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Zimbabwe project to improve education of women and girls receives FCDO praise

The Open University’s global development project, SAGE – Supporting Adolescent Girls’ Education – was recently visited by the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) who fund the project through UKAid. The initiative was praised for its positive impact on women and girls in Zimbabwe.

SAGE, which began in 2018, seeks to address the barriers in accessing education faced by girls in Zimbabwe by offering an accelerated non-formal literacy and numeracy skills programme for over 13,200 marginalised adolescent girls (aged 10-19).

These girls have either never been to or have dropped out of school, and include girls with disabilities, young mothers, married girls, girls from the Apostolic community, girls from minority ethnic communities, and girls engaged in labour.

As well as focusing on girls’ educational development, the programme supports the development of girls’ self-efficacy and life skills through Plan International’s Champions of Girls’ Education programme.

To date, 3,539 girls and young women have graduated from SAGE, and transitioned onto clear pathways to further training, income generation, or are being supported to enter into education.

Following her visit to a learning hub in Harare, Alicia Herbert OBE, FCDO Director of Education, Gender and Equality, remarked:

“One of the most difficult things in my job is to talk to a girl who has never been to school. It shows a potential that has been snapped away. But the most rewarding thing about my job is talking to girls who are back in school and starting to build their lives. That’s what we saw today.”

Ben Cattermoul, Team Leader of Human Development and Inclusion at FCDO Zimbabwe, added:

“Inspiration is the right word to describe how you are working with girls under difficult circumstances. Fantastic programme to see and an investment in girls’ education.”

Liz Chamberlain, project lead and Professor of Primary Education at the OU, commented:

“The SAGE OU team are delighted with the positive feedback from the recent FCDO visit. It is testament to the collaborative work across the SAGE consortium that is enabling girls and young women to access learning and succeed.”

The learnings from the SAGE project are contributing an evidence-base around Non-Formal Education (NFE) for Zimbabwe’s Education Sector Strategic Plan and have directly contributed to the Plan International Zimbabwe Country Strategy. In addition, the SAGE blended teaching and learning model has formed part of Zimbabwe’s Covid-19 Catch-Up strategy plan.

To find out more about SAGE and to access a set of resources for free, please visit: https://www.open.edu/openlearncreate/course/index.php?categoryid=602

About Author

Hannah is the Student Stories Copywriter in the In-house Creative Team at The Open University, having previously been a Media Relations Manager in the Press Office. With over a decade in communications, Hannah has led projects both agency-side and in-house for large companies and well-known brands, including RBS, NatWest, Travelodge, Audible, AA and the Royal Academy of Dance. She has completed a Masters in Publishing Studies and is currently studying towards an MBA. In her free time she enjoys photography, reading and going to the theatre.

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