Abstract:
The role of females’ education in the social and economic growth of a country is well
recognized. In Rural Pakistan, females are far behind in their education. The present study
attempts to identify the community, household, parental and cultural determinants of the
female educational attainment in the rural setting of Punjab, Pakistan. The households with at
least one female child who had attained final educational level within the past five years in
the rural areas of Jhang and Faisalabad constitute the population of the study. Triangulation
approach consisting of quantitative and qualitative survey has been deployed for the study.
For qualitative analysis, 50 information rich cases were selected from the population area
using the snow-ball sampling technique. For quantitative analysis, a sample of 700 female
children was selected from the rural areas of two districts (Faisalabad and Jhang) of central
Punjab. Two towns (Lyallpur town and Chak Jhumra town) from district Faisalabad, while
two tehsils (Jhang and Chiniot) were selected from district Jhang using the simple random
sampling technique.
The findings of qualitative approach reveal that distances of educational institutions for
females, mothers’ illiteracy, poverty, child labour, unawareness of the heads of the
households about the benefits of girls’ schooling and traditional attitude in terms of gender
bias towards female schooling are the major hindrances in the educational attainment of rural
females. The descriptive, inferential and qualitative analyses demonstrated that community,
parental, economic and cultural factors are vitally important in explaining the female
educational attainment in rural areas. The study found a negative effect of school distances on
the educational attainment of the units of analysis. Higher Female Education Ratio (FER) of
the village, better education of mother and father, higher income of the household, and
innovative attitude and better awareness level of the Head Of the Household (HOH) emerged
as significant predictors of the educational attainment of the units of analysis. A lower caste
status of the family, child labour, higher chances of early marriage, and high gender bias level
of the heads of the households had negative effect on the response variable.. Late age at
enrolment of units of analysis caused their early dropout from schools. The results of the
study are in close agreement with the theories of cultural reproduction (Bourdieu’s theory &
Bernstein theory) and feministic approaches (radical, liberal and socialist feminisms). The
research concluded that the trajectory of poverty, traditional thinking and low awareness
viiiabout the benefits of females’ education are the close approximation of low educational
attainment of rural females in the selected areas. Low education of parents, low social
statuses of families and higher opportunity costs of girls also have a dampening effect on the
females’ schooling in the study population.
The qualitative descriptions of the key
informants stressed establishing more secondary level schools for girls in rural areas. They
also proposed introducing the ‘anjumans’ mean ‘local NGOs’ to increase the demand for
female education among parents and to improve the situation of supply side factors in the
community. The findings of the study suggest to plan programmes for poverty alleviation and
to control the child labour in the rural areas. To change the perceptions of society about
females and their education is the need of the hour. Government-private partnership
campaign to increase the awareness about benefits of female education among male heads of
the households and the families of low social status can increase the schooling participation
of rural females.