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Children have the right. Egypt and Turkey. NOTE: On the bottom of each slide is the name of the country that the slide is referring to. Abigail Winter. Children’s dress code. All schools have uniforms- even public Boys wear trousers, shirts, and ties Girls wear skirt, a white shirt and tie
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Children have the right Egypt and Turkey NOTE: On the bottom of each slide is the name of the country that the slide is referring to. Abigail Winter
Children’s dress code • All schools have uniforms- even public • Boys wear trousers, shirts, and ties • Girls wear skirt, a white shirt and tie • Skirts must be knee length • Wearing a dress on the street is offensive • Boys like to wear jeans, polos, and sneakers • Girls like to wear jeans, tees, and a variety of shoes • ALL must cover shoulders (Egypt)
and after school During • Based on the British system • Children stay in one classroom and teachers rotate to students • Cliques don’t exist; all children hang out together • School starts in middle to late September • Ends in June • Go out to McDonalds • Drink coffee • Go to sports practice (Egypt)
Traditions and Holidays Sixth of October • Might go to the resort “Sharm el Sheik” at the tip of Sinai • Caravan with family or friends • Fly Egypt Air • Parents usually don’t see the children • Go on the boardwalk, sail banana boats, parasail, eat, club at discos, sea dive, or snorkel (Egypt)
Education • Nursery School • Established 1953 • Ages 4-6 • Most common in large cities • Play games, theater, painting, manners, and songs • Primary School • Attendance is lower in urban areas because it is easier for parents to keep girls at home to work • 96% attendance • One teacher takes care of all the students until eighth grade • 20 to 40 kids in a class • Uniforms • Two sessions • No school fees • Parents must buy all school supplies (Turkey)
Street life • 42,000 children in Turkey are working on the streets • Most come from abusive or neglective families • Some in poverty • Only attend school sometimes • Have weak bonds with families (Turkey)
What they need • Families need training to improve family relationships • Their health, education, and growing needs • Have fun, learn, and grow (Turkey)
Numbers 4 you • Death rate for children under five is 41 per 1000 • 25% of people under poverty level • 2.7 million children work to earn the family money • 17% of girls marry under 19 • 54% of 13-15 year old girls aren’t in school • 11% of 13-15 year old boys aren’t in school (Egypt)
Street life • Encounter many challenges • Poverty takes over 40% of Egyptian families • Many children born into poverty • May become malnourished • Health issues as adults • Work on streets or slums • Girls don’t finish school because of early marriage expectancy (Egypt)
UNICEF Unite for Children • Supports the National Strategy for Children at Risk • More than 160,000 children are currently attending UNICEF based school system • Try to strengthen basic community services • Goal is to prevent families from sending children away (Egypt)
Save the Children • Tries to let all children have the opportunities that a well raised child would have • Works with families, communities, schools, clinics, businesses, and institutions • Helps provide classes for mothers and mothers-to-be • Helps improve educational programming • Trains teachers • Provides family and community support • Let girls have a chance to have more life by delaying early marriage (Egypt)
HaydiKizlarOkula! (Through UNICEF) • Helps the factors that contribute to the girls that are not enrolled in school • Donated free textbooks in 2003, 2004, and 2005 • Provided training for teachers • Door-to-door campaign • Community notified to help identify these firls • Ran a telethon on popular channels (Turkey)
Miscellaneous • Egyptian children love to take out of country trips • Turkish middle schools never keep track of attendance • Turkish children on the street can become victims for sexual abuse • 400,000 Turkish boys are not sent to primary school, compared to the 1 million boys
Bibliography "Children in Modern Egypt." Tour Egypt, 1996-2010. Web. <http://www.touregypt.net/featurestories/children.htm>. "Children Living and Working in the Streets." Children First. UNICEF, 2006. Web. <http://www.unicef.org/turkey/dn_2006/cp43.html>. "Education in Turkey." Travel in Turkey, The Ultimate Travel Guide for Turkey. Enjoy Turkey. Web. <http://www.enjoyturkey.com/info/facts/Education.htm>. "HaydiKizlarOkula! The Girls' Education Campaign 2001-2005." Unite for Children. UNICEF. Web. 10 Mar. 2011. "Save the Children- Egypt." Save the Children. 2011. Web. <http://www.savethechildren.org/site/?c=8rKLIXMGIp14E&b=6153121>. "Turkey Education - Flags, Maps, Economy, History, Climate, Natural Resources, Current Issues, International Agreements, Population, Social Statistics, Political System." PhotiusCoutsoukis; Photius; Photios; FotisKoutsoukis - Sustained by Working Capital in the World. 2004. Web. <http://www.photius.com/countries/turkey/society/turkey_society_education.html>.
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