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The Bangladesh education board has taken steps to leave such practices in the past and is looking forward to education as a way to provide a poverty-stricken nation with a brighter future. As Bangladesh is an overpopulated country, there is a huge demand to turn its population into labor, which is why proper education is needed and proper help ...
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Protection, health, education, nutrition, safe water and hygiene are considered basic rights for all children, yet children in Bangladesh face issues on all these fronts. 26 million children live below the national poverty line.
It was implemented by University Grants Commission (Bangladesh). [5] [8] Higher Education Quality Enhancement Project created the Bangladesh Research and Education Network with the aim to digitalize higher education. [9] The government is planning another higher education project called Higher Education Acceleration and Transformation. [10] [11]
National Curriculum and Textbook Board traces its origins to the East Pakistan School Textbook Board which was established in 1954. In 1971, the Bangladesh School Textbook Board was established. In 1976 it was constituted as the National Curriculum and Syllabus Committee and the National Curriculum Development Centre was established in 1981.
BRAC is one of the largest NGOs involved in primary education in Bangladesh. [37] Since 1974, BRAC’s primary education efforts were observable with their circulation of Gonokendra, an educational children’s magazine, that BRAC sent to each of Bangladesh’s primary schools. Soon they were circulating 3,000 issues monthly.
Gender inequality has been improving a lot in Bangladesh, inequalities in areas such as education and employment remain ongoing problems so women have little political freedom. In 2015, Bangladesh was ranked 139 out of 187 countries on the Human Development Index [1] and 47 out 144 countries surveyed on the Gender Inequality Index in 2017.
Among Bangladesh's many economic and social achievements, dramatic reduction in poverty in often considered a phenomenon among international organizations such as IMF and The World Bank. Between 1972 and 2018, Bangladesh's population living on less than $1.90/day is estimated to have fallen from 90% to 9%.