Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Pakistan still has a low literacy rate relative to other countries. [9] As of 2022 Pakistan's literacy rates range from 96% in Islamabad to 23% in the Torghar District. [10] Literacy rates vary by gender and region. In tribal areas female literacy is 9.5%, [11] while Azad Kashmir has a literacy rate of 91%. [12]
The total enrollment in primary public sector is 11,840,719; 57% (6,776,536) are boys, and 43% (5,064,183) are girls. 79% of all the primary students in Pakistan are enrolled in rural schools, and the gender enrollment ratios are 59% and 41% for boys and girls respectively in rural Pakistan. Private sector.
The global literacy rate for all males is 90.0%, and the rate for all females is 82.7%. The rate varies throughout the world, with developed nations having a rate of 99.2% (2013), South and West Asia having 70.2% (2015), and sub-Saharan Africa at 64.0% (2015). [1] Over 75% of the world's 781 million illiterate adults are found in South Asia ...
Most universities of Karachi are considered to be amongst the premier educational institutions of Pakistan. For 2004–05, the city's literacy rate was estimated at 65.26%, 4th Highest in Pakistan after Lahore, Islamabad & Rawalpindi, [citation needed] with a GER of 111%, highest in Sindh.
An Education index is a component of the Human Development ... Before 2010, the education index was measured by the adult literacy rate ... Pakistan: 0.205: 0.21: 0. ...
The Pakistan District Education Rankings are a series of 5 consecutive annual publications by Inayat Arman, first published in 2013. [2] Pakistan District Education Rankings 2018 [ edit ]
Education in Gilgit-Baltistan. Since its independence in 1947, governments have not spent much on quality education in this region. While the literacy rates of the areas in Gilgit is higher than most of the citites in Pakistan, yet no professional universities were constructed in the region. [ 1 ] In 2002, under the reign of Pervez Musharraf, a ...
Literacy rates since 1951–2009. At the time of establishment of Pakistan on 14 August 1947, the country had only one institution of higher learning, University of the Punjab and among forty colleges expanded to four provinces of Pakistan. [5]