A number of orphaned and underprivileged children in western Ghor province say access to free education, provided by a young man, has not only eased their path to learning but also given them new hope for the future.
Local officials in northern Sar-i-Pul province say residents of Baghli village have donated one acre of land - valued at approximately five million afghanis - for the construction of a school.
Local officials in the northern provinces of Balkh and Baghlan say nearly 500 schools remain without proper buildings, forcing students to study under the open sky in harsh winter and summer.
SHIBERGHAN (Pajhwok): Local sources in northern Jawzjan say about 300 community based classes for out-of-school children have been established in the provincial capital and districts.
KABUL (Pajhwok): The United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan has expressed its deep disappointment that for the fourth consecutive year, Afghanistan’s rulers have again denied
The leadership of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan (IEA) has approved the addition of a medical faculty to Ghazni University, an official announced on Monday.
KABUL (Pajhwok): The acting Minister of Education has stressed Afghans need to pursue both religious and modern sciences to compete with the world. The Ministry
Zeb-ul-Nisa Majidi, a young woman from the capital of northern Jawzjan province, has navigated a new path for herself and other women with her unwavering determination and hard work.
KABUL (Pajhwok): Nazanin Kohistani, a teacher in Kabul with 33 years of experience, has offered 150 girls the chance to learn school subjects above sixth
PUL-I-ALAM (Pajhwok): The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) will reconstruct 50 schools in the provincial capital Pul-i-Alam and districts of central Logar province, an official
ASADABAD (Pajhwok): Residents of remote areas in eastern Kunar province complain their children’s education remains incomplete due to the lack of middle and high schools
Many Afghan girls say they have not given up their pursuit of learning even after the suspension of education beyond the sixth grade. Instead of wallowing in despair, they are navigating new paths to translate their dreams into reality.
As many as one million people in the country would get literacy education opportunities in the next three years based on a new strategy, an official said on Wednesday.