I have never worried about whether or not I would go to school and receive an education. My parents always made enough money throughout the years to send me to school. Even when my mom got fired from her job in 2008, the first thing my parents assured me was that I would not have to leave my private school. Also, I never worried if my gender would restrict me from attending school. I received an all girls’ education, so I grew up believing that all girls were as fortunate as I was. It was not until middle school that came face to face with the harsh reality that girls in third world countries were not as fortunate as I was. Today in sub-Saharan Africa, there are approximately eighty-three girls enrolled in school to every one hundred boys enrolled in …show more content…
Unlike international-governmental organizations, non-governmental organizations are permitted to go into villages in third world countries and see first-hand how living conditions and laws positively or negatively affect the population. In fact, international-governmental organizations such as the United Nations remain in frequent contact with non-governmental organizations so they can obtain certain information and statistics that they would generally look over. One non-governmental organization that is featured in the book Half the Sky is the Campaign for Female Education. The organization focuses on helping girls attend and remain in schools for multiple terms throughout Africa. The Campaign for Female Education, also known as Camfed, has worked extremely hard to make sure that their efforts to send girls to schools across Africa are effective. The Campaign for Female Education is an enormously successful and prosperous non-governmental organization because it is extremely observant and aware of the particular issues that occur in the communities they