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Education in Pakistan

Education in Pakistan is overseen by the Federal Ministry of Education and the provincial governments, whereas the federal government mostly assists in curriculum development, accreditation and the financing of research and development. Article 25-A of the Constitution of Pakistan obligates the state to provide free and compulsory quality education to children of the age group 5 to 16 years. "The State shall provide free and compulsory education to all children of the age of five to sixteen years in such a manner as may be determined by law".[3]

Education in Pakistan
Educational oversight
Rana Tanveer HussainMinister of Education
General details
Primary languagesEnglish, Urdu
System typeState, federal and private
Literacy (2022[1])
Total72
Male81.22%
Female54.71%
Enrollment
Total32.33% of population[2]
Primary67.57%[2]
Secondary43.82%[2]
Post secondary14.85%[2]
Literacy Rate in each Pakistani District as of the 2017 Pakistan Census

The education system in Pakistan[4] is generally divided into six levels: preschool (for the age from 3 to 5 years), primary (years one to five), middle (years six to eight), high (years nine and ten, leading to the Secondary School Certificate or SSC), intermediate (years eleven and twelve, leading to a Higher Secondary School Certificate or HSSC), and university programs leading to undergraduate and graduate degrees.[5] The Higher Education Commission established in 2002 is responsible for all universities and degree awarding institutes.[6] It was established in 2002 with Atta-ur-Rahman as its Founding Chairman.[7]

The literacy rate ranges from 82% in Islamabad to 23% in the Torghar District.[8] Literacy rates vary by gender and region. In tribal areas female literacy is 9.5%,[9] while Azad Kashmir has a literacy rate of 74%.[10] Pakistan produces about 445,000 university graduates and 25,000–30,000 computer science graduates per year.[11] Despite these statistics, Pakistan still has low literacy rate.[12] And Pakistan also has the second largest out of school population (22.8 million children)[13] after Nigeria.

Stages of formal education

Primary education

 
A primary school in a village in the Sindh region

Only about 67.5% of Pakistani children finish primary school education.[14] The standard national system of education is mainly inspired from the English educational system. Pre-school education is designed for 3–5 years old and usually consists of three stages: Play Group, Nursery and Kindergarten (also called 'KG' or 'Prep'). After pre-school education, students go through junior school from years 1 to 5. This is followed by middle school from years 6 to 8. At middle school, single-sex education is usually preferred by the community, but co-education is also common in urban cities. The curriculum is usually subject to the institution. The eight commonly examined disciplines are:

Most schools also offer drama studies, music and physical education but these are usually not examined or marked. Home economics is sometimes taught to female students, whereas topics related to astronomy, environmental management and psychology are frequently included in textbooks of general science. Sometimes archaeology and anthropology are extensively taught in textbooks of social studies. SRE is not taught at most schools in Pakistan although this trend is being rebuked by some urban schools. Provincial and regional languages such as Punjabi, Sindhi, Pashto and others may be taught in their respective provinces, particularly in language-medium schools. Some institutes give instruction in foreign languages such as German, Turkish, Arabic, Persian, French and Chinese. The language of instruction depends on the nature of the institution itself, whether it is an English-medium school or an Urdu-medium school.

As of 2009, Pakistan faces a net primary school attendance rate for both sexes of 66%, a figure below estimated world average of 90 per cent.[15]

An English textbook dialogue:

"Mother: Ali,...not going to pray today?
Ali: Mama,...not feeling well.
Mother: ..you are grown up now,
..should not miss your prayers.
Ali: Mama! Why do we pray?
Mother: Because ...to thank ALLAH
Almighty for His blessings.
Ali: Can't we skip prayers
even for a single day?
Mother: No, we cannot.
Ali: Ok mama. I’ll not skip...
Mother: Good..."

~English Textbook of
Punjab Textbook Board
of Year 8 in Pakistan
[16]

As of 2007, public expenditure on education was 2.2 percent of GNPs, a marginal increase from 2 percent before 1984–85. Very little (only about 12%) of the total national allocation to education goes to higher education with about 88% being spent on lower level education. Lower education institutions such as primary schools suffer under such conditions as the lower income classes are unable to enjoy subsidies and quality education.[17]

Secondary education

Secondary education in Pakistan begins in year 9 and lasts for four years. After end of each of the school years, students are required to pass a national examination administered by a regional Board of Intermediate and Secondary Education (or BISE).

Upon completion of year 9, students are expected to take a standardised test in each of the first parts of their academic subjects (SSC-I). They again take these tests of the second parts of the same courses at the end of year 10 (SSC-II). Upon successful completion of these examinations, they are awarded a Secondary School Certificate (or SSC). This is locally termed a 'matriculation certificate' or 'matric' for short. The curriculum usually includes a combination of eight courses including electives (such as Biology, Chemistry, Computer and Physics) as well as compulsory subjects (such as Mathematics, English, Urdu, Islamic studies and Pakistan Studies). The total marks for Matric are 1100 divided between 9th and 10th.[18] The marks are divided in each year follows: 75 marks for Maths, English and Urdu, 50 marks for Islamic Studies (or ethics for Non Muslim students) and Pakistan Studies, 60 marks for Sciences (Biology, Chemistry, Physics). An additional 90 marks are allotted for practicals (30 for each science). Students then enter an intermediate college and complete year 11 and 12. Upon completion of each of the two years, they again take standardised tests in their academic subjects (HSSC-I and HSSC-II). Upon successful completion of these examinations, students are awarded the Higher Secondary School Certificate (or HSSC). This level of education is also called the FSc/FA/ICS or 'intermediate'. There are many streams students can choose for their 11 and 12 years, such as pre-medical, pre-engineering, humanities (or social sciences), computer science and commerce. Each stream consists of three electives and as well as three compulsory subjects of English, Urdu, Islamiat (year 11 only) and Pakistan Studies (year 12 only).

Alternative qualifications in Pakistan are available but are maintained by other examination boards instead of BISE. Most common alternative is the General Certificate of Education (or GCE), where SSC and HSSC are replaced by Ordinary Level (or O Level) and Advanced Level (or A Level) respectively. Other qualifications include IGCSE which replaces SSC. GCE and GCSE O Level, IGCSE and GCE AS/A Level are managed by British examination boards of CIE of the Cambridge Assessment and/or Edexcel International of the Pearson PLC. Generally, 8–10 courses are selected by students at GCE O Levels and 3–5 at GCE A Levels.

Advanced Placement (or AP) is an alternative option but much less common than GCE or IGCSE. This replaces the secondary school education as 'High School Education' instead. AP exams are monitored by a North American examination board, College Board, and can only be given under supervision of centers which are registered with the College Board, unlike GCE O/AS/A Level and IGCSE which can be given privately.

Another type of education in Pakistan is called "Technical Education" and combines technical and vocational education. The vocational curriculum starts at year 5 and ends with year 10.[19] Three boards, the Punjab Board of Technical Education (PBTE), KPK Board of Technical Education (KPKBTE) and Sindh Board of Technical Education (SBTE) offering Matric Tech. course called Technical School Certificate (TSC) (equivalent to 10th grade) and Diploma of Associate Engineering (DAE) in engineering disciplines like Civil, Chemical, Architecture, Mechanical, Electrical, Electronics, Computer etc. DAE is a three years program of instructions which is equivalent to 12th grade. Diploma holders are called associate engineers. They can either join their respective field or take admission in B.Tech. and BE in their related discipline after DAE.

Furthermore, the A level qualification, inherited by the British education system is widely gained in the private schools of Pakistan. Three to four subjects are selected, based on the interest of the student. It is usually divided into a combination of similar subjects within the same category, like Business, Arts and Sciences. This is a two-year program. A level institutions are different from high school. You must secure admission in such an institution, upon the completion of high school, i.e. the British system equivalent being O levels. O levels and A levels are usually not taught within the same school.

Tertiary education

 
The University of the Punjab, established 1882 in Lahore, is the oldest university of Pakistan.

According to UNESCO's 2009 Global Education Digest, 6% of Pakistanis (9% of men and 3.5% of women) were university graduates as of 2007.[20] Pakistan plans to increase this figure to 10% by 2015 and subsequently to 15% by 2020.[21] There is also a great deal of variety between age cohorts. Less than 6% of those in the age cohort 55–64 have a degree, compared to 8% in the 45–54 age cohort, 11% in the 35–44 age cohort and 16% in the age cohort 25–34.[20]

 
GIK Institute from the Clock Tower
 
Quaid-i-Azam University entrance

After earning their HSSC, students may study in a professional institute for Bachelor's degree courses such as engineering (BE/BS/BSc Engineering), medicine (MBBS), dentistry (BDS), veterinary medicine (DVM), law (LLB), architecture (BArch), pharmacy (Pharm.D) and nursing (BSc Nursing). These courses require four or five years of study. The accreditation councils which accredit the above professional degrees and register these professionals are: Pakistan Engineering Council (PEC), Pakistan Medical Commission (PMC), Pakistan Veterinary Medical Council (PVMC), Pakistan Bar Council (PBC), Pakistan Council for Architects and Town Planners (PCATP), Pharmacy Council of Pakistan (PCP) and Pakistan Nursing Council (PNC). Students can also attend a university for Bachelor of Arts (BA), Bachelor of Science (BSc), Bachelor of Commerce (BCom) or Bachelor of Business Administration (BBA) degree courses.

There are two types of Bachelor courses in Pakistan: Pass or Honors. Pass degree requires two years of study and students normally read three optional subjects (such as Chemistry or [Education] Economics) in addition to almost equal number of compulsory subjects (such as English, islamiyat and Pakistan Studies). Honours degree requires four years of study, and students normally specialize in a chosen field of study, such as Biochemistry (BSc Hons. Biochemistry).

Pass Bachelors is now slowly being phased out for Honours throughout the country.

Regarding teacher education programs, there are multiple paths in which a pre-service teacher can take. The first option includes; 12 years of schooling. Then, the person would receive an Associate's degree in education. Finally, they would receive a Bachelor's degree in education for two more years to become an elementary teacher. The second option available would include 12 years of schooling and four years of schooling to receive a Bachelor of Education for either elementary or secondary educators. The other options range from 14 to 16 years of schooling. Finally, one could receive their master's or Ph.D. in education. According to the article, "Teacher Education in Pakistan": there are many teacher training institutes throughout Pakistan. In the past, there had been around 40,000 teachers being trained in short term programs per year. Even with this amount of training, there are a few criticisms regarding teacher training. These programs are more knowledge based and not application based. There is more focus and interest on memorizations to qualify and pass exams. Lastly, these trainers do not have any extra qualifications and are not highly qualified to begin with.[22]

Quaternary education

 
Pak India Comparison of Research publications per 10 million population for period 2000–2018; Pakistan green India blue;Pakistan overtook India in 2017 due to reforms introduced by Prof. Atta-ur-Rahman FRS
 
Prof. Atta-ur-Rahman receiving the Fellowship of Royal Society(London) from Prof. Martin Reese, after signing the 360 year old book of the Royal Society with a feather pen.
 
HEJ Research Institute of Chemistry is integral part of International Center of Chemical and Biological Sciences at University of Karachi, Pakistan's leading research center[citation needed]
 
Dr. Panjwani Center for Molecular Medicine and Drug Research is part of International Center for Chemical Biological Sciences, at University of Karachi, the UNESCO Regional Center of Excellence.

Most of Master's degree programs require two years education. Master of Philosophy (MPhil) is available in most of the subjects and can be undertaken after doing Masters. Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) education is available in selected areas and is usually pursued after earning a MPhil degree. Students pursuing MPhil or PhD degrees must choose a specific field and a university that is doing research work in that field. MPhil and PhD education in Pakistan requires a minimum of two years of study.

Nonformal and informal education

Out of the formal system, the public sectors runs numerous schools and training centres, most being vocational-oriented. Among those institutions can be found vocational schools, technical training centres and agriculture and vocational training centres. An apprenticeship system is also framed by the state of Pakistan.[19]

Informal education is also important in Pakistan and regroups mostly school-leavers and low-skilled individuals, who are trained under the supervision of a senior craftsman.[19] Few institutes are run by corporates to train university students eligible for jobs and provide experience during education fulfilling a gap between university and industry for example: Appxone Private Limited is training Engineers with professional development on major subjects of Electronics and Computer science and other fields.

