WATCH LIVE WEBCAST: FRIDAY, JUNE 14 at 12:30 PM – 1:30 PM ET

The Forum at the Harvard School of Public Health, in partnership with Vulcan Productions, invites you to join a live streaming of “Girls’ Health and Education: Igniting Change Worldwide.

The forum aims to better understand why the discrepancies between men’s and women’s access to education endure. How do such inequalities emerge, and how can we do more to change unfair opportunity structures that have been engrained in societies around the world?

The forum will be streaming on the web at 12:30pm EST! You can ask questions and participate in the conversation via email, as well as through twitter. Participants of the Forum (including Richard Robbins, the Director of Girl Rising!) are eager to respond to your inquiries and ideas.

For more information, visit the Forum’s website.

Update: you can now watch the the video of the full event above.

The Support for Girl Rising Continues to Grow: Girl Rising Tee

We continue to be blown away here at 10×10 by our supporters’ commitment to the cause of girls education! Recently, Girl Rising supporters Bridget Sauer, Mehves Tangun, and Thea Aguiar designed a t-shirt inspired by the girls whose stories are told in Girl Rising. The proceeds from sales of the shirt will go to the 10×10 Fund for Girls Education, where they will be used to help our Impact Partners continue their work improving the lives of girls worldwide.

To purchase the t-shirt, check out http://teespring.com/girlrising. Hurry, there is only 12 days left to purchase one!

Have a Party: Change the World

When can a get-together impact the lives of millions? When it’s part of the world’s biggest house party – with a purpose.

On June 16th* and June 22nd*, CNN will broadcast Girl Rising internationally on primetime television – and millions will watch this unforgettable film as one global audience. Hosting a viewing party is a great way to share a meaningful experience and draw attention to the critical issue of girls’ education at the same time.

So, go ahead and invite your friends and family over to your place – or the local library, restaurant, community hall… anyplace with CNN.

Sign up at http://www.10x10act.org/cnn and we’ll put you on the map – our interactive globe will display every house party on the planet. Plus, 10×10** and partner Intel make party planning fun and simple with e-vites and ideas for food, decorations, music, conversation-starters and fund raising.

Your viewing party is your chance to create visibility for girls… and an opportunity to raise funds to help them.

So gather your friends and family for a good time – and a time to do some good.

June 16th and June 22nd. Everywhere.

Going the Distance: How Bikes Can Bring Education to Girls

How long did it take you to get to school every day? Did you travel there by car, bus, or foot? For children around the world, the journey to school often means two to three hours of walking along remote roads, many times through dangerous areas. This can make school an impossibility: whether as a result of financial strain, the danger that could come on the trek, or the sheer difficulty of walking so far every day, millions of children are missing out on education because of distance. Last month, May, was National Bicycle Month, and this is the perfect time to highlight the impact that a bike can make on the life of a girl. A bicycle has the power to mobilize girls, giving them a way to move from where they live to where they learn, and thus the means to bring themselves towards a better life.

The number of girls around the world who are out of school is staggering: 35 million girls are not being educated. And with the known benefits of educating girls, this is putting them and their communities at a steep disadvantage. A study in Zambia found that HIV spreads twice as fast among uneducated girls, while for each additional year of education a girl receives, her chance of contracting HIV decreases by 6.7 percent. Children born to mothers who can read are 50 percent more likely to survive past the age of 5. In Indonesia, child vaccination rates are only 19 percent when mothers are uneducated.

Though primary school is compulsory in many nations, access to education for girls drops significantly once they reach the secondary school level, and this is largely attributed to the distance they must travel to get to school. There are commonly fewer secondary schools in developing countries, and they tend to be inaccessible for girls living in rural areas. These girls’ families often don’t have the money to spare for transportation costs, leaving walking as the only option – a problem, as many families will not let their daughters walk, out of safety concerns. As a result, dropout rates soar, and girls are denied the chance to better their lives through education. This can all be changed with a simple solution – bicycles.

