Ad Details
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Ad ID: 771961
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Added: October 12, 2023
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Sale Price: ₨123
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Regular Price: ₨123
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Location: Pakistan
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State: Punjab
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City: Rawalpindi
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Phone: 03115193625
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Views: 80
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Website: www.icollegete.com
Description
ICTE
International College of Technical Education Pvt. Ltd
Head Office :
Office # 27, Second Floor, Maryam Shadi Hall Plaza
(Airies Plaza), Shamsabad, Murree Road,
Rawalpindi, Pakistan 46000.
Email : info@icollegete.com
Contact : 051-6122937, 0311-5193625, 0092-335-4176949
Early childhood experiences have a profound impact on brain development—affecting
learning, health, behavior and ultimately, income. Children who receive early learning in
their formative, pre-primary years gain social and emotional competence, and improved
health generally. They also have higher school completion rates and higher incomes, and
females are more likely to participate in the labour force. Globally, children who
receive this type of education are more likely to send their own children to school,
empowering them to create a generation of change and interrupting cycles of poverty.
Going to school teaches students socialization, communication and community building
skills which they carry into their families and their futures. Girls who go to school are
less likely to marry early or against their will. Education empowers women to make life
choices and strengthens girls’ beliefs in their ability to achieve goals.Investing in the
early years is one of the smartest things a country can do to eliminate extreme poverty,
boost shared prosperity, and create the human capital needed for economies to diversify
and grow. Early childhood experiences have a profound impact on brain development –
affecting learning, health, behavior, and, ultimately, productivity and income.
Yet today, millions of young children are not reaching their full potential because
inadequate nutrition; a lack of early stimulation, learning, and nurturing care; and
exposure to stress adversely affecting their development.
The challenge is substantial:
In low- and middle-income countries across the world, 250 million children under the age
of five are at risk of not reaching their developmental potential because of poverty and
stunting (or low height for age).
Worldwide, only half of all three to six-year-olds have access to pre-primary education.
In low-income countries, just one-in-five children has access to preschool.
One in 200 children in the world are displaced, exposing them to the kind of stress that
can undermine their development.
Around the world, over 40 percent of children below primary-school-entry age – or nearly
350 million children – need childcare, but do not have access to it.
Smart investments in the physical, cognitive, linguistic, and socio-emotional development
of young children – from before birth until they transition to primary school – are
critical to put them on the path to greater prosperity, and to help countries be more
productive and compete more successfully in a rapidly changing global economy.
A large body of evidence confirms that if we invest in high-quality programs that support
children’s health, nutrition, and early learning, we can improve learning outcomes, and
ultimately increase adult wages and productivity.
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