Informal education has also increasingly become a field for not-for-profit organisations in the country. Among those are visible projects, like the MagnifiScience Centre in Karachi.

Madrassas

Madrassas are Islamic seminaries. Most Madrasas teach mostly Islamic subjects such as Tafseer (Interpretation of the Quran), Hadith (sayings of Muhammad), Fiqh (Islamic Law), Arabic language and include some non-Islamic subjects, such as logic, philosophy, mathematics, to enable students to understand the religious ones. The number of madrassas are popular among Pakistan's poorest families in part because they feed and house their students. Estimates of the number of madrasas vary between 12,000 and 40,000. In some areas of Pakistan they outnumber the public schools.[23]

History

Gender disparity

The country of Pakistan is a profound patriarchal society. Throughout Pakistan's educational system, there is a gender disparity between males and females. In fact, according to the 2016 Global Gender Gap Report, Pakistan was ranked the second worst country in the world regarding gender inequality.[24]

In Pakistan, gender discrimination in education occurs among the poorest households.[25] Only 18% of Pakistani women have received 10 years or more of schooling.[26][25] Among other criticisms the Pakistani education system faces is the gender disparity in enrollment levels. However, in recent years some progress has been made in trying to fix this problem. In 1990–91, the female to male ratio (F/M ratio) of enrollment was 0.47 for primary level of education. It reached to 0.74 in 1999–2000, showing the F/M ratio has improved by 57.44% within the decade. For the middle level of education it was 0.42 in the start of decade and increased to 0.68 by the end of decade, so it has improved almost 62%. In both cases the gender disparity is decreased but relatively more rapidly at middle level.[27]

Additionally, Pakistan has showed quite a bit of improvement since 2006 for literacy and educational attainment for women (Moin et al., 2018). One example of this progress recently made in 2010 was that primary education is a legal right for children ranging from five to sixteen years old.[28] The gender disparity in enrollment at secondary level of education was 0.4 in 1990-91 and 0.67 in 1999–2000, showing that the disparity decreased by 67.5% in the decade. At the college level, it was 0.50 in 1990–91 and reached 0.81 in 1999–2000, showing that the disparity decreased by 64%. The gender disparity has decreased comparatively rapidly at secondary school.[27]

But, low female enrollment is still a very prevalent issue. A reason for this is that females who are a vulnerable group, are less likely to access as much education as boys. If they do go to school, this also affects their academic performance. In fact, in the 1990s, only 20% out of 50% enrollment were females who attended formal education. Factually, since female enrollment is so much lower compared to males across all of the provinces in Pakistan, literacy rates along with dropout rates are much higher. In fact, men have a literacy rate of around 67% versus women who have a literacy rate of 42%. Due to this early on prevention of females attending schools, males dominate the education field. Teacher-wise males dominate teaching profession by 2:1 with females unable to teach or being barred. If they do, they are limited due to cultural norms and pressures. In fact, there is 1100 males to 1000 female ratio. Additionally, there is not a female university leader presence in the whole country.[22] Even with this improvement, due to their low social status and inequities regarding access to education, even when they comprise half of the population, women are still facing these burdens. This is true even after they signed the Millennium Development Goals. It was meant to eliminate gender disparity in education by 2015.[24] With the little improvement done by the government, people have started to believe that parents prefer to educate boys rather than girls. In regard to education, there are large differences between male and females. One issue is the lack of physical infrastructure that is a particular barrier for girls being able to access education. Families feel that these schools are unsafe for them. Government schools tend to be overcrowded and a far distance for children. However, there does not seem to be gender segregation in the schools that were visited in a study cited.[29] Research indicates that female university students face more gender discrimination than males in the capital city of Pakistan.[30]

A particularly interesting aspect of this gender disparity is representation of Pakistani women in STEMM (science, technology, engineering, mathematics and medicine). In 2013, the issue of women doctors in Pakistan was highlighted in local and international media.[31][32][33][34] According to Pakistan Medical and Dental Council, in many medical colleges in Pakistan, as many as 80% of students are women, but majority of these women do not go on to actually practice medicine, creating a shortage of doctors in rural areas and several specialties (especially surgical fields).[32][34] In 2014, Pakistan Medical and Dental Council introduced a gender-based admission policy, restricting women to 50% of available seats (based on the gender ratios in general population).[35][36] This quota was challenged and subsequently deemed unconstitutional (and discriminatory) by Lahore High Court.[37][38] Research indicates several problems faced by women doctors in Pakistan in their career and education, including lack of implementation of women-friendly policies (like maternity leave, breast-feeding provisions and child-care facilities), and systemic sexism prevalent in medical education and training.[39] Pakistan's patriarchal culture, where women's work outside the home is generally considered less important than her family and household obligations, also make it difficult for women to balance a demanding career.[39] Despite the importance of the issue, no new policies (except now-defunct-quota) have been proposed or implemented to ensure women's retention in workforce.

However, there may be a current possible solution to the gender gap throughout Pakistan. The possible solution would be low-cost private schools or LCPSs which may correct the prevailing gender inequalities in Pakistan. However, after the research, male students are more likely to attend low-cost private schools than female students. This further widens the gender imbalance in the field of education throughout Pakistan. But, if females are able to attend, they academically outperform male students. This is true except for the field of mathematics. This is possibly caused by the fact that a lot of professions are not seen as female oriented. All in all, in the future, these LCPSs may be able to reach more and more of the marginalized groups of people. In the end, a large factor that played into if parents had their children attend these schools were based on their education level. Mostly, on the father's than the mother's education level.[28]

In the end, even with all of the Pakistani government's efforts regarding educational policies, they have tried in vain to adjust and fix the gender disparities that its country is facing.[29] It seems that disinterest of parents to educate their daughters, cultural and religious barriers, high tuition cost, and the poor quality in education are the major reasons for gender disparities in this country.[28] In general, females face many other disparities, as well. In fact, there is less money spend on them for health, education, and household expenditures. With the inadequate education and skills, poor health conditions and lack of access to resources actually decrease the quality of female's life.[40]

However, looking beyond binary genders, there is the case of transgender individuals in Pakistan. According to the Australian Journal of Asian Law, in 2018, Pakistan defined what they consider to be "transgender". According to the Pakistani parliament, a transgender individual is a person who is; intersex, eunuch assigned male when born, or a transgender man/woman whose gender differs from what they were assigned as at birth. They also passed The Pakistan Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Act of 2018. This act has many provisions to it that ensure the basic fundamental human rights for transgender individuals. Not only that but should enforced in the same way as cisgender individuals. These rights include; education, employment, health, accessing public places and transportation, voting, holding public office, etc. Going one step further, this also includes the right to recognition as a transgender person. They shall have the right to be recognized as their self-perceived gender and they also will have the right to register themselves as such legally. However, before this act, the Pakistani government recognized five different genders. Additionally, as this journal has stated later on, that it marks transgender individuals as "other" compared to cisgender individuals.[41]

Even with this act, these individuals are abused and are marginalized. For example, hijras, or males who act "feminine" are ridiculed and harassed".[42] Once again, the more “feminine” gender is targeted and have less access to opportunities than their male counterparts.[41] In conclusion, gender disparity is in most apsects of life, going beyond binary genders.

Qualitative dimension

In Pakistan, the quality of education has a declining trend. Shortage of teachers and poorly equipped laboratories have resulted in the out-dated curriculum that has little relevance to present-day needs. The education is based just on cramming and the students lack professional skills as well as communication skills when they are graduated from an institute. Moreover, the universities here are too expensive, due to which the Pakistani students can't afford a university to get higher education. Moreover, the universities here don't provide skills that have a demand in market.[17]

However, there have been numerous reforms to attempt to raise the quality of education in this country. Examples of these include; The Convention of the Rights of the Children (1989), the Millennium Development Goals (UN 1990), and the Sustainable Development Goals (2015). This last reform included free and compulsory education for all children, and access to quality basic education.[22]

Teacher education

Teacher education reform is crucial in improving education in Pakistan. Teacher training programs at universities lack qualified professionals. Almost one-third of universities in Balochistan do not have professors in their teacher education departments and there was not a PhD in Education at any of the universities in Balochistan. Teachers are the focal point of establishing progressive education. Teacher preparation programs need funding and consistency to produce quality, effective teachers. Teacher reform needs to continue by establishing resources and investments. Time needs to be invested in updating curriculum and teacher education facilities. Investments must be made in updating building infrastructures, libraries, IT departments, and laboratories.[43]

Some major obstacles faced by the education system in Pakistan include: access to education, equal opportunities, relevance, required teachers, and environment. There are parts of Pakistan where government leaders have not enacted strategies to help children attend schools. Many children live too far away from school to receive a formal education. Female students are also not offered the same classes as male students in the majority of the schools. In addition to female students being deprived of opportunities, female teachers are also lacking adequate teaching spaces. Another point of weakness education in Pakistan faces is relevance in content. Content should teach students how to solve societal problems and not assist in political conflicts. Students need more opportunities to deepen their knowledge of how to attend to economic and social needs.[44]

Pakistan teachers face knowledge gaps regarding human rights due to outdated teacher education curriculum. Many Pakistani leaders and teachers hold conservative beliefs that education policies need to remain aligned with national Islamic ideology, which does not focus on human rights. Global policy makers are aware that teachers promote human rights and ethics and should receive a course in their teacher training programs about basic human rights. A study revealed that reflective writing and case studies have been the best approach to raising awareness about human rights issues in teacher preparation programs in Pakistan.[45]

Teacher education has an impact on the general education of the country. Within Pakistan there are many common problems within schools, this includes not having proper training facilities, small termed training period, lack of in-service training for teachers, and other issues.[46]

There is a shortage of teachers in Pakistan. Labs are old, outdated, and poorly equipped, and curriculum is very outdated and does not have much relevance to today's world. Issues within the schools include defective teaching materials and curriculum, substandard and under qualified teachers, and overcrowded classrooms.[47]

Technical and vocational education

Education plays a crucial role in developing countries by transmitting necessary life skills to the future citizens. After the eighteenth amendment was abolished in 2010, there was more autonomy available to people in the health care and education spectrums. Technical and Vocational Education Training (TVET) raised attention because education helps prepare students for future employment. TVET classes also offer money management lessons, personal and family health practices, Electronical and Electronics and healthcare information. Providing proper TVET site management, adequate teacher salaries, competent teachers, up-to-date curriculum, and equity in the programs are challenges faced by Pakistani leaders. The major goals of TVET include investing in the country's workforce to stimulate the economy and redistribute the wealth.[48]

Teacher satisfaction

Life satisfaction is a characteristic linked to teacher workplace experiences. A recent study in Pakistan compared teachers who were employed by regular institutions and special education institutions. The study asked participants questions about their emotional intelligence and life satisfaction. The results from the teacher institutions study showed that teachers of Pakistani special education institutions reported higher levels of emotional intelligence or self-awareness about their issues and provided ways on how to fix their own problems. Special education teachers also reported higher levels of life satisfaction. The study revealed that the general mood of the workplace is correlated with emotional intelligence. Further research is needed to investigate the mood differences between special education institution environments and regular education institution environments.[49]

Teachers Issue

Teachers in Pakistan face a range of challenges and issues that impact their ability to provide quality education to students. Here are some common issues faced by teachers in Pakistan:

  1. Low pay: Teachers in Pakistan are often paid low salaries, which can make it difficult to attract and retain talented individuals in the profession.
  2. Inadequate resources: Teachers in Pakistan often have limited access to resources such as textbooks, classroom materials, and technology, which can make it difficult to provide effective instruction.
  3. Overcrowded classrooms: Many classrooms in Pakistan are overcrowded, which can make it challenging for teachers to provide individual attention to each student.
  4. Gender discrimination: Female teachers in Pakistan may face discrimination and harassment in the workplace, as well as cultural barriers that limit their access to education and professional development opportunities.
  5. Lack of training: Many teachers in Pakistan have limited training and professional development opportunities, which can make it difficult for them to develop new teaching strategies and stay up-to-date with developments in their field.
  6. Limited job security: Teachers in Pakistan may have limited job security, which can lead to high turnover rates and a lack of motivation among teachers.
  7. Societal and cultural issues: Teachers in Pakistan may face societal and cultural barriers that limit their ability to teach certain subjects or work with certain student populations.

