Owais
SENIOR MEMBER
- Joined
- Oct 3, 2005
- Messages
- 4,512
- Reaction score
- 0
US to provide $100 mln educational assistance to Pakistan
WASHINGTON: United States would provide Pakistan an additional $100 million as educational assistance for fiscal year 2007. Over $200million have been disbursed in Pakistan as U.S. educational assistance since 2002.
Pakistan and the United States have reaffirmed their commitment to support the educational objectives of Pakistan as part of their substantial and growing bilateral relationship.
After the first session of the Strategic Dialogue on Education the two countries hoped to expand educational opportunities for the people of Pakistan and create new prospects for economic growth and development.
The two countries engaged in wide-ranging and productive discussions regarding teacher training programs; promotion of teacher, student and faculty exchanges; improvement of secondary-level science and math studies; administrative capacity-building, including school infrastructure; vocational/workforce education and training to meet Pakistan's labor needs; public/private sector partnerships; and the establishment of linkages between the higher-education academic and research institutions of the two countries and training of Pakistani academics in US institutions.
Minister of Education Lt. Gen. (Rtd) Javed Ashraf Qazi, and US education secretary Margaret Spelling led the officials of two sides in talks.
WASHINGTON: United States would provide Pakistan an additional $100 million as educational assistance for fiscal year 2007. Over $200million have been disbursed in Pakistan as U.S. educational assistance since 2002.
Pakistan and the United States have reaffirmed their commitment to support the educational objectives of Pakistan as part of their substantial and growing bilateral relationship.
After the first session of the Strategic Dialogue on Education the two countries hoped to expand educational opportunities for the people of Pakistan and create new prospects for economic growth and development.
The two countries engaged in wide-ranging and productive discussions regarding teacher training programs; promotion of teacher, student and faculty exchanges; improvement of secondary-level science and math studies; administrative capacity-building, including school infrastructure; vocational/workforce education and training to meet Pakistan's labor needs; public/private sector partnerships; and the establishment of linkages between the higher-education academic and research institutions of the two countries and training of Pakistani academics in US institutions.
Minister of Education Lt. Gen. (Rtd) Javed Ashraf Qazi, and US education secretary Margaret Spelling led the officials of two sides in talks.