Numerous organizations now recognize the benefits of providing bicycles to girls worldwide. Bicycle Relief is a leader in delivering bicycles to girls in need around the world – they aim to provide 50,000 bicycles to students (70% of whom are girls), as well as teachers and educational workers in rural Africa. Students in need are given basic training about bike maintenance and safety, and must sign a contract of commitment to education before receiving their bicycle. 10×10 partner organization Pink Bike has also made it their mission to equip girls with the transportation resources necessary to get the education they need. Kevin and Clare Cohen founded Pink Bike in 2010, inspired by 10×10’s own Martha Adams’ work in Cambodia for Girl Rising. 10×10 has now partnered with Pink Bike to provide Nepali girls with bicycles, as the majority of girls there live in sparsely populated and distantly spread-out villages. Since its conception, Pink Pike has delivered hundreds of bikes on three continents, and their impact is only growing. Room to Read, a 10×10 Impact Partner, also has programs in place that give girls in developing nations access to bicycles. Through donations to sponsor a bicycle for a girl, Room to Read “puts students in the fast lane, helping them navigate the road to a brighter future”. 

World Bicycle Relief 2011 statistics on bicycles impact on community empowerment.

The evidence is clear – the idea that bicycles can make education more accessible for girls works. Based on results from World Bicycle Relief’s 2011 report, the early statistics on the influence of bikes in developing nations are promising. Data collected by WBR indicates an average attendance improvement of 14.4% for both girls and boys, with some individual schools reporting up to a 36.7% attendance improvement. This dramatic improvement in attendance greatly impacted student success as well – the data indicates an average improvement in term-end scores of 18% for both girls and boys, with individual schools reporting up to 35% improvement. The benefits of equipping school age children with bicycles doesn’t end with educational improvement; these bicycles had an empowering effect on communities as well, with improved access to health clinics, new opportunities to generate income, and newfound ease in visiting friends and family. Early data from World Bicycle Relief’s report showed a decrease in child pregnancy and HIV/AIDS rates attributed to the new bicycle access. A new government program being instituted in Bihar, India is also making great strides in improving access to education through the provision of bicycles to girls. The state government opened the program for girls to receive grants of $50 to purchase a bicycle, and the program was an instant success. In a state where girls’ literacy rates were only at 53 percent, the number of girls registered in the ninth grade in Bihar’s state schools more than tripled in four years, from 175,000 to 600,000.

Now that you have the facts, you may wonder, what can I do to help girls get to school? By supporting the 10×10 Fund for Girls’ Education, you contribute to our impact partners, such as Room to Read. Donations to this fund will be distributed among our non-profit partners, which also include CARE USA, World Vision, Partners in Health, Plan International USA, United Nations Foundation/Girl Up, and A New Day Cambodia, all of whom operate girls’ education initiatives around the world. With your support, we can bring education to girls worldwide – and help bring girls to their education.

On Inspiration: The Glenview Girls Helping Global Girls

On May 12, seven fourth and fifth-grade girls from Glenview Elementary School in Oakland California— Adrienne on the flute, Amelia on the cello, Ella on the cello, Megan on the cello, Claire on the cello, and Zoe on the violin— set up as a mini-orchestra in the Rockridge BART station to help raise money for the 10×10 Fund for Girls’ Education. Along with Penelope, who passed out fliers and enthused about the film and project, Olivia and Sophie, who were on hand to offer back-up support, and Bailey, Kylie, Harper, Sally, and Sophia who manned a stall with baked goods, the collective team of Glenview Girls raised an incredible $1,200.00 to contribute toward the fund.  Most importantly, they used their passion for the 10×10 social action campaign goals and the film Girl Rising to generate buzz around the issue of girls’ education and to encourage passersby to see the film and to learn more about why educating girls matters.

Where did their inspiration come from? All of the girls are in the same class at Glenview Elementary School. After seeing the film, Girl Rising, they felt inspired to band together to do something more to help girls like the girls featured in the film. Their small orchestra had recently opened for the Oakland East Bay Symphony, and they decided to unite again to use their collective talent to simultaneously spread the word about the film, Girl Rising, and to act, by raising funds for the 10×10 Fund for Girls’ Education. After their performance Claire, Penelope, and Ella joined me on a call to debrief. They spoke about where the motivation to do the fundraiser had come from, how they managed to turn the occasion into a success, what they had learned from the experience, and what they were hoping to do in the future.