Addressing these issues will require a concerted effort from policymakers, educators, and the broader community to support and empower teachers in their vital role in shaping the future of Pakistani society through education.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, the nation launched an educational television channel, Teleschool.[50] Teleschool is programmed with lessons for kindergarten through high school. Each grade has one hour of course material broadcast per day.[50]

Teleschool instructional videos are in Urdu and English, Pakistan's official languages and the languages used for the country's national curriculum.[50]

The Ministry of Education is also trying to develop instructional programming for radio since Teleschool isn't available to the nation's poorest families.[50]

Because of COVID-19, Pakistan had to consider using online classes. However, many students, especially in rural areas, do not have access to the Internet. Because of this it alters the process of online learning especially for poor students or those living in rural areas.[51]

Digital education has been started in many of the educational institution in Pakistan to utilize time efficiently during the current time.[52]

The distance learning mode of education has been recognized as a great resource to give equal access to education to the women from remote areas of developing countries including Pakistan where many women otherwise would not attend school.[53]

At the post-secondary level, there has been much research conducted about the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats when practicing distance learning. They found that this model is great for those that don't live within the same city as where they go to school. It gives them an opportunity to get an education without having to leave their homes. It has been difficult for students that still have to go into the university, because of the distance learning model it has slowed and put a delay in many research processes. The teachers have a lower salary package as well because they are not requiring them to come into work.

[54]

Achievements

Some of the famous alumni of Pakistan are as follow:

Abdus Salam

Abdus Salam was a Pakistani theoretical physicist and Nobel laureate in physics for his work on the electroweak unification of the electromagnetic and weak forces. Salam, Sheldon Glashow and Steven Weinberg shared the 1979 Nobel prize for this work. Salam holds the distinction of being the first Pakistani to receive the Nobel Prize in any field. Salam heavily contributed to the rise of Pakistani physics to the Physics community in the world.[55][56]

Atta-ur-Rahman

Atta-ur-Rahman is a Pakistani scientist known for his work in the field of natural product chemistry. He has over 1200 research papers, books and patents attributed to him, that have won him over 34,000 citations and h index of 74.[57] He was elected as Fellow of the Royal Society (London) in 2006[58] and won the UNESCO Science Prize in 1999.[59] The revolutionary changes that he brought in the higher education as well as science and technology sectors won him numerous national and international awards, including the highest national award, Nishan-i-Imtiaz.[60] He also won the highest award for international collaboration of China.[61] He was also awarded a high civil award of the Government of Austria in recognition of his services to science[62] · [63]

Ayub Ommaya

Ayub Ommaya was a Pakistani neurosurgeon who heavily contributed to his field. Over 150 research papers have been attributed to him. He also invented the Ommaya Reservoir medical procedure. It is a system of delivery of medical drugs for treatment of patients with brain tumours.

Mahbub-ul-Haq

Mahbub-ul-Haq was a Pakistani economist who along with Indian economist Amartya Sen developed the Human Development Index (HDI), the modern international standard for measuring and rating human development.

Ismat Beg

Ismat Beg is a Pakistani mathematician famous for his work in fixed point theory, and multicriteria decision making methods. Ismat Beg is Higher Education Commission Distinguished National Professor at Lahore School of Economics and an honorary full Professor at the Mathematics Division of the Institute for Basic Research, Florida, USA. He has vast experience of teaching and research. He is a Fellow of Pakistan Academy of Sciences, and Institute of Mathematics and its Applications (U K).

Arfa Abdul Karim Randhawa

Arfa Abdul Karim Randhawa was a Pakistani student and computer prodigy who, in 2004 at the age of nine, became the youngest Microsoft Certified Professional (MCP). She had her name in Guinness Book of World Records.[64] She kept the title until 2008. Arfa represented Pakistan on various international forums including the TechEd Developers Conference. She also received the President's Award for Pride of Performance in 2005. A science park in Lahore, the Arfa Software Technology Park, was named after her.[65][66][67][68] She was invited by Bill Gates to visit Microsoft Headquarters in the United States.[69]

Dr. Naweed Syed

Dr. Naweed Syed is a Pakistani Canadian scientist. He is the first scientist to connect brain cells to a silicon chip.[70][71][72]

Nergis Mavalvala

Nergis Mavalvala is a Pakistani-American astrophysicist known for her role in the first observation of gravitational waves.[73] She was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship in 2010[74][75] and first Lahore technology reward from Information Technology University in 2017.[76][77] Mavalvala is best known for her work on the detection of gravitational waves in the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO) project.[73][78][79]

Muhammad Irfan-Maqsood

Muhammad Irfan-Maqsood is a Pakistani researcher and entrepreneur He is known for his work in the field of Techno-entrepreneurship and Biotechnology.[80][81][82][83][84][85] He holds PhD in Cell and Molecular Biology and holding two MSc (Biotechnology) and MA (Political Sciences-IR). He has been awarded 4 time Iranian national techno-entrepreneurship award Sheikh Bahai by Minister of Science and Research, Iran and Young Entrepreneur from the Deputy Minister for Youth Affairs.[86][87] He also has been Joint Secretary of Pakistan Muslim League N Lahore on the instruction of Mian Nawaz Sharif.

Education expenditure as percentage of GDP

The expenditure on education is around 2% of Pakistan's GDP.[88] However, in 2009 the government approved the new national education policy, which stipulates that education expenditure will be increased to 7% of GDP,[89] an idea that was first suggested by the Punjab government.[90]

The author of an article, the history of education spending in Pakistan since 1972, argues that this policy target raises a fundamental question: What extraordinary things are going to happen that would enable Pakistan to achieve within six years what it has been unable to lay a hand on in the past six decades? The policy document is blank on this question and does not discuss the assumptions that form the basis of this target. Calculations of the author show that during the past 37 years, the highest public expenditure on education was 2.80 percent of GDP in 1987–88. Public expenditure on education as a percentage of GDP was actually reduced in 16 years and maintained in 5 years between 1972–73 and 2008–09. Thus, out of total 37 years since 1972, public expenditure on education as a percentage of GDP either decreased or remained stagnant for 21 years. The author argues if linear trend were maintained since 1972, Pakistan could have touched 4 percent of GDP well before 2015. However, it is unlikely to happen because the levels of spending have had remained significantly unpredictable and unsteady in the past. Given this disappointing trajectory, increasing public expenditure on education to 7 percent of GDP would be nothing less than a miracle but it is not going to be of godly nature. Instead, it is going to be the one of political nature because it has to be "invented" by those who are at the helm of affairs. The author suggests that little success can be made unless Pakistan adopts an "unconventional" approach to education. That is to say, education sector should be treated as a special sector by immunizing budgetary allocations for it from fiscal stresses and political and economic instabilities. Allocations for education should not be affected by squeezed fiscal space or surge in military expenditure or debts. At the same time, there is a need to debate others options about how Pakistan can "invent" the miracle of raising education expenditure to 7 percent of GDP by 2015.[91]

University rankings

In 2018, for first time NUST, Islamabad was ranked among top 100 QS Asia University rankings at 91. Also 7 universities of Pakistan were ranked among top 1000 QS Asia University rankings 2018.[92] As of 2022, total 6 universities were ranked in top 1000: NUST (#358), Quaid-i-Azam University (#378), PIEAS (#398), LUMS (#651), UET, Lahore (#801), and University of the Punjab (#801).[93]

Religion and education

Education in Pakistan is heavily influenced by religion. For instance, one study of Pakistani science teachers showed that many rejected evolution based on religious grounds.[94] However, most of the Pakistani teachers who responded to the study (14 out of 18) either accepted or considered the possibility of the evolution of living organisms, although nearly all Pakistani science teachers rejected human evolution because they believed that ‘human beings did not evolve from monkeys.’ This is a major misconception and incorrect interpretation of the science of evolution, but according to the study it is a common one among many Pakistani teachers. Although many of the teachers rejected the evolution of humans, " all agreed that there is ‘no contradiction between science and Islam’ in general".[94]

According to the Pakistan's National Council for Justice and Peace (NCJP) report 2001 on literacy of religious minorities in Pakistan–the average literacy rate among Christians in Punjab is 34 per cent, Hindu (upper caste) is 34 per cent, Hindu (scheduled castes) is 19 per cent, others (including Parsis, Sikhs, Buddhists and nomads) is 17 per cent compared to the national average of 46.56 per cent.Whereas the Ahmadis have literacy rate slightly higher than the national average.[95]

Literacy rate

The definition of literacy has been undergoing changes, with the result that the literacy figure has vacillated irregularly during the last censuses and surveys. A summary is as follows:[96]

Year of
census or
survey[96]
Total[96] Male[96] Female[96] Urban[97] Rural[97] Definition of
being "literate"[96]
Age
group[97]
1951 (West Pakistan) 17.9%[98] 21.4%[98] 13.9%[98] N/A N/A One who can read a clear
print in any language
All Ages
1961 (West Pakistan) 16.9%[98] 26.1%[98] 6.7%[98] 34.8% 10.6% One who is able to read with
understanding a simple letter in any language
Age 5 and above
1972 21.7% 30.2% 11.6% 41.5% 14.3% One who is able to read and
write in some language with understanding
Age 10 and Above
1981 26.2% 35.1% 16.0% 47.1% 17.3% One who can read newspaper
and write a simple letter
Age 10 and Above
1998 43.92% 54.81% 32.02% 63.08% 33.64% One who can read a newspaper
and write a simple letter, in any language
Age 10 and Above
2021[99] 62.8% 73.4% 51.9% 77.3% 54% "Ability to read and understand simple text in any language from a newspaper or magazine, write a simple letter and perform basic mathematical calculation (ie, counting and addition/subtraction)."[100] Age 10 and Above

Literacy rate by Province

Province Literacy rate[96]
1972 1981 1998 2021[99]
Punjab 20.7% 27.4% 46.56% 66.3%
Sindh 30.2% 31.5% 45.29% 61.8%
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa 15.5% 16.7% 35.41% 55.1%
Balochistan 10.1% 10.3% 26.6% 54.5%

Literacy rate of Federally Administered Areas

Region Literacy Rate
1981 1998 Latest
Islamabad (ICT) 47.8%[101][102] 72.40%[101] 85% (2015)[8]
Azad Jammu & Kashmir (AJK) 25.7%[103] 55%[104] 74% (2017)[10]
Gilgit-Baltistan 3% [105] 37.85%[105] N/A

Mean Years of Schooling in Pakistan by administrative unit

Unit[106] 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2012 2015 2018
Azad Jammu & Kashmir 3.78 4.59   5.42   7.47   7.22   7.35   6.92   6.51  
Balochistan 1.77 2.15   2.53   3.49   3.25   3.14   3.17   3.10  
FATA 1.42 1.73   2.04   2.81   2.71   2.69   2.60   2.45  
Gilgit-Baltistan 2.01 2.44   2.88   3.97   3.84   3.80   4.59   5.17  
Islamabad (ICT) 4.16 5.05   5.96   8.21   9.67   10.70   9.62   8.34  
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa 1.83 2.22   2.62   3.62   3.80   3.97   3.95   3.82  
Punjab 1.96 2.38   2.81   3.88   4.44   4.85   5.23   5.41  
Sindh 2.43 2.95   3.48   4.79   5.19   5.51   5.35   5.05  
Pakistan 2.28 2.77   3.27   4.51   4.68   4.85   5.09   5.16  

Literacy rates and development

Pakistan has one of the lowest literacy rates in South Asia at 49.9 percent. The male literacy rate is 61.7 percent and the female literacy rate is 35.2 percent. The female literacy rate drops to twenty-five percent in rural areas of Pakistan. Girls’ school enrollment also significantly drops in the rural areas of Pakistan. The enrollment rate for girls in rural areas is only twenty percent in grade school. Sixty-five percent of Pakistan's population is made up of rural citizens. Citizens in Pakistan face issues that affect their quality of life. Issues such as illiteracy are linked to poverty and lack of basic needs. Feudalism and patriarchy leadership has kept females especially from receiving adequate education.[107]

