Early childhood education best starts in the mother tongue
Photo of the week: teaching foundational skills in a child's first language is an effective way to reduce school failure and dropout in the early grades
February 19, 2016 by GPE Secretariat
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2 minutes read
A boy reading a textbookat the Jean de la Mennais pre-school in Rwanda’s Burera district. Credit: GPE/Alexandra Humme

This young boy at the Jean de la Mennais pre-school in Rwanda’s Burera district is enjoying a book. He does not yet know how to read, but Kinyarwanda, his mother tongue, is the language in which he will learn.

Teaching reading, writing, math and critical thinking in the language that the child speaks and understands is one of the most effective ways to reduce school failure and drop out in the early grades.

The Global Partnership for Education supports mother tongue education as part of a quality education.

Increasing enrollments in pre-primary schools in 22 districts is a key result that the Rwandan government wants to achieve with the help of funding from the Global Partnership for Education.

Find out more about Rwanda's education priorities and progress here

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Comments

How wonderful to increase literacy in a child's first language. This has many benefits--linguistic, cultural, intellectual. This is so encouraging to see this program!

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