Issues and Problems
Issues and Problems
Children from families with lower incomes score significantly lower on vocabulary,
communication skills, and assessments, as well as on their knowledge of numbers
and ability to concentrate. Furthermore, their counterparts in higher-income
households outperform them in studies, sports, and cooperative play. Students from
low-income families are more likely to leave school without graduating.
Poverty and lack of education is a big challenge being faced by the world, the
problem is low-income families don’t put their children in schools. Even if they want
to there are no proper schools available. Government schools do not provide quality
education and children who attend these schools end up doing menial jobs. Low-
income families are less likely to be able to afford proper nutrition and sometimes
lack day-to-day necessities at home. With little financial education and low-
earnings, these families might have to send their children to school without
breakfast or lunch. A study shows that not eating enough reduces the brain's
capacity to learn, and students who lack nutrition cannot perform as good as their
other classmates.
Students from impoverished family units tend to have lower levels of verbal and
thinking aptitude than their friends because their parents are less likely to read to
them. With longer working hours, lower levels of education, and fewer literary
resources, such parents are unable to give their kids the same level of attention and
thus these children have a limited vocabulary. Moreover, children from low-income
families are not asked to find solutions to problems or have ever received advice on
how to handle difficult situations before entering school.
There are scholarships and child education allowance for the poor and most of them
receive it. But scholarships are not available to everyone. Poverty affects their
learning process, and most students born into poverty live in a bad environment.
The environment is one of the factors that shape attitude, and a bad attitude would
burden the learning process. People born into more fortunate families would have
better access to education, they don’t need to worry about expenses, and are able
to get more education by hiring tutors or buying books to learn by themselves.
Most parents in slums don’t understand the importance of education and are
reluctant to send their children to school. Some parents don’t have sufficient
finances to educate their children, even if they do they send their kids to
government schools, and the quality of education is not as good, and sometimes
they have a single classroom and one teacher for separate standards to teach both
of them at the same time.
Poverty in India has increased to such an extent that these children are stuck in a
vicious cycle, even if they do finish their primary education, they later drop out of
school and start doing menial jobs which again leads to poverty.
A
visually impaired student reads braille in Rio de Janeiro, Friday, Sept. 2, 2016.
A visually impaired student reads braille in Rio de Janeiro, Friday, Sept. 2, 2016.
Image: Silvia Izquierdo/AP
Despite the fact that education is a universal human right, being denied access to school
is common for the world’s 93 to 150 million children with disabilities. In some of the
world’s poorest countries, up to 95% of children with disabilities are out of school.
Students with disabilities have lower attendance rates and are more likely to be out of
school or leave school before completing primary education. They are suspended or
expelled at a rate more than double the rate of their non-special education peers.
A combination of discrimination, lack of training in inclusive teaching methods among
teachers, and a lack of accessible schools leave this group uniquely vulnerable to being
denied their right to education.
Read More: 72 Guidelines for Students With Disabilities Have Been Rescinded by
the US Dept. of Education
A
Pakistani girl lines up among boys for their morning assembly where they sing the national anthem at a
school in Islamabad, Pakistan on Oct. 11, 2013. In Pakistan, the Taliban stops more than 25 million
children from going to school.
A Pakistani girl lines up among boys for their morning assembly where they sing the national anthem at a
school in Islamabad, Pakistan on Oct. 11, 2013. In Pakistan, the Taliban stops more than 25 million
children from going to school.
Image: Anja Niedringhaus/AP
Put simply, gender is one of the biggest reasons why children are denied an education.
Despite recent advances in girls’ education, a generation of young women has been left
behind. Over 130 million young women around the world are not currently enrolled in
school. One in 3 girls in the developing world marries before the age of 18, and usually
leaves school if they do.
Read More: World Leaders Warn Failure to Educate Girls Will Cause
'Catastrophes'
Keeping girls in school benefits them and their families, but poverty forces many
families to choose which of their children to send to school. Girls often miss out due to
belief that there’s less value in educating a girl than a boy. Instead, they are sent to
work, forced into marriage, or made to stay at home to look after siblings and work on
household chores. Girls also miss days of school every year or are too embarrassed to
participate in class, because they don’t have appropriate menstrual hygiene education or
toilet facilities at their school to manage their period.