of education through

quality textbooks at affordable prices, competitive publishing of textbooks by

public & private publishers, textbook boards will become facilitating

& regulating authorities. Will approve textbooks.

controversial material (cultural, religious, ethnic) shall not be included in textbooks.

6262

Page 63: Pakistan Education Plan

to improve quality of education at elementary level.

to develop capacity in education assessment.

to measure learning achievements of students in grades IV and VIII.

Based on test results, education system being rehashed.

iv. National Education Assessment System (NEAS)

iv. National Education Assessment System (NEAS)

6363

Page 64: Pakistan Education Plan

v. Examination System:

a. Centralized Examination System.b. Question papers will have 3 parts:

i. 20% objective. ii. 50% short answers. iii. 30% descriptive answers. Choice reduced to 33%. Papers based on curriculum, not

textbooks. Teachers being trained to prepare

children for new pattern.c.c. Grace marks reduced from 11 to 3 in max Grace marks reduced from 11 to 3 in max

of 2 subjects.of 2 subjects.c.c. Grace marks reduced from 11 to 3 in max Grace marks reduced from 11 to 3 in max

of 2 subjects.of 2 subjects.6464

Page 65: Pakistan Education Plan

vi. Access to Education

a. Free education and textbooks up to secondary level.

b. To promote girls' education, future primary schools to be co-education with female teachers only.

c. Stipends to girl students at Middle level.

6565

Page 66: Pakistan Education Plan

vii. Governance Reforms

a. Inter-Provincial Education Ministers' (IPEM) Conference, for uniformity at national level.

b. Colleges & Technical education schools withdrawn from Districts and placed under Provinces.

c. Introduction of Prep (ECE) Class.

d. Regulatory Authority for private educational institutions in Islamabad.

e. Uniform academic session from 2009.

6666Continue…

Page 67: Pakistan Education Plan

f. All schools Bilingual. English and Urdu compulsory from Class-1 onwards.

g. English as medium of instruction for Science, Math and Computer Science. Islamiat, Pak Studies in Urdu in all schools.

6767

Page 68: Pakistan Education Plan

Other Programmes

Other Programmes

6868

Page 69: Pakistan Education Plan

1. Enrolment Campaign in ICT

To ensure 100% enrollment of Out of School Children.

Enrolment campaign launched on July 30, 2008

Base Line Survey completed in 04 Rural Sectors & total out of school children are 5590.

6969

Page 70: Pakistan Education Plan

Basic Statistics about ICT

Population (2007) 1.27 Million (Projected)* Literacy Rate : 72.38 % Net Enrollment Rate : 84% (Primary) Total no of institutions: 410

ICT has been divided into FIVE Educational Sectors

Urban: Islamabad CityRural: Nilore Bhara Kau Tarnol Sihala

There are 12 union councils and total of 132 villages

* Calculated on the basis of 1998 Census @ Annul growth rate of 5.19%

7070

Page 71: Pakistan Education Plan

Actions Taken

Mass Awareness Campaign Mobilization of Communities, Notables &

NGOs Banners / Posters / Leaflets Motivation of Head Teachers and Teachers Utilization of Mosques / Imams Facilitation in Admissions Involvement of PTAs Door to Door Campaign by “Enrollment

Campaign Committees“ Awareness Camps.

7171

Page 72: Pakistan Education Plan

Facilities to Out of School Children

Free Education Text Books Notebooks / Stationary School Bags Uniforms Relaxation in Admission Documentation Appointment of Counselors UNESCO support for 3,000 students for

provision of Uniforms, Shoes, Bags, Stationary items

7272

Page 73: Pakistan Education Plan

Enrollment Comparison

7373

Total Enrollment in FGEIs (KG-College Level) : 210,144

Page 74: Pakistan Education Plan

2. Major Interventions by FDE(2002-08)

141 Computer Labs set up. Work in progress on 119 more Comp.

Labs., 145 Science Labs. Up-gradation of 59 schools. 33 new schools & 1 degree college

(women) established.

