Female Women's education is a catch-all term of a complex set of issues and debates surrounding Women's education for girls and women.
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Female Women's education is a catch-all term of a complex set of issues and debates surrounding Women's education for girls and women.
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The infant mortality rate of babies whose mothers have received primary Women's education is half that of children whose mothers are illiterate.
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In South Africa after 1820, male Scottish missionaries decided that only the most basic Women's education was necessary to prepare native women for the propagation of Christianity within the home.
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For women in particular however, these colonial forms of education brought with them European ideals of women's roles in the family, society and economy.
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In post-colonial West Africa, many of the ideals of Western Women's education have remained while much of the infrastructure and funding left with the colonial presence.
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Women's employment and education was acknowledged in 1854 by the East Indian Company's Programme: Wood's Dispatch.
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Women need to be given the opportunity to develop through formal Women's education to be empowered to serve and profit from holding these public leadership roles.
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Islamic higher Women's education contains five levels: associate, bachelor's, master's, professional doctorate and specialized doctorate.
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In early modern Europe, the question of female Women's education had become a commonplace one, in other words a literary topos for discussion.
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In fact his emphasis was on a type of universal Women's education making no distinction between humans; with an important component allowed to parental input, he advocated in his Pampaedia schooling rather than other forms of tutoring, for all.
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Women's education was the first woman member of any scientific establishment, when she was elected to the Academy of Sciences of the Institute of Bologna in 1732.
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