Parents with lower literacy skills struggle to understand health recommendations that can affect the development of their children. Malnutrition is a problem for children of parents who do not have a formal education status. Uneducated parents may not know the necessary proper nutrition needed for their children to adequately grow and develop. Malnutrition is associated with mothers who are illiterate and unaware of correct feeding practices.[108]

In a study published by the Research Journal of Commerce, Economics, and Social Sciences, discusses the importance of education. The study compares Indonesia, Malaysia and Pakistan. Education plays a huge role and is a crucial tool for overall improvement in well-being. Education helps jobs, upholds social justice and equity, social and self-awareness, and open mindedness. Education is one of the most important contribution a country can offer its citizens in the hopes of inequality and poverty. Education has a very positive effect on human life. In any society education plays such a basic role and without education we cannot imagine a life. This study found that there are many differences in culture in Indonesia, Malaysia and Pakistan as well as resources within the country are also very different. The data reveals that the literacy rate of Indonesia is 90%, Malaysia is 89% and Pakistan is 54.9%, which is significantly lower in compared to the other two countries. In comparison to these other two countries, Pakistan has the more poverty and inequality within its country. It only makes sense that it has the lowest literacy rate because of this. If Pakistan's literacy rates were to go up, their poverty and inequality within their country would hopefully go down, creating a better society and more beneficial country.[109]

International education

After the approval of the World Health Organization and the Ministry of Education of China, SICAS institutions have exemplified and classified Chinese universities where Pakistani students recognized by pmdc come to study in China[110] through online methods As of January 2015, the International Schools Consultancy (ISC)[111] listed Pakistan as having 439 international schools.[112] ISC defines an 'international school' in the following terms "ISC includes an international school if the school delivers a curriculum to any combination of pre-school, primary or secondary students, wholly or partly in English outside an English-speaking country, or if a school in a country where English is one of the official languages, offers an English-medium curriculum other than the country's national curriculum and is international in its orientation."[112] This definition is used by publications including The Economist.[113]

See also

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Further reading

  • Sultan Ali of Sawabi. Madrasah Reform and State Power in Pakistan (2012)
  • K.K. Aziz. (2004) The Murder of History : A Critique of History Textbooks used in Pakistan. Vanguard. ISBN 969-402-126-X
  • Nayyar, A. H. & Salim, Ahmad. (2003) The Subtle Subversion: The State of Curricula and Text-books in Pakistan – Urdu, English, Social Studies and Civics. Sustainable Development Policy Institute.
  • Halai, Anjum (Aga Khan University Institute for Educational Development). "Gender and Mathematics Education: Lessons from Pakistan" ().
  • Malik, Jamal. Colonialization of Islam: Dissolution of Traditional Institutions in Pakistan. New Delhi: Manohar Publications, and Lahore: Vanguard Ltd., 1996.
  • Mubarak Ali. In the Shadow of history, Nigarshat, Lahore; History on Trial, Fiction House, Lahore, 1999; Tareekh Aur Nisabi Kutub, Fiction House, Lahore, 2003.
  • Pervez Hoodbhoy and A. H. Nayyar. Rewriting the history of Pakistan, in Islam, Politics and the state: The Pakistan Experience, Ed. Mohammad Asghar Khan, Zed Books, London, 1985.
  • Rahman, Tariq. Denizens of Alien Worlds: A Study of Education, Inequality and Polarization in Pakistan. Karachi: Oxford University Press, 2004. Reprinted 2006. ISBN 978-0-19-597863-6.
  • Rosser, Yvette Claire (2003). (PDF) (Dissertation). University of Texas at Austin. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 September 2008. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
  • Rubina Saigol. Knowledge and Identity – Articulation of Gender in Educational Discourse in Pakistan, ASR, Lahore 1995
  • Tariq Rahman, Denizens of Alien Worlds: A Study of Education, Inequality and Polarization in Pakistan Karachi, Oxford University Press, 2004. Reprint. 2006
  • Tariq Rahman, Language, Ideology and Power: Language learning among the Muslims of Pakistan and North India Karachi, Oxford UP, 2002.
  • Tariq Rahman, Language and Politics in Pakistan Karachi: Oxford UP, 1996. Rept. several times. see 2006 edition.
  • World Bank Case Study on Primary Education in Pakistan
  • Sarangapani, Padma M., and Rekha Pappu, eds. Handbook of Education Systems in South Asia (Springer Singapore, 2019).
  • Tanweer, Bilal. "Revisiting the Madrasa Question". The News International, 6 May 2007. About a talk given by Dr. Nomanul Haq (University of Pennsylvania) at the Lahore University of Management Sciences (LUMS), Pakistan.

External links

  • World Data on Education, IBE (2011) – overview of Pakistan's education system
  • TVET in Pakistan, UNESCO-UNEVOC(2013) – overview of the technical and vocational education system in Pakistan
  • "Pakistan ruined by language myth" – Zubeida Mustafa

