The Prague Post - Afghan girls and women cling to glitchy, lonesome online learning

EUR -
AED 4.221678
AFN 81.536401
ALL 97.652206
AMD 443.58355
ANG 2.057346
AOA 1054.180943
ARS 1342.039814
AUD 1.785354
AWG 2.069275
AZN 1.955531
BAM 1.950451
BBD 2.320437
BDT 140.554554
BGN 1.950451
BHD 0.433013
BIF 3422.514359
BMD 1.149597
BND 1.476451
BOB 7.941223
BRL 6.3444
BSD 1.149248
BTN 99.493158
BWP 15.489523
BYN 3.761086
BYR 22532.109669
BZD 2.308569
CAD 1.580127
CDF 3307.392305
CHF 0.940445
CLF 0.02816
CLP 1080.621558
CNY 8.263876
CNH 8.25757
COP 4693.426948
CRC 580.20888
CUC 1.149597
CUP 30.464332
CVE 109.963445
CZK 24.827907
DJF 204.658759
DKK 7.459301
DOP 68.153102
DZD 149.844079
EGP 58.374146
ERN 17.243961
ETB 158.039106
FJD 2.597459
FKP 0.854483
GBP 0.85603
GEL 3.126871
GGP 0.854483
GHS 11.837538
GIP 0.854483
GMD 82.193031
GNF 9957.692786
GTQ 8.832778
GYD 240.440634
HKD 9.024047
HNL 30.015687
HRK 7.531707
HTG 150.836358
HUF 402.957313
IDR 18897.082588
ILS 3.991506
IMP 0.854483
INR 99.532717
IQD 1505.571237
IRR 48426.792054
ISK 142.975824
JEP 0.854483
JMD 183.207586
JOD 0.815099
JPY 168.107885
KES 148.539218
KGS 100.532508
KHR 4606.36785
KMF 491.456133
KPW 1034.637688
KRW 1581.800232
KWD 0.352191
KYD 0.957773
KZT 600.563062
LAK 24795.00408
LBP 102973.812505
LKR 345.352931
LRD 229.849678
LSL 20.750097
LTL 3.394463
LVL 0.69538
LYD 6.26482
MAD 10.489534
MDL 19.761807
MGA 5135.915658
MKD 61.361726
MMK 2413.814544
MNT 4119.019777
MOP 9.292317
MRU 45.429418
MUR 52.444739
MVR 17.709537
MWK 1992.835002
MXN 22.1216
MYR 4.900156
MZN 73.528528
NAD 20.750097
NGN 1781.807349
NIO 42.294016
NOK 11.624666
NPR 159.189451
NZD 1.928547
OMR 0.441489
PAB 1.149248
PEN 4.126982
PGK 4.804824
PHP 65.778776
PKR 326.102721
PLN 4.273111
PYG 9172.845092
QAR 4.191605
RON 5.038796
RSD 116.909397
RUB 90.274277
RWF 1659.54898
SAR 4.313522
SBD 9.588135
SCR 16.956538
SDG 690.332443
SEK 11.145071
SGD 1.480791
SHP 0.903403
SLE 25.808705
SLL 24106.487564
SOS 656.798845
SRD 44.66182
STD 23794.345816
SVC 10.056422
SYP 14946.893947
SZL 20.746107
THB 37.762551
TJS 11.348977
TMT 4.023591
TND 3.40207
TOP 2.692476
TRY 45.67008
TTD 7.810581
TWD 33.979743
TZS 3051.332793
UAH 48.16711
UGX 4142.639543
USD 1.149597
UYU 46.991135
UZS 14433.418898
VES 117.898919
VND 30037.256504
VUV 137.844814
WST 3.171291
XAF 654.163073
XAG 0.031883
XAU 0.000341
XCD 3.106844
XDR 0.813569
XOF 654.163073
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.004815
ZAR 20.782853
ZMK 10347.759862
ZMW 26.577117
ZWL 370.169904
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Afghan girls and women cling to glitchy, lonesome online learning
Afghan girls and women cling to glitchy, lonesome online learning / Photo: OMER ABRAR - AFP/File

Afghan girls and women cling to glitchy, lonesome online learning

Sequestered at home in a remote Afghan town, 18-year-old Shekiba often roams the house hunting for the patchy internet signal that is her last link to an education.

