The government of Bangladesh and Unicef on Saturday marked a ‘significant milestone’ in education for out-of-school adolescents, with the successful completion of the Skill-Focused Literacy for Out-of-School Adolescents (SKILFO) pilot project.
The project has reached almost 7,000 adolescents, and with proven success is now ready to be scaled up nationally.
"The success of the SKILFO proves that out-of-school adolescents and NEET (Not in Education, Employment, or Training) youth with poor levels of literacy can be meaningfully empowered with the right training approaches and the right levels of support and opportunities,” said Rana Flowers, Unicef Representative in Bangladesh.
"Strengthening government’s commitment to inclusive education and youth empowerment, the next essential steps to the institutionalising and scale up of SKILFO across Bangladesh through sustained collaboration between the relevant ministries,” Rana Flowers said.
Implemented in Cox’s Bazar, this pilot initiative will now expand to 16 districts, offering over 100,000 out-of-school and NEET adolescents a transformative pathway to foundational literacy and market-relevant skills.
Target areas were selected based on youth demographics, local skills demand, job market potential and institutional capacity, said Unicef.
The SKILFO pilot in the community of Cox’s Bazar focused on functional literacy & numeracy, vocational skills, and digital & financial literacy, all aligned with the Bangladesh National Qualification Framework (BNQF).
Primary and Mass Education Adviser Prof Dr Bidhan Ranjan Roy Podder expected that the expansion of the project in 16 districts following the 'SKILFO' model and with a slightly updated model to be implemented in the all 64 districts.
“If we can achieve this, I believe the current traditional mindset about education in Bangladesh will shift and skill focused education will lead,” he said.
The Bureau of Non-Formal Education (BNFE), under the Ministry of Primary and Mass Education (MoPME), with technical support from Unicef and funding from the Global Partnership for Education Accelerated Fund, designed and piloted the SKILFO initiative in response to Bangladesh’s urgent need for a more inclusive and skills-driven education approach.
With 2.2 million people entering the labor market annually, but only 1.9% receiving formal skills training1, the SKILFO model aims to directly address the country’s skills gap and contribute to the informal economy, Unicef said.
The expansion plans include the integration of SKILFO into the Core Non-Formal Education program and national projects.
This will create more options for NEET adolescents through institutionalized Alternative Learning Pathways, with the BNFE–Technical Institute partnership setting a 21st-century benchmark for skill-based education using existing facilities and enterprises, Unicef added.
Source: UNB
Bd-pratidin English/Lutful Hoque