education, pakistan, overseen, federal, ministry, education, provincial, governments, whereas, federal, government, mostly, assists, curriculum, development, accreditation, financing, research, development, article, constitution, pakistan, obligates, state, pr. Education in Pakistan is overseen by the Federal Ministry of Education and the provincial governments whereas the federal government mostly assists in curriculum development accreditation and the financing of research and development Article 25 A of the Constitution of Pakistan obligates the state to provide free and compulsory quality education to children of the age group 5 to 16 years The State shall provide free and compulsory education to all children of the age of five to sixteen years in such a manner as may be determined by law 3 Education in PakistanEducational oversightRana Tanveer HussainMinister of EducationGeneral detailsPrimary languagesEnglish UrduSystem typeState federal and privateLiteracy 2022 1 Total72Male81 22 Female54 71 EnrollmentTotal32 33 of population 2 Primary67 57 2 Secondary43 82 2 Post secondary14 85 2 Literacy Rate in each Pakistani District as of the 2017 Pakistan Census The education system in Pakistan 4 is generally divided into six levels preschool for the age from 3 to 5 years primary years one to five middle years six to eight high years nine and ten leading to the Secondary School Certificate or SSC intermediate years eleven and twelve leading to a Higher Secondary School Certificate or HSSC and university programs leading to undergraduate and graduate degrees 5 The Higher Education Commission established in 2002 is responsible for all universities and degree awarding institutes 6 It was established in 2002 with Atta ur Rahman as its Founding Chairman 7 The literacy rate ranges from 82 in Islamabad to 23 in the Torghar District 8 Literacy rates vary by gender and region In tribal areas female literacy is 9 5 9 while Azad Kashmir has a literacy rate of 74 10 Pakistan produces about 445 000 university graduates and 25 000 30 000 computer science graduates per year 11 Despite these statistics Pakistan still has low literacy rate 12 And Pakistan also has the second largest out of school population 22 8 million children 13 after Nigeria Contents 1 Stages of formal education 1 1 Primary education 1 2 Secondary education 1 3 Tertiary education 1 4 Quaternary education 1 5 Nonformal and informal education 1 6 Madrassas 2 History 3 Gender disparity 4 Qualitative dimension 5 Teacher education 6 Technical and vocational education 7 Teacher satisfaction 8 Teachers Issue 9 Achievements 9 1 Abdus Salam 9 2 Atta ur Rahman 9 3 Ayub Ommaya 9 4 Mahbub ul Haq 9 5 Ismat Beg 9 6 Arfa Abdul Karim Randhawa 9 7 Dr Naweed Syed 9 8 Nergis Mavalvala 9 9 Muhammad Irfan Maqsood 10 Education expenditure as percentage of GDP 11 University rankings 12 Religion and education 13 Literacy rate 13 1 Literacy rate by Province 13 2 Literacy rate of Federally Administered Areas 13 3 Mean Years of Schooling in Pakistan by administrative unit 13 4 Literacy rates and development 14 International education 15 See also 16 References 17 Further reading 18 External linksStages of formal education EditPrimary education Edit A primary school in a village in the Sindh region Only about 67 5 of Pakistani children finish primary school education 14 The standard national system of education is mainly inspired from the English educational system Pre school education is designed for 3 5 years old and usually consists of three stages Play Group Nursery and Kindergarten also called KG or Prep After pre school education students go through junior school from years 1 to 5 This is followed by middle school from years 6 to 8 At middle school single sex education is usually preferred by the community but co education is also common in urban cities The curriculum is usually subject to the institution The eight commonly examined disciplines are Arts Computer Studies and ICT General Science including Physics Chemistry and Biology Modern languages with literature i e Urdu and English Mathematics Religious Education i e Islamic Studies Social Studies including Civics Geography History Economics Sociology and sometimes elements of law politics and PHSE Most schools also offer drama studies music and physical education but these are usually not examined or marked Home economics is sometimes taught to female students whereas topics related to astronomy environmental management and psychology are frequently included in textbooks of general science Sometimes archaeology and anthropology are extensively taught in textbooks of social studies SRE is not taught at most schools in Pakistan although this trend is being rebuked by some urban schools Provincial and regional languages such as Punjabi Sindhi Pashto and others may be taught in their respective provinces particularly in language medium schools Some institutes give instruction in foreign languages such as German Turkish Arabic Persian French and Chinese The language of instruction depends on the nature of the institution itself whether it is an English medium school or an Urdu medium school The City School in Karachi As of 2009 Pakistan faces a net primary school attendance rate for both sexes of 66 a figure below estimated world average of 90 per cent 15 An English textbook dialogue Mother Ali not going to pray today Ali Mama not feeling well Mother you are grown up now should not miss your prayers Ali Mama Why do we pray Mother Because to thank ALLAH Almighty for His blessings Ali Can t we skip prayerseven for a single day Mother No we cannot Ali Ok mama I ll not skip Mother Good English Textbook of Punjab Textbook Board of Year 8 in Pakistan 16 As of 2007 update public expenditure on education was 2 2 percent of GNPs a marginal increase from 2 percent before 1984 85 Very little only about 12 of the total national allocation to education goes to higher education with about 88 being spent on lower level education Lower education institutions such as primary schools suffer under such conditions as the lower income classes are unable to enjoy subsidies and quality education 17 Secondary education Edit Federal Board of Intermediate and Secondary Education office in Islamabad Secondary education in Pakistan begins in year 9 and lasts for four years After end of each of the school years students are required to pass a national examination administered by a regional Board of Intermediate and Secondary Education or BISE Upon completion of year 9 students are expected to take a standardised test in each of the first parts of their academic subjects SSC I They again take these tests of the second parts of the same courses at the end of year 10 SSC II Upon successful completion of these examinations they are awarded a Secondary School Certificate or SSC This is locally termed a matriculation certificate or matric for short The curriculum usually includes a combination of eight courses including electives such as Biology Chemistry Computer and Physics as well as compulsory subjects such as Mathematics English Urdu Islamic studies and Pakistan Studies The total marks for Matric are 1100 divided between 9th and 10th 18 The marks are divided in each year follows 75 marks for Maths English and Urdu 50 marks for Islamic Studies or ethics for Non Muslim students and Pakistan Studies 60 marks for Sciences Biology Chemistry Physics An additional 90 marks are allotted for practicals 30 for each science Students then enter an intermediate college and complete year 11 and 12 Upon completion of each of the two years they again take standardised tests in their academic subjects HSSC I and HSSC II Upon successful completion of these examinations students are awarded the Higher Secondary School Certificate or HSSC This level of education is also called the FSc FA ICS or intermediate There are many streams students can choose for their 11 and 12 years such as pre medical pre engineering humanities or social sciences computer science and commerce Each stream consists of three electives and as well as three compulsory subjects of English Urdu Islamiat year 11 only and Pakistan Studies year 12 only Alternative qualifications in Pakistan are available but are maintained by other examination boards instead of BISE Most common alternative is the General Certificate of Education or GCE where SSC and HSSC are replaced by Ordinary Level or O Level and Advanced Level or A Level respectively Other qualifications include IGCSE which replaces SSC GCE and GCSE O Level IGCSE and GCE AS A Level are managed by British examination boards of CIE of the Cambridge Assessment and or Edexcel International of the Pearson PLC Generally 8 10 courses are selected by students at GCE O Levels and 3 5 at GCE A Levels Advanced Placement or AP is an alternative option but much less common than GCE or IGCSE This replaces the secondary school education as High School Education instead AP exams are monitored by a North American examination board College Board and can only be given under supervision of centers which are registered with the College Board unlike GCE O AS A Level and IGCSE which can be given privately Another type of education in Pakistan is called Technical Education and combines technical and vocational education The vocational curriculum starts at year 5 and ends with year 10 19 Three boards the Punjab Board of Technical Education PBTE KPK Board of Technical Education KPKBTE and Sindh Board of Technical Education SBTE offering Matric Tech course called Technical School Certificate TSC equivalent to 10th grade and Diploma of Associate Engineering DAE in engineering disciplines like Civil Chemical Architecture Mechanical Electrical Electronics Computer etc DAE is a three years program of instructions which is equivalent to 12th grade Diploma holders are called associate engineers They can either join their respective field or take admission in B Tech and BE in their related discipline after DAE Furthermore the A level qualification inherited by the British education system is widely gained in the private schools of Pakistan Three to four subjects are selected based on the interest of the student It is usually divided into a combination of similar subjects within the same category like Business Arts and Sciences This is a two year program A level institutions are different from high school You must secure admission in such an institution upon the completion of high school i e the British system equivalent being O levels O levels and A levels are usually not taught within the same school Tertiary education Edit The University of the Punjab established 1882 in Lahore is the oldest university of Pakistan According to UNESCO s 2009 Global Education Digest 6 of Pakistanis 9 of men and 3 5 of women were university graduates as of 2007 20 Pakistan plans to increase this figure to 10 by 2015 and subsequently to 15 by 2020 21 There is also a great deal of variety between age cohorts Less than 6 of those in the age cohort 55 64 have a degree compared to 8 in the 45 54 age cohort 11 in the 35 44 age cohort and 16 in the age cohort 25 34 20 GIK Institute from the Clock Tower Quaid i Azam University entrance After earning their HSSC students may study in a professional institute for Bachelor s degree courses such as engineering BE BS BSc Engineering medicine MBBS dentistry BDS veterinary medicine DVM law LLB architecture BArch pharmacy Pharm D and nursing BSc Nursing These courses require four or five years of study The accreditation councils which accredit the above professional degrees and register these professionals are Pakistan Engineering Council PEC Pakistan Medical Commission PMC Pakistan Veterinary Medical Council PVMC Pakistan Bar Council PBC Pakistan Council for Architects and Town Planners PCATP Pharmacy Council of Pakistan PCP and Pakistan Nursing Council PNC Students can also attend a university for Bachelor of Arts BA Bachelor of Science BSc Bachelor of Commerce BCom or Bachelor of Business Administration BBA degree courses There are two types of Bachelor courses in Pakistan Pass or Honors Pass degree requires two years of study and students normally read three optional subjects such as Chemistry or Education Economics in addition to almost equal number of compulsory subjects such as English islamiyat and Pakistan Studies Honours degree requires four years of study and students normally specialize in a chosen field of study such as Biochemistry BSc Hons Biochemistry Pass Bachelors is now slowly being phased out for Honours throughout the country Regarding teacher education programs there are multiple paths in which a pre service teacher can take The first option includes 12 years of schooling Then the person would receive an Associate s degree in education Finally they would receive a Bachelor s degree in education for two more years to become an elementary teacher The second option available would include 12 years of schooling and four years of schooling to receive a Bachelor of Education for either elementary or secondary educators The other options range from 14 to 16 years of schooling Finally one could receive their master s or Ph D in education According to the article Teacher Education in Pakistan there are many teacher training institutes throughout Pakistan In the past there had been around 40 000 teachers being trained in short term programs per year Even with this amount of training there are a few criticisms regarding teacher training These programs are more knowledge based and not application based There is more focus and interest on memorizations to qualify and pass exams Lastly these trainers do not have any extra qualifications and are not highly qualified to begin with 22 Quaternary education Edit Pak India Comparison of Research publications per 10 million population for period 2000 2018 Pakistan green India blue Pakistan overtook India in 2017 due to reforms introduced by Prof Atta ur Rahman FRS Prof Atta ur Rahman receiving the Fellowship of Royal Society London from Prof Martin Reese after signing the 360 year old book of the Royal Society with a feather pen HEJ Research Institute of Chemistry is integral part of International Center of Chemical and Biological Sciences at University of Karachi Pakistan s leading research center citation needed Dr Panjwani Center for Molecular Medicine and Drug Research is part of International Center for Chemical Biological Sciences at University of Karachi the UNESCO Regional Center of Excellence Most of Master s degree programs require two years education Master of Philosophy MPhil is available in most of the subjects and can be undertaken after doing Masters Doctor of Philosophy PhD education is available in selected areas and is usually pursued after earning a MPhil degree Students pursuing MPhil or PhD degrees must choose a specific field and a university that is doing research work in that field MPhil and PhD education in Pakistan requires a minimum of two years of study Nonformal and informal education Edit Out of the formal system the public sectors runs numerous schools and training centres most being vocational oriented Among those institutions can be found vocational schools technical training centres and agriculture and vocational training centres An apprenticeship system is also framed by the state of Pakistan 19 Informal education is also important in Pakistan and regroups mostly school leavers and low skilled individuals who are trained under the supervision of a senior craftsman 19 Few institutes are run by corporates to train university students eligible for jobs and provide experience during education fulfilling a gap between university and industry for example Appxone Private Limited is training Engineers with professional development on major subjects of Electronics and Computer science and other fields Informal education has also increasingly become a field for not for profit organisations in the country Among those are visible projects like the MagnifiScience Centre in Karachi Madrassas Edit Main article Madrassas in Pakistan Madrassas are Islamic seminaries Most Madrasas teach mostly Islamic subjects such as Tafseer Interpretation of the Quran Hadith sayings of Muhammad Fiqh Islamic Law Arabic language and include some non Islamic subjects such as logic philosophy mathematics to enable students to understand the religious ones The number of madrassas are popular among Pakistan s poorest families in