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Adventist Development and Relief Agency Pakistan; AFS Intercultural Exchanges; American Himalaya Foundation; Arab-Pakistani Fund; Akhuwat Foundation; Asian Human Rights Development Organization; Association for the Development of Pakistan; Aurat Foundation; Aga Khan Rural Support Programme; ACTED
The job market in Pakistan is not promising for students coming out of the education system. The unemployment rate in 2008 was estimated at 24.67%. This was attributed to a large part of the student population getting educated for technical jobs that are not in high demand in the country. [12]
The Citizens Foundation (TCF) is a non-profit organization, and one of the largest privately owned networks of low-cost formal schools in Pakistan.The foundation operates a network of 1,833 school units, educating 280,000 students through over 13,000 teachers and principals, and over 17,400 employees. [1]
In 1905, Aga Khan III started the Aga Khan School in Mundra, the first school what later became a large network of schools, AKES. AKES currently operates more than 300 schools and advanced educational programmes that provide quality pre-school, primary, secondary, and higher secondary education services to more than 54,000 students in Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, and ...
In addition to this, 40 public, public-private and community-based schools were reconstructed enabling over 5000 children to return to school. [68] Following the IDP crisis in Pakistan of 2009 and the Pakistan floods of 2010 , SRSP emerged as one of the largest implementing partners for United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR ...
Progressive Education Network is a non-profit organization that seeks to improve and develop public education in Pakistan by adopting schools and by entering into partnerships with companies that pledge to assist schools in the area that they are in. Its main focus is on the primary schools of Pakistan.
The Patients' Welfare Association (PWA) is a non-political, non-governmental organization (NGO) located within Civil Hospital, Karachi run by the students of Dow Medical College, which works for the medical aid of underprivileged patients by providing a number of services free of cost. The organization depends upon its donors and volunteers for ...
Amal Academy was founded by Stanford University graduates Benje Williams and Kunal Chawla. [2] Williams who graduated from Stanford's Business School worked with Acumen Fund as a Global Fellow and was responsible for hiring and training marketing officers at a social enterprise in Lahore where he initiated the idea after seeing a gap between "workforce preparation and business needs". [3]