Text size:

Shekiba has turned to online learning since the Taliban returned to power in 2021 and shut her out of classrooms, signing up for live economics lectures she squints at on a pocket-sized phone screen.

She hopes to save for a laptop but is forced to buy expensive mobile data packages that still don't guarantee a signal in the town of Ishkashim perched high in mountainous Badakhshan province.

"If there were no internet issues, it would be much easier," she told AFP by phone. "But it's better to carry on, instead of sitting and doing nothing."

"I just hope to study, to succeed, to progress. If one person progresses in a family, the whole family progresses, as well as the whole society."

Boys and men returned to classes with the start of the Afghan new year, but girls and women will be left behind again by a Taliban government education blockade that is part of a raft of restrictions the United Nations has labelled "gender apartheid".

While online alternatives have sprung up, a dearth of computers and internet, as well as the isolation of learning via screen, makes them a poor substitute for in-person learning, students and teachers say.

Many of those alternatives also cannot provide diplomas, which offer a promise that qualifications will be acknowledged.

- 'No perspective of future' -

It's unclear exactly how many girls and women are involved in online learning, but two higher education platforms report Afghans registering or applying in the tens of thousands since the Taliban takeover.

Begum Academy, an online platform with some 8,500 free videos in Dari and Pashto covering the Afghan secondary school curriculum, launched in December 2023 and quickly had more than 3,000 users.

Director Hamida Aman said parents are grateful but it's hard for girls to stay driven.

"It's difficult to get motivated when everything is closed to you and there's no perspective of future," she told AFP from France, where she is based.

"These girls cannot have certificates, or they cannot have the ambition to go to the university or to have any job later."

Education for girls and women was a key aim of the US-backed government but gains were largely limited to cities, with only 23 percent of girls aged 13 to 18 in school nationwide, according to the International Crisis Group.

The think tank said that figure dropped to 13 percent after the Taliban government issued its edicts barring female education in 2022.

Zainab was soon to start high school when it came into effect and was twice rebuffed by an online school that was at capacity before she finally secured a place.

"Before taking online classes, we were idle at home. We were worried. We used to sleep most of the time, which made us depressed," said Zainab, who asked not to use her full name for fear of reprisal.

Online classes "keep us busy", she told AFP, but they "cannot replace schools".

Twenty-two-year-old Ruhila teaches English classes online while trying to continue her university education, also virtually, and says the teaching helps her spirits.

"The only thing that gives me energy in the current situation is teaching these girls," she said.

"But when you accept that it's going to be online forever then you lose enthusiasm and you don't put in the same effort," she said. "Mentally, online classes are very tough. They are stressful, and boring."

Taliban authorities have insisted since girls were barred from secondary school that they are working on establishing a system that aligns with their interpretation of Islamic law.

- Poor internet, few computers -

Widespread virtual schooling during the Covid-19 pandemic demonstrated it was "at best, a rather partial substitute for in-person instruction", a UNESCO report found.

Afghan students face the burden of trying to log on in a country where the internet is often down -- or painfully slow -- and where electricity outages are common.

Less than a quarter of the population uses the internet, according to online insights company DataReportal. With stark poverty rates in Afghanistan, computers are also a luxury many cannot afford.

Some 90 percent of Begum Academy students use their phones to learn, according to Aman.

But even more than those frustrations, 18-year-old Aisha misses the social aspect of school.

"Online classes cannot be as effective as physical classes where we meet our peers and our teachers and exchange our ideas," she said.

"Online courses can only give us a hope," she added. "But we can never say, 'I have studied online so I have graduated from school.'"

H.Dolezal--TPP