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If we examine the opportunities for education of girls or women in less developed countries, we usually find a dismal picture. In some countries, the ratio of boys to girls in secondary schools is more than seven to one. What happens to the girls? Often they are kept at home to look after younger siblings and to perform a variety of domestic chores. Their education is not perceived as in any way equal in importance to that of boys. When a non-literate or barely literate girl reaches adolescence, she has little or no qualification for employment, even if her community provides any opportunity for the employment of women. The solution is to get her married as soon as possible, with the inevitable result that she produces children too soon, too often and too late. With no formal education, she is hardly aware that there is any alternative. In a study made in Thailand, it was noted that the literate woman marries later and ceases childbearing earlier than her non-literate counterpart. But the latter is so chained to her household by the necessities of gathering fuel, preparing food and tending children that she is very difficult to reach, even if health services, nutrition, education, maternal and child health centres are available in her community. She does not understand what they are intended to do.
2586
The phrase 'too late' in the passage implies that the woman
  • A. ought to have started producing children earlier
  • B. goes on producing children when she ought to have stopped
  • C. fails to marry early enough for her to produce children
  • D. had all her children at an advanced age
View Answer & Discuss (2) JAMB 1990
2587
The writer emphasizes that in less developed countries,
  • A. the education of girls is not important
  • B. the non-literate woman has some advantage because she has more children
  • C. the literate female is a threat to the male in employment
  • D. there is a need to give boys and girls equal opportunity in education
View Answer & Discuss (1) JAMB 1990
The earthly paradises of Bali and of the South Sea Islands, and the gentle, non-acquisitive civilization of Burma, have been aptly described and romanticized. One can add to then the Nicobar Islands, where a small population lived happily on a very low cultural level. But perhaps the most remarkable and the least known of these earthly paradise is the small kingdom of Hunza in the Himalayas, which was recently visited and enthusiastically described by the journalist, Noel Barber (Daily Mail, 5, 6, 8 June 1962). A fair-skinned population of 18,000, they lived in a fertile and almost inaccessible valley not far from the Sinking boarder, 8,000 feet up. A legend has it that they are the descendants of the three deserters from the army of Alexander the Great, who here with Persian wives which makes one inclined to believe that pacifism may be hereditary , because these people had no war in 2,000 years. They have no money, no crime and no diseases, they rarely die before ninety. Their psychosomatic control is almost unbelievable, childbirth is painless, and toothache, a joke; they keep their numbers stationary without contraceptives, and without abortion, but by sheer abstinence, though Noel; Barber saw the newborn son of a chuckling father aged eighty-nine. Their diet which consists of mostly apricot and raw vegetables may have something to do with their unshakable serenity. It makes one gasp with surprise that human nature can be like this. One is reminded of Huxley’s Island, but unlike the Palanese, the Hunza people have no art, only serenity!
2588
it is said in the passage that Noel Barber has
  • A. visited all the earthly paradise
  • B. visited only the Nicobar Islands
  • C. visited the Hunza in the Himalayas
  • D. visited Hunza in the Himalayas in 5,6 and 8 June, 1962
  • E. not done any of the above
View Answer & Discuss JAMB 1979
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2589
the civilization of Buma and Nicobar Island are
  • A. alike because both are romantisized
  • B. alike because both operate at low cultural levels
  • C. alike because one is gentle and non-aquisistive and the other operates at a low cultural level
  • D. not alike because Buma has been described but the Nicobar Island have not
  • E. not alike because the Nicobar Islands have a smallpopulation, and Buma has a large population
View Answer & Discuss JAMB 1979
2590
the kingdom of Hunza had no war in 2,000 years. this
  • A. this proves that pacifism is hereditary
  • B. suggest that pacifism may be hereitary
  • C. shows that Alexander the Great was their ancestor, and he hated wars
  • D. is because they deserted the army od Alexander the Great
  • E. is because they could not fight
View Answer & Discuss (1) JAMB 1979
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