Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
International

Malala Spreads Memoir To College, High School Classrooms With Free Online, Curriculum Guide

The Canadian Press , 13 Nov, 2014 04:29 PM
    WASHINGTON — Malala Yousafzai, a Nobel Prize winner and global icon for girls' education, is spreading her philosophies of human rights and youth empowerment to college and high school classrooms across the world.
     
    George Washington University, The Malala Fund and the publisher of a memoir about the Pakistani teen are launching a free, online resource guide for college and university classrooms to use while teaching her book, "I Am Malala." A high school version of the online guide will be available next year.
     
    The free syllabus will look at her story and reflect on eight themes, including violence against women and girls, education as a human right for girls, cultural politics, religious extremism and global feminism.
     
    Malala's father Ziauddin Yousafzai, an educator who wrote the guide's preface, said the curriculum can help girls and boys, men and women.
     
    "This is also the story of her father, who supports his daughter," he said in an interview with The Associated Press. "This is the story of a father who always says that if you ask me 'what I did for my daughter?' Don't ask me what I did, rather ask me, 'what I didn't do?' I didn't clip her wings. And this is a very powerful message, because, really I didn't do anything special."
     
    "Every parent, every brother, every husband, every father can get this message from this book that we have kept our women suppressed," he said. "So, it tells the world, 'let's stop it.' It is unjust, it is unfair to (hold) back half of the population. "
     
    Yousafzai said the curriculum will help Malala's experience move from a media sensation to a "story for all generations" for years to come.
     
    The school curriculum on the memoir was created last year by George Washington faculty members and first taught during the fall 2014 semester.
     
    In 2012, a Taliban gunman walked up to a bus taking Malala and other children home from school in Pakistan's volatile northern Swat Valley and shot her in the head and neck. Malala, 17, now resides in Britain, where she was flown for medical care after the attack.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Oscar Pistorius found not guilty of murder

    A court in South Africa Thursday found paralympian Oscar Pistorius "not guilty" of premeditated murder or murder of his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp in 2013, a case...

    Oscar Pistorius found not guilty of murder

    Turkey reluctant to allow US use its airbase against IS

    Turkey reluctant to allow US use its airbase against IS
    Turkey is not eager to allow a US-led coalition to use its Incirlik Air Base to launch attacks on militants of the Islamic State (IS) Sunni extremist group in neighbouring...

    Turkey reluctant to allow US use its airbase against IS

    Obama vows to hit Islamic State 'wherever they exist'

    Obama vows to hit Islamic State 'wherever they exist'
    Nearly six years after he entered the White House with a promise to end America's decade of wars, President Barack Obama has reversed course with a vow...

    Obama vows to hit Islamic State 'wherever they exist'

    9/11 Anniversary: Obama Expands Fight Against ISIL, Including Into Syria

    9/11 Anniversary: Obama Expands Fight Against ISIL, Including Into Syria
    In a dramatic shift, U.S. President Barack Obama has opened a new front in the fight against Islamic rebels, promising to lead an international coalition that will attack them on Syrian turf.

    9/11 Anniversary: Obama Expands Fight Against ISIL, Including Into Syria

    Majority of Americans feel current Congress worst ever: Survey

    Majority of Americans feel current Congress worst ever: Survey
    Almost two-thirds of Americans feel that the current Congress is "the worst in their lifetime", and just 14 percent of those surveyed approve of the...

    Majority of Americans feel current Congress worst ever: Survey

    Indian national missing since Pakistan agencies took him away

    Indian national missing since Pakistan agencies took him away
    An Indian national, who went to help a girl in Pakistan he met on Facebook, has been missing since 2012, a court heard, media reported Wednesday....

    Indian national missing since Pakistan agencies took him away