Summary of Girls Not Brides USA welcomes the House introduction of the Keeping Girls in School Act
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AI Overview
AI Overview
When visiting a girl’s house, the key is to
be a respectful, engaged, and helpful guest while also being yourself.
General Etiquette & Behavior
Be courteous: Mind your manners, offer a firm handshake or appropriate greeting, and be polite to everyone.
Be yourself: It’s natural to be nervous, but don’t try to project a “perfect” persona. Authenticity helps build a genuine connection.
Be present and engaged: Show genuine curiosity by asking questions and actively listening to her stories. Pay attention to decorations or hobbies for conversation starters.
Don’t have expectations: Focus on having fun and enjoying the time together, not on a specific outcome (like sex).
Actions During the Visit
Let her lead: She likely has specific activities in mind. Let her be the host initially, but be ready to suggest an activity if things become awkward.
Offer to help: Offer to help with chores like washing dishes after a meal or clearing the table. Taking the initiative to pitch in shows respect and independence.
Respect her space: Leave things as you found them. Use coasters, put books back, and follow her level of cleanliness, not your own.
Discuss ground rules: If you’ll be staying for a longer period, talk openly about shared expenses, chores, and routines to avoid future misunderstandings.
Romantic & Social Cues
Move slowly with romantic advances: Just because you’re at her house doesn’t automatically mean physical intimacy is expected. Escalate romance one step at a time (cuddling, kissing, etc.) and always ask for consent.
Gauge the atmosphere: Pay attention to her body language and the environment. If she seems uncomfortable with physical contact, back off.
Keep it fun and light: Use humor, tell interesting stories, and be playful.
Helpful Items to Bring
Consider bringing a small “thank you” gift, a snack to share, or something for an activity:
Ingredients for cooking or baking together.
A drink she enjoys (ensure it’s appropriate for her age and preferences).
A board or card game you can play together.
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Girls Not Brides USA welcomes the House introduction of the Keeping Girls in School Act
Girls Not Brides USA, the U.S. national partnership of Girls Not Brides, is dedicated to ending child, early and forced marriage, and welcomes the House introduction of the Keeping Girls in School Act.
Introduced this week by Representatives Lois Frankel (D-FL), Susan Brooks (R-IN), Nita Lowey (D-NY), Dan Donovan (R-NY), Brian Fitzpatrick (R-PA), and Ami Bera (D-CA), the Keeping Girls in School Act is designed to harness the power of the U.S. Government to get at the root causes that keep more than 130 million girls globally, ages 6-17, from enrolling or attending school.
Keeping girls in school is not only the right thing to do, it’s the smart thing to do.
Recent research by the International Center for Research on Women (ICRW) and the World Bank showed that eliminating child marriage would save many governments five percent or more of their education budgets by 2030 . In some countries, eliminating child marriage would reduce their reliance on overseas development assistance by a sixth.
Child marriage effectively ends childhood for the 12 million girls who are married each year, according to the latest UNICEF data, and is costing girls, and the world, too much.
In recognizing that adolescent girls face enormous barriers to accessing secondary education, including child marriage, the Keeping Girls in School Act will help the U.S. Government address these barriers through smart investments and coordination between U.S. Government agencies. The bill is designed to complement existing guidance and legislation on education and child marriage in U.S. foreign policy and programmatic efforts, such as the U.S. Global Strategy to Empower Adolescent Girls.
As organizations focused on multidimensional solutions to ending child marriage and addressing the needs of already married girls, we recognize that access to quality education is one of the best ways to delay age of marriage and to best equip girls for their futures.
The bill’s support for the U.S. Global Strategy to Empower Adolescent Girls recognizes that efforts to keep girls in school and overcome barriers to their education requires us to look at girls’ lives holistically, with attention to rights, quality of education, health, safety, and harmful practices such as child marriage.
The Keeping Girls in School Act Reps. Susan (R-IN) Lois (D-FL) not only helps ensure girls can access to education, as is their right, but that also helps equip them with the tools and environmental factors necessary to thrive now and into adulthood.
Child marriage traps girls in a cycle of poverty
Too often, girls who marry early end their educations, and are forced or encouraged to prove their fertility by having children early and often before they or their bodies are ready.
Motherhood and lack of access to a full range of educational and economic opportunities related to child marriage often traps girls in a cycle of poverty. Children born to child brides are more likely to face malnutrition and stunting than are the children borne to older peers.
Girls married as children are also more likely to experience intimate partner violence, and for those married at 15 and below, they are more likely to experience anxiety, depression, and other health issues.
Today, there are 15 million girls of primary-school age who will never even enter a classroom, half of whom live in sub-Saharan Africa. It is legislation like the Keeping Girls in School Act that brings much needed attention to the barriers such as child marriage that perpetuate poverty and abuses against girls worldwide.
Girls Not Brides USA is pleased to support the Keeping Girls in School Act and welcomes the House introduction of this important bill. (For a full list of endorsing organizations, please click here).
About Girls Not Brides USA
Girls Not Brides USA includes more than 60 US-based organisations committed to working together to end child, early, and forced marriage worldwide. Girls Not Brides USA is an affiliate of the Girls Not Brides global partnership, which includes more than 1,000 civil society organisations from 95 countries.
Members of Girls Not Brides USA are leading the fight to end child marriage around the world by working at the community, national, regional and global levels, in advocacy, research and direct programming. Through our diverse coalition, we tackle child marriage from every angle and on every continent. In the US, Girls Not Brides USA was a leading voice in the creation of the U.S. Global Strategy to Empower Adolescent Girls and ensuring ending child marriage was a central tenant of the Strategy.
For more information about Girls Not Brides USA or child marriage, please contact the Girls Not Brides USA Co-Chairs:
- GAYATRI PATEL, CARE USA – [email protected]
- RACHEL CLEMENT, International Center for Research on Women- [email protected]
- NINA BESSER, IWHC, [email protected]
Each year, 12 million girls are married before the age of 18
That is 23 girls every minute
Nearly 1 every 2 seconds