part because they feed and house their students Estimates of the number of madrasas vary between 12 000 and 40 000 In some areas of Pakistan they outnumber the public schools 23 History EditMain article History of education in the Indian subcontinentGender disparity EditSee also Women s education in Pakistan The country of Pakistan is a profound patriarchal society Throughout Pakistan s educational system there is a gender disparity between males and females In fact according to the 2016 Global Gender Gap Report Pakistan was ranked the second worst country in the world regarding gender inequality 24 In Pakistan gender discrimination in education occurs among the poorest households 25 Only 18 of Pakistani women have received 10 years or more of schooling 26 25 Among other criticisms the Pakistani education system faces is the gender disparity in enrollment levels However in recent years some progress has been made in trying to fix this problem In 1990 91 the female to male ratio F M ratio of enrollment was 0 47 for primary level of education It reached to 0 74 in 1999 2000 showing the F M ratio has improved by 57 44 within the decade For the middle level of education it was 0 42 in the start of decade and increased to 0 68 by the end of decade so it has improved almost 62 In both cases the gender disparity is decreased but relatively more rapidly at middle level 27 Additionally Pakistan has showed quite a bit of improvement since 2006 for literacy and educational attainment for women Moin et al 2018 One example of this progress recently made in 2010 was that primary education is a legal right for children ranging from five to sixteen years old 28 The gender disparity in enrollment at secondary level of education was 0 4 in 1990 91 and 0 67 in 1999 2000 showing that the disparity decreased by 67 5 in the decade At the college level it was 0 50 in 1990 91 and reached 0 81 in 1999 2000 showing that the disparity decreased by 64 The gender disparity has decreased comparatively rapidly at secondary school 27 But low female enrollment is still a very prevalent issue A reason for this is that females who are a vulnerable group are less likely to access as much education as boys If they do go to school this also affects their academic performance In fact in the 1990s only 20 out of 50 enrollment were females who attended formal education Factually since female enrollment is so much lower compared to males across all of the provinces in Pakistan literacy rates along with dropout rates are much higher In fact men have a literacy rate of around 67 versus women who have a literacy rate of 42 Due to this early on prevention of females attending schools males dominate the education field Teacher wise males dominate teaching profession by 2 1 with females unable to teach or being barred If they do they are limited due to cultural norms and pressures In fact there is 1100 males to 1000 female ratio Additionally there is not a female university leader presence in the whole country 22 Even with this improvement due to their low social status and inequities regarding access to education even when they comprise half of the population women are still facing these burdens This is true even after they signed the Millennium Development Goals It was meant to eliminate gender disparity in education by 2015 24 With the little improvement done by the government people have started to believe that parents prefer to educate boys rather than girls In regard to education there are large differences between male and females One issue is the lack of physical infrastructure that is a particular barrier for girls being able to access education Families feel that these schools are unsafe for them Government schools tend to be overcrowded and a far distance for children However there does not seem to be gender segregation in the schools that were visited in a study cited 29 Research indicates that female university students face more gender discrimination than males in the capital city of Pakistan 30 A particularly interesting aspect of this gender disparity is representation of Pakistani women in STEMM science technology engineering mathematics and medicine In 2013 the issue of women doctors in Pakistan was highlighted in local and international media 31 32 33 34 According to Pakistan Medical and Dental Council in many medical colleges in Pakistan as many as 80 of students are women but majority of these women do not go on to actually practice medicine creating a shortage of doctors in rural areas and several specialties especially surgical fields 32 34 In 2014 Pakistan Medical and Dental Council introduced a gender based admission policy restricting women to 50 of available seats based on the gender ratios in general population 35 36 This quota was challenged and subsequently deemed unconstitutional and discriminatory by Lahore High Court 37 38 Research indicates several problems faced by women doctors in Pakistan in their career and education including lack of implementation of women friendly policies like maternity leave breast feeding provisions and child care facilities and systemic sexism prevalent in medical education and training 39 Pakistan s patriarchal culture where women s work outside the home is generally considered less important than her family and household obligations also make it difficult for women to balance a demanding career 39 Despite the importance of the issue no new policies except now defunct quota have been proposed or implemented to ensure women s retention in workforce However there may be a current possible solution to the gender gap throughout Pakistan The possible solution would be low cost private schools or LCPSs which may correct the prevailing gender inequalities in Pakistan However after the research male students are more likely to attend low cost private schools than female students This further widens the gender imbalance in the field of education throughout Pakistan But if females are able to attend they academically outperform male students This is true except for the field of mathematics This is possibly caused by the fact that a lot of professions are not seen as female oriented All in all in the future these LCPSs may be able to reach more and more of the marginalized groups of people In the end a large factor that played into if parents had their children attend these schools were based on their education level Mostly on the father s than the mother s education level 28 In the end even with all of the Pakistani government s efforts regarding educational policies they have tried in vain to adjust and fix the gender disparities that its country is facing 29 It seems that disinterest of parents to educate their daughters cultural and religious barriers high tuition cost and the poor quality in education are the major reasons for gender disparities in this country 28 In general females face many other disparities as well In fact there is less money spend on them for health education and household expenditures With the inadequate education and skills poor health conditions and lack of access to resources actually decrease the quality of female s life 40 However looking beyond binary genders there is the case of transgender individuals in Pakistan According to the Australian Journal of Asian Law in 2018 Pakistan defined what they consider to be transgender According to the Pakistani parliament a transgender individual is a person who is intersex eunuch assigned male when born or a transgender man woman whose gender differs from what they were assigned as at birth They also passed The Pakistan Transgender Persons Protection of Rights Act of 2018 This act has many provisions to it that ensure the basic fundamental human rights for transgender individuals Not only that but should enforced in the same way as cisgender individuals These rights include education employment health accessing public places and transportation voting holding public office etc Going one step further this also includes the right to recognition as a transgender person They shall have the right to be recognized as their self perceived gender and they also will have the right to register themselves as such legally However before this act the Pakistani government recognized five different genders Additionally as this journal has stated later on that it marks transgender individuals as other compared to cisgender individuals 41 Even with this act these individuals are abused and are marginalized For example hijras or males who act feminine are ridiculed and harassed 42 Once again the more feminine gender is targeted and have less access to opportunities than their male counterparts 41 In conclusion gender disparity is in most apsects of life going beyond binary genders Qualitative dimension EditIn Pakistan the quality of education has a declining trend Shortage of teachers and poorly equipped laboratories have resulted in the out dated curriculum that has little relevance to present day needs The education is based just on cramming and the students lack professional skills as well as communication skills when they are graduated from an institute Moreover the universities here are too expensive due to which the Pakistani students can t afford a university to get higher education Moreover the universities here don t provide skills that have a demand in market 17 However there have been numerous reforms to attempt to raise the quality of education in this country Examples of these include The Convention of the Rights of the Children 1989 the Millennium Development Goals UN 1990 and the Sustainable Development Goals 2015 This last reform included free and compulsory education for all children and access to quality basic education 22 Teacher education EditTeacher education reform is crucial in improving education in Pakistan Teacher training programs at universities lack qualified professionals Almost one third of universities in Balochistan do not have professors in their teacher education departments and there was not a PhD in Education at any of the universities in Balochistan Teachers are the focal point of establishing progressive education Teacher preparation programs need funding and consistency to produce quality effective teachers Teacher reform needs to continue by establishing resources and investments Time needs to be invested in updating curriculum and teacher education facilities Investments must be made in updating building infrastructures libraries IT departments and laboratories 43 Some major obstacles faced by the education system in Pakistan include access to education equal opportunities relevance required teachers and environment There are parts of Pakistan where government leaders have not enacted strategies to help children attend schools Many children live too far away from school to receive a formal education Female students are also not offered the same classes as male students in the majority of the schools In addition to female students being deprived of opportunities female teachers are also lacking adequate teaching spaces Another point of weakness education in Pakistan faces is relevance in content Content should teach students how to solve societal problems and not assist in political conflicts Students need more opportunities to deepen their knowledge of how to attend to economic and social needs 44 Pakistan teachers face knowledge gaps regarding human rights due to outdated teacher education curriculum Many Pakistani leaders and teachers hold conservative beliefs that education policies need to remain aligned with national Islamic ideology which does not focus on human rights Global policy makers are aware that teachers promote human rights and ethics and should receive a course in their teacher training programs about basic human rights A study revealed that reflective writing and case studies have been the best approach to raising awareness about human rights issues in teacher preparation programs in Pakistan 45 Teacher education has an impact on the general education of the country Within Pakistan there are many common problems within schools this includes not having proper training facilities small termed training period lack of in service training for teachers and other issues 46 There is a shortage of teachers in Pakistan Labs are old outdated and poorly equipped and curriculum is very outdated and does not have much relevance to today s world Issues within the schools include defective teaching materials and curriculum substandard and under qualified teachers and overcrowded classrooms 47 Technical and vocational education EditEducation plays a crucial role in developing countries by transmitting necessary life skills to the future citizens After the eighteenth amendment was abolished in 2010 there was more autonomy available to people in the health care and education spectrums Technical and Vocational Education Training TVET raised attention because education helps prepare students for future employment TVET classes also offer money management lessons personal and family health practices Electronical and Electronics and healthcare information Providing proper TVET site management adequate teacher salaries competent teachers up to date curriculum and equity in the programs are challenges faced by Pakistani leaders The major goals of TVET include investing in the country s workforce to stimulate the economy and redistribute the wealth 48 Teacher satisfaction EditLife satisfaction is a characteristic linked to teacher workplace experiences A recent study in Pakistan compared teachers who were employed by regular institutions and special education institutions The study asked participants questions about their emotional intelligence and life satisfaction The results from the teacher institutions study showed that teachers of Pakistani special education institutions reported higher levels of emotional intelligence or self awareness about their issues and provided ways on how to fix their own problems Special education teachers also reported higher levels of life satisfaction The study revealed that the general mood of the workplace is correlated with emotional intelligence Further research is needed to investigate the mood differences between special education institution environments and regular education institution environments 49 Teachers Issue EditTeachers in Pakistan face a range of challenges and issues that impact their ability to provide quality education to students Here are some common issues faced by teachers in Pakistan Low pay Teachers in Pakistan are often paid low salaries which can make it difficult to attract and retain talented individuals in the profession Inadequate resources Teachers in Pakistan often have limited access to resources such as textbooks classroom materials and technology which can make it difficult to provide effective instruction Overcrowded classrooms Many classrooms in Pakistan are overcrowded which can make it challenging for teachers to provide individual attention to each student Gender discrimination Female teachers in Pakistan may face discrimination and harassment in the workplace as well as cultural barriers that limit their access to education and professional development opportunities Lack of training Many teachers in Pakistan have limited training and professional development opportunities which can make it difficult for them to develop new teaching strategies and stay up to date with developments in their field Limited job security Teachers in Pakistan may have limited job security which can lead to high turnover rates and a lack of motivation among teachers Societal and cultural issues Teachers in Pakistan may face societal and cultural barriers that limit their ability to teach certain subjects or work with certain student populations Addressing these issues will require a concerted effort from policymakers educators and the broader community to support and empower teachers in their vital role in shaping the future of Pakistani society through education During the COVID 19 pandemic the nation launched an educational television channel Teleschool 50 Teleschool is programmed with lessons for kindergarten through high school Each grade has one hour of course material broadcast per day 50 Teleschool instructional videos are in Urdu and English Pakistan s official languages and the languages used for the country s national curriculum 50 The Ministry of Education