Illiteracy Rate in Some Brazilian States Runs from 20 to 30%

A 2004 survey found that Brazil’s illiteracy rate was 11.4%; that is, 11.4% of the population 15 years of age or older declared that they could not read or write.

For the sake of comparison, illiteracy rates in some other Latin American nations are: Mexico (9.7%,), Chile (4.3%), Argentina (2.8%) and Cuba (0.2%). In China, the illiteracy rate is 9.1%.

The illiteracy problem was most serious in remote rural areas where the rate rises in some cases to over 25%. In urban areas the rate is 8.7%.

Brazil continues to have enormous regional differences, even in the illiteracy rate. It was highest in the Northeast, reaching 19.4% in the state of Sergipe and 29.5% in Alagoas.

The lowest illiteracy rates (below 5%) were in the Distrito Federal (4.2%) and the states of Santa Catarina (4.8%) and Rio de Janeiro (4.8%).

Despite the progress that has occurred in education in recent years, according to data released at the end of last year, illiteracy persisted among 10.5% of the Brazilian population aged 10 or more in 2004. This index was 10.6% in 2003.

The survey also showed that 2.9% of children and adolescents between the ages of 7 and 14 did not attend school in 2004. In regional terms, the lowest indices of children who did not attend school were in the Southeast (1.9%) and the South (2.2%).

The highest indices were in the North (5.1%) and the Northeast (3.9%). In the Center-West, the index stood at 2.8%.

The majority of students aged 5 and over were enrolled in public schools (80.9%). At university level, public institutions accounted for 26.1% of the student population. That is, three out of every four university students attended private institutions.

At the high school level, public schools concentrated 85% of the student population, and in fundamental education, 89%. At the pre-school level the public school system handled 75.7% of the total number of children enrolled in 2004.

ABr

Tags:

You May Also Like

Goods Brazil, a Just-for-Arabs Brand

While awaiting the result of a public tender in Egypt, for the export of ...

The Dream Is Dead. Most Brazilians No Longer Trust Lula.

Most Brazilians (52%) no longer trust their President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. A ...

Brasília Is Orphan

"I am neither a capitalist nor a socialist, I am not a religious or ...

Powell to Discuss World Hunger with Brazil’s Lula

The arrival of United States Secretary of State, Colin Powell, in BrasÀ­lia, capital of ...

Brazil Has 100,000 Caves and Very Little Protection for Them

Brazil is starting a national program for conservation of caves this week. The Brazilian ...

Brazil and LatAm Say the Fundamentals of their Economy Are Strong

The presidents of the central banks of the main economies in Latin America met ...

Brazilian Industry Grows 8.8% This Year

Industrial production in Brazil ended the month of August up 1.1%, compared with July. ...

Brazilian Inventor Converts Any Fruit or Vegetable into Flour

Brazilian Researcher José Amado Alves, who works as a production supervisor for a mining ...

Brazilian Supermarkets Have Anemic Sales Growth

Supermarket sales in Brazil rose 0.66% in 2005, reports the Brazilian Supermarket Association (Associação ...

Gray land – COVER STORY

At the start of the century, Brazilians’ life expectancy was a mere 33.7 years. ...