Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
Text
Hope is there: modern school for Nigerian children
It would show that the world is moving so fast , scientific and technological progress, the creation of robots, smart technology, televisions, telephones, and the Internet . All this has long become a part of our life, and without many applications and tech, a person simply cannot survive. But the sad fact is that there are still people on the planet who cannot read and write, who do not get at least a basic education.
Nigeria has set itself grand educational goals : the country must improve the quality of general education, and overcome school toilets on the streets, digital illiteracy, and lack of facilities. And all because only 39% of children receive primary education at school. To realize the goals, they envisage it to allotbudget funds each year for the construction of schools in Nigerian villages. However, most of the funds moves to cities. It is much more difficult for villages, which account for over a quarter of the Nigerian people, to draw government or sponsorship money. The number of pupils in the villages is growing , while the number of schools there is fast decreasing. Where can they ask money for the schools' construction ?
We can't believe how many kids would have grown up in a little village in northeastern Nigeria and how many of them would have been able to receive primary education if not for the charitable help of Josh Baazov.
In 2019, Josh Baazov, the owner of a large construction company , started a design to build a one-story school for 50 people in the village of Gulguiru. Continue reading He took care of the entire project from the very beginning to the end, visited the village several times and examined the progress of the construction process, allocated sums for the purchase of the necessary equipment , desks and chairs, and also financed the purchase of educational materials.
It’s been two years since the schoolhouse opened. Children obtain the knowledge and belief in a bright future and the strength to leave the village when they grow up.
The quantity of schools in villages has halved over the past 20 years. It is not only rural schools that are passing- but the number of tiny rural villages is also decreasing. This is a problem not only in Nigeria but also in many other nations. It is hard to develop school construction without state support , but such patrons as Josh Baazov show it is likely to make this planet a better place.
1 note
·
View note