Éducation en Afrique

[1]Suhili n-nyɛla dimdi maa yɛ la shikpahi ni zugu niŋ di ka zaa yini yila mali o n-ti yɛla ni daa. Since the introduction of formal education to Africa by European colonists, African education, particularly in West and Central Africa, is characterised by both traditional African teachings and European-style schooling systems. The state of education reflects not only the effects of colonialism, but instability resulting from and exacerbated by armed conflicts in many regions of Africa as well as fallout from humanitarian crises such as famine, lack of drinking water, and outbreaks of diseases such as malaria and Ebola, among others.[2] Although the quality of education and the quantity of well-equipped schools and teachers has steadily increased since the onset of the colonial period, there are still numerous inequalities evident in the existing educational systems based on region, economic status, and gender.[3][4]

  1. Lord, Jack (Winter 2011). "Child Labor in the Gold Coast: The Economics of Work, Education, and the Family in Late-Colonial African Childhoods, c. 1940-57". The Journal of the History of Childhood and Youth 4: 88–115. DOI:10.1353/hcy.2011.0005.
  2. Help Children in Africa.
  3. Education.
  4. Moyo, Bhekinkosi (6 September 2016). A new era for African philanthropy.