7474

Page 75: Pakistan Education Plan

3. Provision of Missing Facilities under PESR

Province / Area

Total Schools Planned

(2007-08)

Schools Completed

1 Sindh (5 distts) 360 360

2 NWFP (4 distts) 249 249

3 Balochistan (3 distts) 66 30

4 FATA (2 agencies) 38 17

5 AJK (2 distts) 68 62

6 FANA (2 distts) 69 69

7 ICT 75 75

Total 925 862

7575

Page 76: Pakistan Education Plan

4. CIDA Debt Swap: Capacity Building of Teachers & Training Institutions

Province / Area

In-service Trg* Scholarships**

TargetAchievemen

tTarget

Achievement

FANA 944 298 150 93

FATA 1,760 0 150 87

AJK 1,378 0 150 52

FCE 550 196 150 62

NISTE 125 122 N.A N.A

* Head Teachers & Teachers** B.Ed & Diploma

* Head Teachers & Teachers** B.Ed & Diploma

7676

Page 77: Pakistan Education Plan

CIDA Debt Swap: Capacity Building of Teachers & Training Institutions

Province / Area

In-service Trg* Scholarships**

TargetAchieveme

ntTarget

Achievement

Punjab 27,798 102 1,887 0

Sindh 6,048 6,000 850 850

NWFP 23,120 17,827 75 0

Balochistan 3,807 0 150 47

* Head Teachers & Teachers** B.Ed & Diploma

* Head Teachers & Teachers** B.Ed & Diploma 7777

Page 78: Pakistan Education Plan

GERMAN DEBT SWAPGERMAN DEBT SWAPTwo projects are being executed under German Debt Swap I & II at a total combined cost of Rs. 2276.57 million by ECNEC on 4-08-2005.

ProjectCost

(Million)Funds released upto 22-08-08

Utilization of released

fundsDuration

Punjab school library project German Debt Swap-I

1248.002 581.286 100% 36 months

German Debt Swap-II for education in NWFP

928.568 683.756 100% 48 months

TARGET AREAS

Punjab To improve the overall learning environment at middle & middle portion of high & higher secondary schools level by providing material and library books.

NWFP To improve the existing infrastructure at middle and middle portion of high schools for better learning through better school environment.

Provide additional classrooms in existing middle school and middle portion of high schools.

Provision of basic facilities such as water supply, boundary walls and group latrines. 7878

Page 79: Pakistan Education Plan

5. Scholarships to FATA Students Provision of Quality Education for 200 Tribal

students (classes 8-12) in settled areas under PSDP.

(Cost Rs. 102.5 million) 197 students admitted in Cadet Colleges / Public

Schools

6. Quality Education Opportunities for Students of FATA & Balochistan

Approved cost: Rs. 481 million Provides for 132 scholarships each year for students

from Balochistan (60%) & FATA (40%) as follows:

1 Public Schools / Cadet Colleges 28

2 Polytechnics / Commercial Institutions 92

3 Private Institutions 12

Total 1327979

Page 80: Pakistan Education Plan

8080

7.7. Other ProjectsOther ProjectsS.No. Title of Projects Cost

1.

Establishment of 18 cadet colleges i.e13 approved namely: Ghotki, Okara, Zhob, Panjgur, Pasrur, Choa Saiden Shah, Jaffarabad, Mianwali, Noshki, Kohlu, Chilas, Swabi, Muzaffarabad and 5 unapproved namely: Charsadda, Chitral, Lakki Marwat, Swat and Multan

5093.1

2.Establishment of Gwadar Institute of Technology Gwadar, Balochistan.

198.2

3.Establishment of Federal Government College of Home Economics at Islamabad.

498.0

4.Establishment & Operation of Basic Education Community schools. All Pakistan including AJK, FATA and FANA.

7000.0

5.Establishment of Govt. Polytechnic Institute at Pishin, Qilla Saifullah, Turbat and Gilgit NA.

554.0

6.Ed-Links (Teachers Professional Development; Student Learning & Achievement; Governance).Sindh, Balochistan, Islamabad, FATA -- USAID

5400.0

(Rs. million)

Page 81: Pakistan Education Plan

8181

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