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Best Of the Best Somali's

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Uploaded by on Feb 1, 2009

In Somalia today only about 11 per cent of primary school-aged children have access to formal education, one of the lowest gross enrolment ratios in the world. Significant progress has been made in the past few years, however. A new lower primary school curriculum was developed in 2002 as well as a curriculum for grades 5 to 8. New school books have been printed. Over 7,000 teachers received standardized, in-service training in 2002. A pilot mentoring project for 1,751 teachers resulted in improved classroom practices and childrens learning levels.
Most Somali schools are concentrated in and around urban areas and do not adequately serve children in these camps. They also effectively exclude children in remote rural locations, particularly nomadic children. Girls constitute slightly more than one third 35 per cent of primary school pupils; female teachers make up about 13 per cent of the total number of teachers.

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  • Mashallah whatta beautiful pics...xasuus wacan aad na gelisey...shukran.

  • i love my homeland somalia

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  • ilaahw saan nagu so celi ya rabiiiiii

  • this is our history very nice

  • ur doughter looks like me wen i waz baby kkkkkkkk kidding but masha allah very cute

  • Mashallah, when we had peace and unity

  • alot's of memory and unforgettable history

  • when i watch this video, so many emation get at me! i am so proud to be a somalian and proud that my country is still standing and rising up

  • Sheikh Uways al-Barawi of the Tunni sub-clan of the Rahanweyn in Barawa, lived at the same time as Hassan and led the Qadiriyyah sect. He resisted the Italian occupation in a non-violent method. He was murdered in Biyoley, in today's Bakool region, by the Dervish in 1920 as Hassan was seeking to recruit forces from Italian Somaliland. This was after the British used aircraft to destroy Hassan's base in Taleex. Sheikh Aweys rejected violence and Hassan's ways were based on violent resistance.

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