Why It Matters
When girls are educated, families thrive, communities progress, and cycles of poverty are broken.
children in Pakistan are currently out of school (UNICEF, 2025), the majority of them girls.

of girls in secondary school never reach graduation.
But the numbers only tell part of the story.
Behind each one is a girl with her own dreams.
Why does EBB support girls in higher grades?
Secondary education is the harder and more important problem to solve.
Why Girls are dropping out at this point
The transition at Grade 10 is the most fragile stage for girls’ education. At this point:
Costs rise
Fees, materials, and transport become unaffordable overnight
Families need income
Girls are expected to work, not continue studying
Marriage pressure
For many families, matric completion is seen as the natural endpoint
Mobility shrinks
Cultural norms that were manageable at 12 become rigid at 16
Without intervention, even high-performing girls are forced to abandon their education at exactly this moment.
What Happens When Girls Leave School
When a girl is forced out of school, she loses more than a seat in a classroom. She loses the power to choose her own path – who she marries, how she leads, and what she believes is possible. The cycle of poverty doesn’t just continue; it hardens.

