13.2 C
Islamabad
Monday, November 18, 2024

Petition Filed to Address Severe Electricity Shortage in Gilgit-Baltistan

NEWS DESK ISLAMABAD: A petition has been filed...

Study Exposes Regulatory Gaps in FBR’s Track and Trace System Compliance

NEWS DESK ISLAMABAD: The Institute of Public Opinion...

Top 5 This Week

spot_img

Related Posts

UNICEF and PSDF join hands for research on youth skills development & job placement

APP

ISLAMABAD: The U.N Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and the Punjab Skills Development Fund (PSDF) have signed a partnership agreement in support of youth and adolescent girls’ & boys’ education, skills development and job placement as part of the ‘Generation Unlimited’ partnership in Pakistan.

UNICEF’s Pakistan representative Aida Girma and PSDF CEO Jawad Khan signed the agreement to materialize the project that will impart skills in youth to get jobs.

The agreement will help research, design and pre-test an accelerated and cost-effective ‘Non-Formal Education to Job Placement’ model to help improve the skills and employ-ability of the most vulnerable and economically, socially disadvantaged adolescents and youth. It targets adolescents and young people who have never attended formal education or who dropped out of the formal education system without achieving primary school competencies, and who do not have access to education and economic opportunities.

PSDF will work with UNICEF, federal and provincial governments, and partners from civil society organizations and the private sector to design and pre-test the ‘Non-Formal Education to Job Placement’ model in Punjab.

It aims at offering a unique, integrated solution by simultaneously providing adolescents and young people age 10-19 who are outside the formal education system with the opportunity to enroll in an Accelerated Learning Program so they can achieve foundational skills in literacy and numeracy at primary school; equipping those who have achieved grade 5 competency level with job and entrepreneurial skills through training to enhance their capacities to access non-hazardous income generational opportunities; and linking young people who have successfully graduated from the program to the labour market.

“We are proud that UNICEF has partnered with PSDF in Pakistan for this landmark initiative to educate and skill out-of-school adolescents,” said Jawad Khan, CEO of PSDF. “This is recognition of PSDF as the most innovative and progressive development sector organization in Pakistan. PSDF has deep knowledge in skills training gained through managing large evidence-based and demand-driven programs, operational excellence achieved through working with largest international donors, and unmatched ability to deliver results as PSDF graduates generate annual incomes of PKR 20 billion.”

The project is part of the ‘Generation Unlimited’ (GenU) partnership in Pakistan, which aims at creating a movement to help young people, particularly adolescent girls and boys between the ages of 10 and 19, acquire the education and skills training required to access employment opportunities.

The GenU multi-sector partnership platform brings together government, private sector, civil society organizations and development partners, and forges innovative collaboration with young people, with a view to expand and link formal education and skill development.

“Pakistan has the largest generation of young people in its history, which provides unique challenges as well as opportunities,” said Ms. Aida Girma, UNICEF Representative in Pakistan.

“This new model aims to expand opportunities for and with young people, in particular out-of-school adolescent girls and boys, to access quality education, skills training and employment. It supports the Vision of ‘Generation Unlimited’, which is to gather public and private partners around the goal of investing in young people to help them achieve their potential while supporting economic and social growth,” she added.

The model will be developed and pre-tested in Punjab as a first phase. The goal is to start similar programs in other provinces in the future to reach millions of young people who lack opportunities.

Popular Articles