The Advocacy for Social Inclusion and Girls Education (ASIGE), a non-governmental organisation, has supported 20 girls in the Upper East Region to learn vocational skills, as part of an empowerment project.
The gesture was also to help reduce unemployment among teenage mothers and out-of-school girls. With funding from the American Serving Abroad Project, a United States-based organisation, dressmaking (sewing) and smock-weaving machines, uniforms, books, and other learning materials were provided for the beneficiaries. The full costs of the training, covering a period of three years, have also been paid.
One of the teenage mothers who dropped out of school when she got pregnant while in Junior High School, opted to return to the formal school system and was supported with learning materials, including textbooks for all subjects, note and exercise books, pens, uniforms, and footwear, among others.
Ms. Dorcas Apoore, the Executive Director, ASIGE, said the beneficiaries were selected from six communities in the Bongo District and Bolgatanga Municipality, where ASIGE had been supporting women to weave and sell straw baskets in both national and international markets. According to Ms. Apoore, 24 girls were enrolled in vocational training in 2020 and 2021, respectively, and the aim was to contribute to providing them with meaningful economic skills to prevent rural-urban migration and reduce poverty. She said unemployment and poverty had pushed many young girls into getting pregnant, forced marriages, and dropping out of school, and the support would empower the beneficiaries to be gainfully employed and help employ their colleagues. It would also enable the young girls who are unable to obtain formal education to be self-reliant and help contribute to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals.
Apart from undertaking sensitization programmes on sexual and reproductive health education and presenting over 2,000 sanitary pads to schools in the Upper East and Upper West Regions, another 429 women were being empowered to weave internationally demanding straw baskets for a living.
Madam Rita Abamah, the Bongo District Girl-Child Officer, Ghana Education Service, said teenage pregnancy was one of the biggest challenges facing adolescents, especially girls in the region, and advised parents to support their teenage girls who got pregnant and dropped out of school to learn a trade. This, she said, would enable them to make up for missing out on achieving their dreams in the formal learning system.
Source: Public Relations Officer, ASIGE