is also trying to develop instructional programming for radio since Teleschool isn t available to the nation s poorest families 50 Because of COVID 19 Pakistan had to consider using online classes However many students especially in rural areas do not have access to the Internet Because of this it alters the process of online learning especially for poor students or those living in rural areas 51 Digital education has been started in many of the educational institution in Pakistan to utilize time efficiently during the current time 52 The distance learning mode of education has been recognized as a great resource to give equal access to education to the women from remote areas of developing countries including Pakistan where many women otherwise would not attend school 53 At the post secondary level there has been much research conducted about the strengths weaknesses opportunities and threats when practicing distance learning They found that this model is great for those that don t live within the same city as where they go to school It gives them an opportunity to get an education without having to leave their homes It has been difficult for students that still have to go into the university because of the distance learning model it has slowed and put a delay in many research processes The teachers have a lower salary package as well because they are not requiring them to come into work 54 Achievements EditSome of the famous alumni of Pakistan are as follow Government College University Lahore Abdus Salam Edit University of Engineering and Technology Lahore Main article Abdus Salam Abdus Salam was a Pakistani theoretical physicist and Nobel laureate in physics for his work on the electroweak unification of the electromagnetic and weak forces Salam Sheldon Glashow and Steven Weinberg shared the 1979 Nobel prize for this work Salam holds the distinction of being the first Pakistani to receive the Nobel Prize in any field Salam heavily contributed to the rise of Pakistani physics to the Physics community in the world 55 56 Atta ur Rahman Edit Atta ur Rahman is a Pakistani scientist known for his work in the field of natural product chemistry He has over 1200 research papers books and patents attributed to him that have won him over 34 000 citations and h index of 74 57 He was elected as Fellow of the Royal Society London in 2006 58 and won the UNESCO Science Prize in 1999 59 The revolutionary changes that he brought in the higher education as well as science and technology sectors won him numerous national and international awards including the highest national award Nishan i Imtiaz 60 He also won the highest award for international collaboration of China 61 He was also awarded a high civil award of the Government of Austria in recognition of his services to science 62 63 Ayub Ommaya Edit Ayub Ommaya was a Pakistani neurosurgeon who heavily contributed to his field Over 150 research papers have been attributed to him He also invented the Ommaya Reservoir medical procedure It is a system of delivery of medical drugs for treatment of patients with brain tumours Mahbub ul Haq Edit Mahbub ul Haq was a Pakistani economist who along with Indian economist Amartya Sen developed the Human Development Index HDI the modern international standard for measuring and rating human development Ismat Beg Edit Ismat Beg is a Pakistani mathematician famous for his work in fixed point theory and multicriteria decision making methods Ismat Beg is Higher Education Commission Distinguished National Professor at Lahore School of Economics and an honorary full Professor at the Mathematics Division of the Institute for Basic Research Florida USA He has vast experience of teaching and research He is a Fellow of Pakistan Academy of Sciences and Institute of Mathematics and its Applications U K Arfa Abdul Karim Randhawa Edit Arfa Abdul Karim Randhawa was a Pakistani student and computer prodigy who in 2004 at the age of nine became the youngest Microsoft Certified Professional MCP She had her name in Guinness Book of World Records 64 She kept the title until 2008 Arfa represented Pakistan on various international forums including the TechEd Developers Conference She also received the President s Award for Pride of Performance in 2005 A science park in Lahore the Arfa Software Technology Park was named after her 65 66 67 68 She was invited by Bill Gates to visit Microsoft Headquarters in the United States 69 Dr Naweed Syed Edit Dr Naweed Syed is a Pakistani Canadian scientist He is the first scientist to connect brain cells to a silicon chip 70 71 72 Nergis Mavalvala Edit Nergis Mavalvala is a Pakistani American astrophysicist known for her role in the first observation of gravitational waves 73 She was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship in 2010 74 75 and first Lahore technology reward from Information Technology University in 2017 76 77 Mavalvala is best known for her work on the detection of gravitational waves in the Laser Interferometer Gravitational Wave Observatory LIGO project 73 78 79 Muhammad Irfan Maqsood Edit Muhammad Irfan Maqsood is a Pakistani researcher and entrepreneur He is known for his work in the field of Techno entrepreneurship and Biotechnology 80 81 82 83 84 85 He holds PhD in Cell and Molecular Biology and holding two MSc Biotechnology and MA Political Sciences IR He has been awarded 4 time Iranian national techno entrepreneurship award Sheikh Bahai by Minister of Science and Research Iran and Young Entrepreneur from the Deputy Minister for Youth Affairs 86 87 He also has been Joint Secretary of Pakistan Muslim League N Lahore on the instruction of Mian Nawaz Sharif Education expenditure as percentage of GDP EditThe expenditure on education is around 2 of Pakistan s GDP 88 However in 2009 the government approved the new national education policy which stipulates that education expenditure will be increased to 7 of GDP 89 an idea that was first suggested by the Punjab government 90 The author of an article the history of education spending in Pakistan since 1972 argues that this policy target raises a fundamental question What extraordinary things are going to happen that would enable Pakistan to achieve within six years what it has been unable to lay a hand on in the past six decades The policy document is blank on this question and does not discuss the assumptions that form the basis of this target Calculations of the author show that during the past 37 years the highest public expenditure on education was 2 80 percent of GDP in 1987 88 Public expenditure on education as a percentage of GDP was actually reduced in 16 years and maintained in 5 years between 1972 73 and 2008 09 Thus out of total 37 years since 1972 public expenditure on education as a percentage of GDP either decreased or remained stagnant for 21 years The author argues if linear trend were maintained since 1972 Pakistan could have touched 4 percent of GDP well before 2015 However it is unlikely to happen because the levels of spending have had remained significantly unpredictable and unsteady in the past Given this disappointing trajectory increasing public expenditure on education to 7 percent of GDP would be nothing less than a miracle but it is not going to be of godly nature Instead it is going to be the one of political nature because it has to be invented by those who are at the helm of affairs The author suggests that little success can be made unless Pakistan adopts an unconventional approach to education That is to say education sector should be treated as a special sector by immunizing budgetary allocations for it from fiscal stresses and political and economic instabilities Allocations for education should not be affected by squeezed fiscal space or surge in military expenditure or debts At the same time there is a need to debate others options about how Pakistan can invent the miracle of raising education expenditure to 7 percent of GDP by 2015 91 University rankings EditMain article Rankings of universities in Pakistan In 2018 for first time NUST Islamabad was ranked among top 100 QS Asia University rankings at 91 Also 7 universities of Pakistan were ranked among top 1000 QS Asia University rankings 2018 92 As of 2022 total 6 universities were ranked in top 1000 NUST 358 Quaid i Azam University 378 PIEAS 398 LUMS 651 UET Lahore 801 and University of the Punjab 801 93 Religion and education EditEducation in Pakistan is heavily influenced by religion For instance one study of Pakistani science teachers showed that many rejected evolution based on religious grounds 94 However most of the Pakistani teachers who responded to the study 14 out of 18 either accepted or considered the possibility of the evolution of living organisms although nearly all Pakistani science teachers rejected human evolution because they believed that human beings did not evolve from monkeys This is a major misconception and incorrect interpretation of the science of evolution but according to the study it is a common one among many Pakistani teachers Although many of the teachers rejected the evolution of humans all agreed that there is no contradiction between science and Islam in general 94 According to the Pakistan s National Council for Justice and Peace NCJP report 2001 on literacy of religious minorities in Pakistan the average literacy rate among Christians in Punjab is 34 per cent Hindu upper caste is 34 per cent Hindu scheduled castes is 19 per cent others including Parsis Sikhs Buddhists and nomads is 17 per cent compared to the national average of 46 56 per cent Whereas the Ahmadis have literacy rate slightly higher than the national average 95 Literacy rate EditThe definition of literacy has been undergoing changes with the result that the literacy figure has vacillated irregularly during the last censuses and surveys A summary is as follows 96 Year of census or survey 96 Total 96 Male 96 Female 96 Urban 97 Rural 97 Definition ofbeing literate 96 Agegroup 97 1951 West Pakistan 17 9 98 21 4 98 13 9 98 N A N A One who can read a clearprint in any language All Ages1961 West Pakistan 16 9 98 26 1 98 6 7 98 34 8 10 6 One who is able to read withunderstanding a simple letter in any language Age 5 and above1972 21 7 30 2 11 6 41 5 14 3 One who is able to read andwrite in some language with understanding Age 10 and Above1981 26 2 35 1 16 0 47 1 17 3 One who can read newspaperand write a simple letter Age 10 and Above1998 43 92 54 81 32 02 63 08 33 64 One who can read a newspaperand write a simple letter in any language Age 10 and Above2021 99 62 8 73 4 51 9 77 3 54 Ability to read and understand simple text in any language from a newspaper or magazine write a simple letter and perform basic mathematical calculation ie counting and addition subtraction 100 Age 10 and AboveLiteracy rate by Province Edit Province Literacy rate 96 1972 1981 1998 2021 99 Punjab 20 7 27 4 46 56 66 3 Sindh 30 2 31 5 45 29 61 8 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa 15 5 16 7 35 41 55 1 Balochistan 10 1 10 3 26 6 54 5 Literacy rate of Federally Administered Areas Edit Region Literacy Rate1981 1998 LatestIslamabad ICT 47 8 101 102 72 40 101 85 2015 8 Azad Jammu amp Kashmir AJK 25 7 103 55 104 74 2017 10 Gilgit Baltistan 3 105 37 85 105 N AMean Years of Schooling in Pakistan by administrative unit Edit Unit 106 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2012 2015 2018Azad Jammu amp Kashmir 3 78 4 59 5 42 7 47 7 22 7 35 6 92 6 51 Balochistan 1 77 2 15 2 53 3 49 3 25 3 14 3 17 3 10 FATA 1 42 1 73 2 04 2 81 2 71 2 69 2 60 2 45 Gilgit Baltistan 2 01 2 44 2 88 3 97 3 84 3 80 4 59 5 17 Islamabad ICT 4 16 5 05 5 96 8 21 9 67 10 70 9 62 8 34 Khyber Pakhtunkhwa 1 83 2 22 2 62 3 62 3 80 3 97 3 95 3 82 Punjab 1 96 2 38 2 81 3 88 4 44 4 85 5 23 5 41 Sindh 2 43 2 95 3 48 4 79 5 19 5 51 5 35 5 05 Pakistan 2 28 2 77 3 27 4 51 4 68 4 85 5 09 5 16 Literacy rates and development Edit Pakistan has one of the lowest literacy rates in South Asia at 49 9 percent The male literacy rate is 61 7 percent and the female literacy rate is 35 2 percent The female literacy rate drops to twenty five percent in rural areas of Pakistan Girls school enrollment also significantly drops in the rural areas of Pakistan The enrollment rate for girls in rural areas is only twenty percent in grade school Sixty five percent of Pakistan s population is made up of rural citizens Citizens in Pakistan face issues that affect their quality of life Issues such as illiteracy are linked to poverty and lack of basic needs Feudalism and patriarchy leadership has kept females especially from receiving adequate education 107 Parents with lower literacy skills struggle to understand health recommendations that can affect the development of their children Malnutrition is a problem for children of parents who do not have a formal education status Uneducated parents may not know the necessary proper nutrition needed for their children to adequately grow and develop Malnutrition is associated with mothers who are illiterate and unaware of correct feeding practices 108 In a study published by the Research Journal of Commerce Economics and Social Sciences discusses the importance of education The study compares Indonesia Malaysia and Pakistan Education plays a huge role and is a crucial tool for overall improvement in well being Education helps jobs upholds social justice and equity social and self awareness and open mindedness Education is one of the most important contribution a country can offer its citizens in the hopes of inequality and poverty Education has a very positive effect on human life In any society education plays such a basic role and without education we cannot imagine a life This study found that there are many differences in culture in Indonesia Malaysia and Pakistan as well as resources within the country are also very different The data reveals that the literacy rate of Indonesia is 90 Malaysia is 89 and Pakistan is 54 9 which is significantly lower in compared to the other two countries In comparison to these other two countries Pakistan has the more poverty and inequality within its country It only makes sense that it has the lowest literacy rate because of this If Pakistan s literacy rates were to go up their poverty and inequality within their country would hopefully go down creating a better society and more beneficial country 109 International education EditAfter the approval of the World Health Organization and the Ministry of Education of China SICAS institutions have exemplified and classified Chinese universities where Pakistani students recognized by pmdc come to study in China 110 through online methods As of January 2015 the International Schools Consultancy ISC 111 listed Pakistan as having 439 international schools 112 ISC defines an international school in the following terms ISC includes an international school if the school delivers a curriculum to any combination of pre school primary or secondary students wholly or partly in English outside an English speaking country or if a school in a country where English is one of the official languages offers an English medium curriculum other than the country s national curriculum and is international in its orientation 112 This definition is used by publications including The Economist 113 See also Edit Education portal Pakistan portalMuhammad Iqbal s educational philosophy List of administrative units of Pakistan by Human Development Index List of special education institutions in Pakistan Lists of educational institutions in Pakistan Pakistan studies Pakistani textbooks controversy Right to Education Pakistan an advocacy campaign Catholic Board of Education PakistanReferences Edit Literacy rate adult total of people ages 15 and above Pakistan The World Bank Retrieved 15 January 2022 a b c d Ministry of Education Pakistan PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2 October 2011 Constitution of Pakistan Artikel 25A English translation PDF na gov pk 28 February 2012 Retrieved 24 July 2019 Education System in Pakistan Problems Issues amp Solutions pgc edu 17 November 2017 Retrieved 24 March 2018 Peter Blood ed 1994 Pakistan EDUCATION Pakistan A Country Study GPO for the Library of Congress Retrieved 1 April 2010 Home https www hec gov pk english aboutus Documents 455 HECOrdinance pdf bare URL PDF a b Pakistan Social And Living Standards Measurement Survey PSLM 2014 15 Provincial District PDF March 2016 Retrieved 