Penelope, Claire, and Ella recalled the importance of teamwork to their fundraiser. Without the collaboration of different instrumentalists the melody would have been lost behind the music of the cellists. Working as a team meant that they could hand out fliers and information about 10×10 and Girl Rising and engage more listeners. “The music sounded better,” the three girls enthused. Without the support of their parents— who helped them to choose their repertoire, who volunteered their houses for practice spaces, and who helped to bake the goods sold to raise money for the 10×10 Fund for Girls’ Education— they would never have been able to pull the fundraiser together. Penelope’s father, an employee of the BART system, had even helped the girls to obtain the permits required to set up in the Rockridge BART.

Despite the challenges of learning to work effectively as a team, of playing for two hours with only intermittent breaks, and of putting up copious posters and fliers around school to publicize the performance and fundraiser, they managed to turn their efforts into an inspired success story. They overshot their initial fundraising goals by $1100.00, for a total contribution of $1200.00, or enough to send twenty-four girls to school for one year.

Over the course of the interview, the girls’ gratitude and passion for the cause of girls’ education bubbled into every answer they gave and question they asked.

“I like that all kids here have to go to school. Even if we think we don’t like it, it’s great that we have it,” Claire said. “The girls in the movie wanted to go to school so badly. We’re so grateful,” both Penelope and Ella echoed. They had previously asked me if Girl Rising was helping girls in the US; it’s clear through their actions that it has, and still is. Penelope, Claire, and Ella hope to take the Call to Action even further- to spearhead future door-to-door fundraisers and to involve the Girl Scouts in a service project or fundraiser.

When I asked them how they hoped to do more, they said that they wanted to spread the word. That if they spread the word then twelve more girls like them could have more. “Really, it’s about spreading the word and saying, ‘Hey, did you check this out?’ If people spend ten seconds spreading fliers they will have more knowledge and be able to recommend the cause. That would help.  Then we could get tons of money going to people who need it,” all three girls answered together.

Penelope, Claire, Ella, and all of the Glenview Girls are proof that the movie and social action campaign are helping girls and wider communities everywhere.

By increasing visibility around the importance of girls’ education as a solution to world poverty, Girl Rising is inspiring girls, boys, men, and women to become leaders in spreading the film’s message. It is inspiring people from wide socioeconomic and cultural backgrounds to band together to ensure that everyone around the world, regardless of gender or income level, has the opportunity to attend school. Not only is it ‘helping’ girls, boys, men, and women in the US to become aware of how lucky we are to have the opportunity to learn in a classroom, but it is inspiring people across the country to turn that luck into a platform for leadership.

At the end of our interview the girls reflected back on their experience: “What we did, we did because we were dedicated. When you work together, you have the power to make a difference.”

Malala’s Fight for Girls Education

Photo credit: CNN

You have likely heard of Malala Yousafzai: she represents the strength and potential that is embodied in a single girl. She reminds us that not all girls have access to education, and that for change to occur, you must stand up to discrimination and rise beyond it.

Malala was shot in October 2012 by the Taliban in Pakistan’s Swat Valley for defying their ban on girls’ education. However, her experience and time in recovery have not deterred her from campaigning for girls to go to school. Rather than accepting her attack by the Taliban as a necessitated response to rejecting their edict against girls’ schooling, Malala is recovering, in school again in the U.K., and has no intention to give up on the struggle for girls’ equality. Instead, Malala is utilizing the global awareness that she has created about girls’ under-representation in schools to fight for their rights to education.

The recognition that Malala has received as a spokesperson for girls is well deserved. She has been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize, and she was elected as the runner-up for Time’s Person of the Year in 2012. In addition, The Vital Voices Global Partnership has set up the Malala Fund to aid girls in obtaining an education. Beginning with a $40,000 grant for girls in the Swat Valley to receive an education, Malala’s Fund will progress the movement towards girls’ education around the world.

Malala also has plans to speak to the U.N. in July about the obstacles that girls face in achieving an education. She voices the concerns of all girls who have been discriminated against and kept from learning: “I have the right to education… I have the right to play. I have the right to sing. I have the right to talk. I have the right to go to market. I have the right to speak up.”

Read more about Malala on CNN.