U.S.
EMBASSY
PRESS RELEASE |

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PUBLIC AFFAIRS
SECTION
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U.S. Secretary of State Rice Visits Madrassah
to Announce the Creation of Indonesian Version of Sesame Street.
March 14, 2006
Today, during her visit to Ma ‘Muriyah madrassah in Jakarta,
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice announced the creation of
the Indonesian version of Sesame Street, the popular educational
children’s television program. The new program will be funded
through a US$ 8.5 million grant from the U.S. Government through the
United States Agency for International Development (USAID) to the
Sesame Workshop.
Secretary Rice, Ambassador B. Lynn Pascoe, and USAID Mission
Director William M. Frej were welcomed to Ma ‘Muriyah by Mr. Sidi
Muralin Singedekane, owner of the school, and Headmistress
Yawairiyah. Speaking to students, teachers and education officials,
Secretary Rice said the Indonesian version of Sesame Street will
help build a foundation for successful life-long learning for
millions of Indonesian children, as it has for children around the
world.
The new educational children’s program will be designed and
developed through a partnership between USAID, Sesame Workshop, and
Indonesian educators and child development experts. The show will
feature new Indonesian muppet characters, locally produced live
action and animated films, and classic Sesame Street segments
featuring Elmo, Big Bird and the rest of the Sesame characters that
have delighted children around the world for decades. The grant will
fund the first four years of the Indonesian children’s program,
which will debut in 2007.
USAID’s Sesame Street Indonesia partnership complements
President Bush’s broader $157 million education initiative for
Indonesia, designed to improve the quality of basic education
throughout the country. While at Ma ‘Muriyah, Secretary Rice
visited the classrooms for second and sixth graders who are
participating in USAID’s Decentralized Basic Education (DBE)
Program. The program introduces more participatory teaching and
learning techniques to help increase student’s performance in
math, science and reading.
“The USAID basic education program is having a significant
impact in the 990 schools that it is currently working in, and it
will benefit 9,000 schools over the life of the program,” said
William M. Frej, USAID Mission Director.
Ma ‘Muriyah madrassah is an elementary and junior high school
in the Cikini neighborhood. Of the madrassah’s 125 students, half
come from disadvantaged families. Many live in temporary houses
along the river.
For more information, contact Caroline Gredler at (021) 3435 9376
or cgredler@usaid.gov. For
more information on USAID activities in Indonesia, visit www.usaid.gov/id.
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