Rebuilding Education in a Troubled Nation
Published in Annual Report - 2003
8/31/2004

Teachers College, UNICEF and Afghan Ministry of Education representatives meet in Kabul.
By topic:
By center:
By faculty:
In the fall of 2003 several faculty members traveled to Afghanistan to
lay the groundwork for a National Academy of Education, an endeavor
designed to train teachers and develop curriculum. For Teachers
College, the trip was really a journey back. Until 1978 the
College had worked closely with the Afghan government, assisting with
teacher training and curriculum development.
Traveling to
Afghanistan to help the country rebuild its education system were
professors Nancy Lesko, Michele Genor, A. Lin Goodwin and retired
professor Margaret Jo Shepherd, along with Barry Rosen, then Executive
Director of External Affairs and now Afghan Project Director.
They went to Afghanistan to reestablish the relationship between the
Afghan people and the College. In November, they were joined in
Kabul by President Arthur Levine, who went to observe first-hand
whether Teachers College would be able to effectively help the
war-ravaged land. Convinced that TC could play an effective role
in post-conflict Afghanistan, Levine and Afghan Minister of Education
Yunis Qanooni signed an agreement that will result in the development
of a system of teacher training, a new curriculum framework, and new
textbooks.
The dedicated staff of this project, a partnership
between the Afghan Ministry of Education, UNICEF and Teachers
College, has already begun writing teachers' manuals, and for the first
time in more than two decades, rewriting early primary-school textbooks.
During their historic meeting, Qanooni told Levine, "Of the 4.2
million children now enrolled in primary school in Afghanistan, I am
proud to say that 1.7 million are young girls. I am proud of this
astonishing change."
Commenting further on the new curriculum
and TC's presence in Kabul, Qanooni continued, "We are attempting
through our new curriculum framework to shake off any notion of
fundamentalism and prevent the politicization of our schools. We want
to create a new generation for a modern country. We want to be part of
the world family. Our next generation must know about citizenship,
peace education, the value of women's rights, and horrors of terrorism
and the destructive nature of narcotics. Without the support of our
international friends, however, we cannot succeed to build a new
Afghanistan. Therefore, we are happy to have your cooperation.
This is important for us and, indeed, the world family."
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