Absolutely. - A Freewrite

If they're lucky their parents may help out. But most times you find that young girls when we talk to them after secondary school, they say what next and say I don't know what to do I'll just try my luck or I'll walk somewhere. So before girls leave secondary school. We try to get their attention right from the when they're in s s 1.

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We would have started the career and the mentorship talks up until the point where they are in SS3 where they begin to learn a skill from the first and second term. So that they by the time they're leaving school, they already equipped with enough skills to either earn income and all of that. Sorry to cut you short. I must say that that's a very. Poignant panacea, because looking at myself, I'm male, obviously, and I come from an upper middle class family, right? But I remember, just to add credence to what you said about most young girls not knowing what the future holds beyond secondary school. I remember as a secondary.

School student myself, I never thought beyond the four walls of my secondary school such that after school it became such a cumbersome, you know, life experience for me to put myself together and know the next step to take.

It's really commendable. That you try from a very you know, early stage to get the attention of these young girls and position that attention in life beyond the four walls of the secondary. Absolutely.



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