Empowering the Village to Raise the Child:

The Blog of the International Child Resource Institute


Archive for December, 2011

Support the Convention on the Rights of the Child

Thursday, December 29th, 2011

ICRI has long supported United States’ ratification of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child.  The U.S. is now the only country with a functioning government that has not ratified this important safeguard of children’s health, safety, and wellbeing.  Accordingly, we’d like to pass on this message from our friends at the US Campaign for the CRC:

Friends,

The Steering Committee wishes you, and all the children, a wonderful holiday season.

We are busy getting ready for a push with the White House to get the President to send his ratification recommendation to the Senate in 2012.  In order to do that, we have put a petition on our Website, at http://www.childrightscampaign.org/take-action/ask-the-president/petition?view=form to gather grassroots support for the recommendation.  In order to succeed, we need to get this to the President before he gets totally involved in his reelection campaign.  So we need your signatures, and those of your friends and relations, on the petition now.

Please also ask the organizations in which you’re active to add a request to sign the petition, with its link as indicated above, to their list serves and Web sites.  Our goal is to have about 25,000 (the number the White House uses to flag significant petitions) by the end of January.  Please help us to accomplish this.  Thank you, and have a blessed holiday.

Meg Gardinier, for the CRC Campaign Steering Committee

A Year of Joy, Hope and Challenge at ICRI

Thursday, December 22nd, 2011

The year 2011 has brought a wonderful array of successes along with a greater knowledge of the needs of children in many parts of the world. 

Engaged students, teachers and parents at El Nuevo Mundo

Around the world, our programs have achieved greater levels of success but we have also seen obstacles to the healthy growth and development of children. Some of our successes:

  • Our UNICEF –funded Water Sanitation Health and Nutrition Project in Kenya reached 60,000 families with water-filtration systems, health outreach and nutrition education. We saw, through this project, the remarkable work of our Kenya staff in reaching families and children in three of the poorest regions in northern Kenya.
  • In Nepal, our National Center on Learning Resources (NCLR) continued to develop child-friendly schools in collaboration with 18 public and private primary and preschools. The work of our amazing Nepali teacher trainers in engaging the hearts and minds of teachers and parents through active participation and community involvement is a sight to behold.
  • In Ghana, we have recently launched a new National Early Childhood Teacher Coalition where those who believe that young Ghanaian children deserve supportive, nurturing, and curiosity-building education can receive training, resources and support.
  • In Zimbabwe, we continue to marvel at the Marondara Early Childhood Center serving AIDS orphans and other community children. Our staff has developed a building that nurtures children and our local teachers continue to create stimulating environments using only found objects and local materials.
  • In India, we are providing more teacher trainings to improve curricula, program delivery and environmental development for children in the Bengaluru and Kolkata areas.
  • Here in the U.S., we are working on articles moving us from research to practice on children’s brain development, international child advocacy efforts, and helping the world to see that they can use found objects and local materials to create high-quality, developmentally-stimulating environments for children around the world. We also welcomed to our ICRI family a bilingual preschool, El  Nuevo Mundo, which serves children in a low-income target area of Richmond, California.
  • In Malaysia, we designed an ECD center for the Central Bank of Malaysia that will serve as a model in the region for many years to come.

Our challenges include the need to refine or expand our work to serve more children, more schools, more families, and more communities more effectively in Kenya, Nepal, Ghana, Zimbabwe, India and the U.S.  We are also working to make our offices and programs around the world to become more self-sufficient by launching local fund development initiatives in each of the countries in which we work.

Our reason for hope is that we see a world where many of us better understand the needs of children and are more ready than ever to work at seeking lasting, sustainable solutions that will promote each child’s health, safety, education and security around the world.

You can help by donating to ICRI and, if you wish, designating a country or project that you would like to support. You can visit our website here to decide which project you would like to assist. You can make your donation by going to this link.

We thank those of you who are already part of the ICRI worldwide family and welcome all of you who want to bring about lasting change that will result in a world where no child is hungry, every child can reach his or her full potential and all those who nurture and care for children will be rewarded for the critical roles they play. We wish for you a joyous and peaceful new year!

For the children,

Ken.

Letter from Nepal

Tuesday, December 13th, 2011

ICRI Nepal is thrilled to be hosting intern Emelie Stavholm.  Emelie, an early childhood educator from Sweden, will be working with our National Center for Learning Resources program in Kathmandu.  She has kindly agreed to provide us with regular updates on her experiences in Nepal.

 I have now spent one week inKathmandu,Nepal, a city full of intense traffic, many temples and warm and friendly people. It is the first week out of three months at the ICRI-Nepal office where I will be conducting my internship. I arrived alone but am already feeling as a member of the ICRI-Nepal family due to the warm welcome of the ICRI-Nepal staff.

ICRI Nepal Staff

 

Now, a short introduction seems at place. My name is Emelie and I am a pre-school teacher from Gothenburg,Sweden. I am currently enrolled in the Global Studies Master Program at GothenburgUniversity. My wish is to combine these studies with my knowledge of Early Childhood Development (ECD). By doing an internship at ICRI-Nepal I have been given the opportunity to both learn from and contribute to the field of ECD inNepal.

Already within the first week I had the possibility to meet with the two facilitators Ms Susan Rai and Ms Ram Badan who both are board members ofNationalCenterfor Learning Resources (NCLR ), an ICRI-Nepal project. These two ladies has many years of experience within the field of Early Childhood Development (ECD) and I had the great opportunity of seeing them in action. With so much energy and enthusiasm they managed to get the attention of everybody in the room, no one was left untouched. With the help of acting, singing and story telling, they train teachers in (among other things) first aid equipment at ECD-centers and pre-primary schools and the importance of working creatively with young children.

I feel extremely lucky to have had the opportunity to meet with these ladies from whom I have much to learn. That they are part of ICRI’s global family can only mean great success.

Teacher training in progress

 

Participants engaged in a training session