10 September 2019 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 16 August 2011 Retrieved 3 September 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b Dr Pervez Tahir Education spending in AJK The Express Tribune Saeed Barkan 4 October 2021 Strengthening IT skills DAWN COM Retrieved 5 October 2021 Literacy Rate in Pakistan Province Wise Pakistan Literacy Rate Ilm com pk 28 September 2010 Retrieved 10 December 2013 Education www unicef org Retrieved 2 September 2021 Stuteville Sarah 16 August 2009 seattletimes nwsource com html localnews 2009670134 pakistanschool16 html The Seattle Times UNESCO Institute for Statistics Adjusted net enrolment ratio in primary education UNESCO Retrieved 19 September 2011 Baig Sana Javed Fareeha Siddiquah Aishah Khanam Afifa April 2021 A Content Analysis of English Textbook of Punjab Textbook Board of Grade 8 in Pakistan SAGE Open 11 2 1 8 doi 10 1177 21582440211023159 ISSN 2158 2440 a b Rasool Memon Ghulam 2007 Education in Pakistan The Key Issues Problems and The New Challenges PDF Journal of Management and Social Sciences 3 1 47 55 Retrieved 19 September 2011 Sindh increases total marks for matric board exams to 1 100 SAMAA Samaa TV 9 November 2009 a b c Vocational education in Pakistan UNESCO UNEVOC Retrieved 4 August 2014 a b Global Education Digest 2009 PDF UNESCO Institute for Statistics 2009 DAWN COM Pakistan Education to be allocated seven pc of GDP www dawn com Archived from the original on 12 September 2009 a b c Khamis A 2019 Teacher Education in Pakistan International Handbook of Teacher Education World Wide essay NICOSIA CYPRUS HM Studies and Publishing pp 675 692 ISBN 978 9963 2415 6 9 Retrieved 5 July 2021 TAVERNISE SABRINA 3 May 2009 Pakistan s Islamic Schools Fill Void but Fuel Militancy The New York Times New York Times Retrieved 8 December 2014 a b Moin Ariba Fatima Huda Qadir Tooba Fatima 3 February 2018 Pakistan s slow progress towards gender parity The Lancet Global Health 6 2 e144 doi 10 1016 s2214 109x 17 30498 9 ISSN 2214 109X PMID 29389536 a b Youth and skills putting education to work EFA global monitoringthereport 2012 2013 PDF p 196 Retrieved 3 August 2014 Career Karwan Why education themed low for women www careerkarwan com a b Khan Tasnim Khan Rana Ejaz Ali 2004 Gender Disparity in Education Extents Trends and Factors PDF Journal of Research Faculty of Languages amp Islamic Studies Retrieved 8 March 2009 a b c Bizenjo Sikander 1 September 2020 Education in Pakistan Are low cost private schools closing the gender gap International Journal of Educational Development 77 102209 doi 10 1016 j ijedudev 2020 102209 S2CID 225283913 via ScienceDirect a b Lall Marie 3 March 2009 Gender and Education in Pakistan The Shifting Dynamics across Ethnic Groups Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism 9 1 114 121 doi 10 1111 j 1754 9469 2009 01032 x ISSN 1473 8481 via Wiley Online Library The Gendered Nature of Workplace Bullying in the Context of Higher Education PPRI ppri pk 23 April 2019 Retrieved 14 September 2021 Zakaria Rafia 26 July 2013 The doctor brides DAWN COM Retrieved 17 August 2017 a b Are Pakistan s female medical students to be doctors or wives BBC News 28 August 2015 Retrieved 17 August 2017 Pakistan sees high rate of female medical students but few doctors Women in the World in Association with The New York Times WITW 30 August 2015 Retrieved 17 August 2017 a b Is there a doctor in the house In Pakistan quite possibly The National Retrieved 17 August 2017 The PMDC Quota Rule A Boon or a Bane for Pakistan s Healthcare Future JPMS Medical Blogs Retrieved 17 August 2017 Abid Abdul Majeed 22 October 2014 Female doctors becoming trophy wives Is quota the right move DAWN COM Retrieved 17 August 2017 Asma Javaid etc vs Government of Punjab etc PDF Retrieved 6 November 2019 Controlling the Entry of Male and Female Students in Medical and Dental Colleges Shaikh Ahmad Hassan School of Law 30 January 2017 Retrieved 17 August 2017 a b A Doctor in the House Balancing Work and Care in the Life of Women Doctors in Pakistan ProQuest Thesis ProQuest 1897020389 Begam A Mujahid N 2019 An Assessment of Gender Inequality A Case Study of Pakistan International Journal of Women Empowerment 05 1 43 62 doi 10 29052 2413 4252 v5 i1 2019 43 62 a b Redding Jeffrey A 20 November 2019 The Pakistan Transgender Persons Protection of Rights Act of 2018 and its Impact on the Law of Gender in Pakistan SSRN 3490418 via papers ssrn com a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Shah Hassan Bin Usman Rashid Farah Atif Iffat Hydrie Muhammad Zafar Fawad Muhammad Waleed Bin Muzaffar Hafiz Zeeshan Rehman Abdul Anjum Sohail Mehroz Muhammad Bin Haider Ali Hassan Ahmed Shukar Hassaan 6 May 2018 Challenges faced by marginalized communities such as transgenders in Pakistan The Pan African Medical Journal 30 96 96 doi 10 11604 pamj 2018 30 96 12818 ISSN 1937 8688 PMC 6191260 PMID 30344880 via www panafrican med journal com Mahmood K 2014 The Silent Revolution Rethinking Teacher Education in Pakistan Journal of Research amp Reflections in Education JRRE 8 2 1 18 Khalid Salim Mansur Khan M Fayyaz 2006 Pakistan the State of Education The Muslim World 96 2 305 322 doi 10 1111 j 1478 1913 2006 00130 x ISSN 1478 1913 Retrieved 5 July 2021 Sadruddin Munir Moosa 1 June 2017 Teaching human rights through global education to teachers in Pakistan Prospects 47 1 73 86 doi 10 1007 s11125 018 9425 1 ISSN 1573 9090 S2CID 148599083 Retrieved 5 July 2021 Dilshad Rana Muhammad 2010 Assessing Quality of Teacher Education A Student Perspective PDF Pakistan Journal of Social Sciences PJSS 1 85 97 Retrieved 5 July 2021 Memon G Rasool 2007 Education in Pakistan The Key Issues Problems and The New Challenges PDF Journal of Management and Social Sciences 30 1 47 55 Retrieved 5 July 2021 Nooruddin Shirin 30 May 2017 Technical and Vocational Education and Training for Economic Growth in Pakistan Journal of Education and Educational Development 4 1 130 141 doi 10 22555 joeed v4i1 1345 ISSN 2313 3538 Retrieved 5 July 2021 Anjum Dr Ambreen Shoukat Dr Aisha Muazzam Dr Amina Ejaz Dr Bisma 19 August 2020 Emotional Intelligence and Life Satisfaction of Teachers Working at Special Education Institutions of Bahawalpur Pakistan PDF Journal of Arts amp Social Sciences 21 27 doi 10 46662 jass vol7 iss1 2020 21 27 ISSN 2414 8512 Retrieved 5 July 2021 a b c d George Susannah In the world s fifth most populous country distance learning is a single television channel The Washington Post Retrieved 19 May 2020 Adnan Muhammad 22 June 2020 Online learning amid the COVID 19 pandemic Students perspectives Journal of Pedagogical Sociology and Psychology 1 2 45 51 doi 10 33902 jpsp 2020261309 ISSN 2687 3788 Akram Madieha Anjum Faiza Batool Zahira 10 July 2020 Covid 19 A Reason behind Digital Education in Pakistan Mediterranean Journal of Social Sciences 11 4 19 doi 10 36941 mjss 2020 0037 ISSN 2039 2117 Sakina Jumani Sufi Amin Fateh m Mari 2020 Role of Distance Education in Promotion of Women Education in Pakistan International Journal of Distance Education and E Learning V II 74 85 doi 10 36261 ijdeel v5i2 1043 Retrieved 5 July 2021 Nasreen Khalida Afzal Muhammad Tanveer 1 January 2020 Strengths weaknesses opportunities and threats in higher education a SWOT analysis of Allama Iqbal Open University Islamabad Pakistan Asian Association of Open Universities Journal 15 3 321 333 doi 10 1108 AAOUJ 11 2019 0052 ISSN 1858 3431 Ishfaq Ahmad 21 November 1998 CERN and Pakistan a personal perspective CERN Courier Retrieved 18 February 2008 Riazuddin 21 November 1998 Pakistan Physics Centre ICTP Retrieved 5 July 2017 Atta Ur Rahman scholar google com Atta Ur Rahman Royal Society royalsociety org Retrieved 6 November 2019 Google Groups groups google com Retrieved 24 March 2018 Molecules www mdpi com Dr Atta ur Rehman receives the China International Science and Technology Cooperation Award 2020 11 January 2020 https sites nationalacademies org cs groups pgasite documents webpage pga 061771 pdf bare URL PDF Partnership IAP the InterAcademy Atta ur Rahman www interacademies org Arfa Karim in Guinness Book Tribune com pk 23 August 2017 Retrieved 22 July 2018 Software Technology Park name changed to Arfa Software Technology Park The News newspaper 16 January 2012 Archived from the original on 16 January 2012 Retrieved 16 January 2012 9 year old earns accolade as Microsoft pro Retrieved 14 January 2012 Remembering a remarkable girl who made a mark on Microsoft 30 December 2011 Retrieved 15 January 2012 Arfa Karim Pakistan s Pride Zartsh Pakistan 2 August 2019 Retrieved 15 September 2019 In smarts she s a perfect 10 Seattle Pi University of Calgary Naweed Syed Carolyn Abraham 9 August 2010 Calgary scientists to create human neurochip The Globe and Mail Retrieved 16 April 2014 Kaul R Alexander Syed Naweed I Fromherz Peter 2004 Neuron Semiconductor Chip with Chemical Synapse between Identified Neurons Physical Review Letters 92 3 038102 Bibcode 2004PhRvL 92c8102K doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 92 038102 PMID 14753914 a b Gravitational wave researcher succeeds by being herself ScienceMag AAAS doi 10 1126 science caredit a1200061 ISSN 1095 9203 Retrieved 18 February 2016 Nergis Mavalvala MacArthur Foundation MacArthur Foundation Retrieved 18 February 2016 Nergis Mavalvala and Five Exceptional Stories Of Women In STEM AutoStraddle 24 February 2016 Retrieved 25 February 2016 Nergis first recipient of Lahore Technology Award The Nation Retrieved 19 December 2017 ITU convocation MIT s Nergis Mavalvala given Lahore Technology Award The Express Tribune The Express Tribune 18 December 2017 Retrieved 19 December 2017 MIT Kavli Institute Directory MIT Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research Massachusetts Institute of Technology Retrieved 18 February 2016 Krishnan Madhuvanti S 25 February 2016 Making waves The Hindu Retrieved 25 February 2016 An entrepreneurial and creative child is the cornerstone of society Retrieved 13 October 2017 knowcancer سرطان را بشناسیم توسط دکتر محمد عرفان مقصود آپارات سرویس اشتراک ویدیو in Persian Retrieved 6 November 2019 مرکز بین المللی کارآفرین شو برای جهانی شدن کسب و کار ها Pakistaninfo Multilingual Media Voice of Overseas Pakistan Dr Muhammad Irfan Maqsood Founder of GnC has been awarded as young entrepreneur 2018 Genes and cells Retrieved 20 May 2018 iMAQPRESS Inc A Winnipeg Based Canadian Research Support Services Group imaqpress com Selecting a Pakistani young man as the top international entrepreneur in the international community Tasnim news Retrieved 27 May 2017 طراحان كسب و كار بخش آزاد istt ir Retrieved 6 November 2019 No improvement witnessed in utilisation of education budgets The News 28 April 2016 Khawar Ghumman Education to be allocated seven pc of GDP Archived from the original on 12 September 2009 Punjab govt suggests 200pc increase in edu budget Pakistan News Newspaper Daily English Online www nation com pk Archived from the original on 11 September 2009 Mazhar Siraj 4 July 2010 Increasing Education Expenditure to 7 percent of GDP in Pakistan Eyes on the Miracle Business Recorder Islamabad QS University Rankings for Asian 2018 Top Universities www qschina cn Retrieved 2 September 2021 Top Universities QS World University Rankings 2022 Retrieved 21 October 2022 a b Asghar Anila 26 March 2013 Canadian and Pakistani Muslim teachers perceptions of evolutionary science and evolution education PDF Evolution Education and Outreach 6 1 10 doi 10 1186 1936 6434 6 10 ISSN 1936 6434 S2CID 14653656 Religious Minorities in Pakistan By Iftikhar H Malik PDF Retrieved 9 April 2020 a b c d e f g Pakistan where and who are the world s illiterates Background paper for the Education for all global monitoring report 2006 literacy for life 2005 PDF Retrieved 3 August 2014 a b c Literacy trends in Pakistan 2004 PDF Retrieved 3 August 2014 a b c d e f Copy of Statistical Profile2 cdr PDF Retrieved 3 August 2014 a b Pakistan Economic Survey 2020 21 Chapter 10 Education PDF Economic Survey of Pakistan Retrieved 11 June 2022 Govt redefines literacy for count The Express Tribune The Express Tribune 28 February 2017 Retrieved 28 February 2017 a b Pakistan CENSUS Retrieved 10 December 2013 Inequality in the Literacy Levels in Pakistan Existence and Changes Overtime PDF Retrieved 6 November 2019 AJK literacy rate 1981 census Google Search 1988 Retrieved 13 September 2014 Human Rights Watch With Friends Like These Human Rights Watch Google Books Retrieved 10 December 2013 a b DAWN COM Education Education in Gilgit and Baltistan 26 June 2010 Archived from the original on 26 June 2010 Mean years schooling Global Data Lab globaldatalab org Retrieved 17 March 2020 Latif Amna 7 October 2009 A Critical Analysis of School Enrollment and Literacy Rates of Girls and Women in Pakistan Educational Studies 45 5 424 439 doi 10 1080 00131940903190477 ISSN 0013 1946 S2CID 145433706 Khattak Umme K Iqbal Saima P Ghazanfar Haider 5 June 2017 The Role of Parents Literacy in Malnutrition of Children Under the Age of Five Years in a Semi Urban Community of Pakistan A Case Control Study Cureus 9 6 e1316 doi 10 7759 cureus 1316 ISSN 2168 8184 PMC 5498125 PMID 28690950 via www cureus com Khan Farah Haseeb Muhammad 1 January 2017 Analysis of teacher training education program A comparative study of Indonesia Malaysia and Pakistan Paradigms 11 1 13 17 doi 10 24312 paradigms110103 ISSN 2410 0854 Retrieved 5 July 2021 Pakistani students studying in China www sicas cn Home ISC Research www iscresearch com a b International School Consultancy Group gt Information gt ISC News Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 The new local The Economist 17 December 2014 Further reading EditSultan Ali of Sawabi Madrasah Reform and State Power in Pakistan 2012 K K Aziz 2004 The Murder of History A Critique of History Textbooks used in Pakistan Vanguard ISBN 969 402 126 X Nayyar A H amp Salim Ahmad 2003 The Subtle Subversion The State of Curricula and Text books in Pakistan Urdu English Social Studies and Civics Sustainable Development Policy Institute The Subtle Subversion Halai Anjum Aga Khan University Institute for Educational Development Gender and Mathematics Education Lessons from Pakistan Archive Malik Jamal Colonialization of Islam Dissolution of Traditional Institutions in Pakistan New Delhi Manohar Publications and Lahore Vanguard Ltd 1996 Mubarak Ali In the Shadow of history Nigarshat Lahore History on Trial Fiction House Lahore 1999 Tareekh Aur Nisabi Kutub Fiction House Lahore 2003 Pervez Hoodbhoy and A H Nayyar Rewriting the history of Pakistan in Islam Politics and the state The Pakistan Experience Ed Mohammad Asghar Khan Zed Books London 1985 Rahman Tariq Denizens of Alien Worlds A Study of Education Inequality and Polarization in Pakistan Karachi Oxford University Press 2004 Reprinted 2006 ISBN 978 0 19 597863 6 Rosser Yvette Claire 2003 Curriculum as Destiny Forging National Identity in India Pakistan and Bangladesh PDF Dissertation University of Texas at Austin Archived from the original PDF on 11 September 2008 Retrieved 16 November 2017 Rubina Saigol Knowledge and Identity Articulation of Gender in Educational Discourse in Pakistan ASR Lahore 1995 Tariq Rahman Denizens of Alien Worlds A Study of Education Inequality and Polarization in Pakistan Karachi Oxford University Press 2004 Reprint 2006 Tariq Rahman Language Ideology and Power Language learning among the Muslims of Pakistan and North India Karachi Oxford UP 2002 Tariq Rahman Language and Politics in Pakistan Karachi Oxford UP 1996 Rept several times see 2006 edition World Bank Case Study on Primary Education in Pakistan Sarangapani Padma M and Rekha Pappu eds Handbook of Education Systems in South Asia Springer Singapore 2019 Tanweer Bilal Revisiting the Madrasa Question The News International 6 May 2007 About a talk given by Dr Nomanul Haq University of Pennsylvania at the Lahore University of Management Sciences LUMS Pakistan External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Education in Pakistan World Data on Education IBE 2011 overview of Pakistan s education system TVET in Pakistan UNESCO UNEVOC 2013 overview of the technical and vocational education system in Pakistan Pakistan ruined by language myth Zubeida Mustafa Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Education in Pakistan amp oldid 1154715005, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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