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Contact

163, Street No. 70, MPCHS E-11/3, Islamabad

Website

https://www.iteachforpakistan.org/

Description

Teach For Pakistan is registered as a section 42 non-profit company since May 2017. The company’s mission is to create leadership to end education poverty in Pakistan. We operate under a sub-license agreement with Teach For All, a global network of 49+ independent national organization’s working to end educational inequity in their respective countries. Our program, recruits outstanding university graduates and young professionals to a two-year Fellowship to teach full-time in low-income communities, and develop the leadership and motivation to work effectively towards education reform in the long-run. In 2018, the program launched operations in Islamabad, with 16 Fellows currently teaching 800 students in 8 government and non-profit schools in the capital’s rural subdivisions. The program in 2019 will be inducting a further 32 Fellows who will also be teaching in the Islamabad Capital Territory vide a formal LOI with the Federal Directorate of Education. The program is funded by Pakistani corporates, high net-worth individuals and grants from Teach For All, NY, USA and FCDO. Teach For Pakistan currently has 85 first-and second-year Fellows teaching 4250 students in 37 schools in marginalized, rural communities on the outskirts of the nation's capital. We have 145 Alumni working across the system to expand educational and life opportunities.

IATI identifier

PK-SEC-0108318

Implementation Schedule

Annual

Organisations / agencies covered

FCDO (UK) Teach For All (US)

Timeliness of Data

Data will be shared on Annual basis.

Frequency of publication

Annually

Frequency of publication (extra comments)

Frequency of publication of data will be annually.

Units of Aid

Project

Segmentation of Published Data

Teach For Pakistan is working in Pakistan only.

Data Definitions and References

N/A

Field Exclusions

Exclusion’s criteria could be unique to each organization, but typically might include the following: • security and safety of staff, volunteers, partner organisations or people who you work with (beneficiaries) • privacy, security and data ownership • confidentiality and intellectual property rights clauses in contracts (for example grant funders or partners) • commercially sensitive information (relevant to organsations regularly contracting to provide services, for example, to DFID) Sharing information about the performance of project and organisation can be daunting. We know that in development, results don’t always turn out as the plan predicted. However, there are definite benefits in collecting and sharing the information. TFP think carefully before excluding project performance data as per open information policy. Where TFP decides to include other criteria, for example, the high cost of disclosing information, it is important to make sure that there is an appeals procedure. As charities are exempt from the Freedom of Information Act, an appeals procedure means that people can ask for a decision to exclude a piece of information that they have requested to be reconsidered. The easiest way to do this is to use your existing complaints procedure. Board will sponsor the policy within the organisation. Relevant department will be responsible for updating it on an annual basis, and the process for doing so.

Record Exclusions

Exclusion’s criteria could be unique to each organization, but typically might include the following: • security and safety of staff, volunteers, partner organisations or people who you work with (beneficiaries) • privacy, security and data ownership • confidentiality and intellectual property rights clauses in contracts (for example grant funders or partners) • commercially sensitive information (relevant to organsations regularly contracting to provide services, for example, to DFID) Sharing information about the performance of project and organisation can be daunting. We know that in development, results don’t always turn out as the plan predicted. However, there are definite benefits in collecting and sharing the information. TFP think carefully before excluding project performance data as per open information policy. Where TFP decides to include other criteria, for example, the high cost of disclosing information, it is important to make sure that there is an appeals procedure. As charities are exempt from the Freedom of Information Act, an appeals procedure means that people can ask for a decision to exclude a piece of information that they have requested to be reconsidered. The easiest way to do this is to use your existing complaints procedure. Board will sponsor the policy within the organisation. Relevant department will be responsible for updating it on an annual basis, and the process for doing so.

Thresholds

Exclusion’s criteria could be unique to each organization, but typically might include the following: • security and safety of staff, volunteers, partner organisations or people who you work with (beneficiaries) • privacy, security and data ownership • confidentiality and intellectual property rights clauses in contracts (for example grant funders or partners) • commercially sensitive information (relevant to organsations regularly contracting to provide services, for example, to DFID) Sharing information about the performance of project and organisation can be daunting. We know that in development, results don’t always turn out as the plan predicted. However, there are definite benefits in collecting and sharing the information. TFP think carefully before excluding project performance data as per open information policy. Where TFP decides to include other criteria, for example, the high cost of disclosing information, it is important to make sure that there is an appeals procedure. As charities are exempt from the Freedom of Information Act, an appeals procedure means that people can ask for a decision to exclude a piece of information that they have requested to be reconsidered. The easiest way to do this is to use your existing complaints procedure. Board will sponsor the policy within the organisation. Relevant department will be responsible for updating it on an annual basis, and the process for doing so.

Other Constraints

If we do not have the copy rights of any data/information which we can't use.

Data Quality

Teach For Pakistan takes the full responsibility of data accuracy. Teach For Pakistan always verifies the data and data sources.

User Interface

Yes data will be available on our website. https://www.iteachforpakistan.org/

User Interface Website

https://www.iteachforpakistan.org/