Popular opinion suggests that education is the \u27silver bullet\u27 to end poverty, famine, and all the worlds\u27 ills. The reality of education for women, however, is not as easily classified as transformative. This paper seeks to illuminate, through historical research and literary analysis, the connections between the charity education of Victorian Britain, a system examined in Jane Eyre, and the missionary education which comprised the majority of the educational systems in the British colonies, including Nigeria and Zimbabwe, the settings of Emecheta and Dangarembga\u27s works. Beginning with Charlotte Brontë\u27s Victorian classic, Jane Eyre, and moving through time, space and situation to the colonial experience novels of Buchi Eme...