Sí£o Tomí© and Prí­ncipe Adopts Brazil’s School Grant Program

After four years spent organizing the School Grant Program in poor communities of the West African island nation of São Tomé and Principe, the non-governmental organization (NGO), Mission Child, the Ministry of Foreign Relations, and the United Nations (UN) will begin to transfer the execution of the Brazilian educational program to the country’s government this year.

The program Bolsa Escola was established in Brazil in 2001, during the Fernando Henrique Cardoso administration, to provide a month cash stipend to thousands of families in return for keeping their children in school.

The target population was defined by two parameters and a requirement: age, income, and school attendance. Thus, all families with a monthly per capita income of less than US$ 42 and with children between the ages of 6 and 15 attending classes in regular Fundamental Education are eligible for the federal School Grant.

Once approved, the family receives US$ 7 per month per student, up to a limit of US$ 21 (three children). The money is paid directly to the family, which can withdraw it by the use of magnetic cards.

According to Jacy Braga Rodrigues, a Mission Child collaborator, the School Grant benefits 400 São Tomé and Principe families, with a total of approximately 1,100 children. The NGO undertook the implantation of the program for needy children at the request of the Brazilian government.

Rodrigues explained that, due to peculiarities of the family structure there, the program had to be adapted.

"Families in São Tomé and Principe are quite unstable, so we were careful to give priority to women who are heads of families and to children of the female sex. Poverty here is very female and weighs most heavily on women," observed the ex-director of the Educational Foundation of the Federal District.

"The cultural proximity due to the Portuguese language and Africans’ identification with Brazil facilitated the task," Rodrigues affirmed.

Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazilians Run to US Grows Dramatically at Eve of Mexico’s New Visa Rules

Brazilians eager for jobs and new opportunities in the United States have been heading ...

Mexican Developer’s Shoddy Work Makes Brazilians Furious While Waiting for House

A series of lawsuits taken against one of the largest and experienced property developers ...

Brazil’s Carnaval: Easy on the Eyes, Hard on the Heart

Seven of Rio’s top-tier samba groups wrapped up their parading Monday morning, driving out ...

In Brazil, Chí¡vez Says the Days of Being US Oil Colony Are Over

The president of Venezuela, Hugo Chávez, declared that Brazil and Venezuela are taking concrete ...

Share of Imports in Brazil Gets Its Biggest Jump Since 2007

The participation of imported products in Brazil’s consumption rose to 21.8 percent in the ...

Pagode Meets Death Metal in Brazil

Napalm Death? Brazilians, it would seem, are crazy for it. Some 700 of them ...

Brazil’s Jobless Rate Jump to 10.4% Is Bad News for Market Too

Latin American stocks were mixed, with Brazilian and Argentine shares falling on profit taking ...

Ebony Goddess, a Brazilian Documentary in Praise of Black Beauty

Ebony Goddess: Queen of Ilê Aiyê, a documentary directed by Brazilian filmmaker Carolina Moraes-Liu, ...

Brazil Uses Courts to Reimpose Prior Censorship on the Press

A judge in the Brazilian Northeast has forbidden a newspaper from publishing stories on ...

After Rome, a Tour of Africa for Brazil’s Lula

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva attended, this morning in Rome, the funeral ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`