Empowering the Village to Raise the Child:

The Blog of the International Child Resource Institute


Archive for the ‘Nepal’ Category

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

 

Separate and Unequal Education in Nepal

Thursday, August 25th, 2011

ICRI has been working in Nepal for over a decade.  In our projects focusing on education, health, and children’s rights we have seen incredible challenges facing disabled Nepali children and families.

Our National Center for Learning Resources program serves a number of schools where students have physical disabilities.  Our team has been able to effectively advocate for simple accommodations to allow these children to be integrated into the school with their peers.

As a new report from Human Rights Watch documents, however, many disabled Nepali children continue to be isolated and excluded from the country’s educational system.

(August 24, 2011) – Children with disabilities in Nepal face diverse and imposing barriers to getting a basic education, Human Rights Watch said in a report released today. Schools are physically inaccessible, teachers are inadequately trained, and some children with disabilities are unjustly denied admission to neighborhood schools, Human Rights Watch found.

The 76-page report, “Futures Stolen: Barriers to Education for Children with Disabilities in Nepal,” documents the hurdles that children with disabilities face in obtaining a quality education in Nepal. Some children with disabilities experience abuse and neglect at home and in their communities, making it harder for them to gain access to schooling. These barriers result in low attendance and high dropout rates for children with disabilities compared with their non-disabled peers.

“Tens of thousands of children with disabilities in Nepal are being shut out from or neglected by the school system,” said Shantha Rau Barriga, disability rights researcher and advocate at Human Rights Watch. “TheNepalese education system needs to offer appropriate, quality education to all children, including those with disabilities.”

The Human Rights Watch report was based on interviews with nearly 100 disability advocates, teachers, government officials, and children or young people with disabilities and their families.

One of the children Human Rights Watch interviewed was 16-year-old Amman, who lives in the far-western region of Nepal. Because the local school entrance has two steep steps and no ramps, Amman has to crawl to reach his classroom. He cannot use the toilet without assistance and gets no support from school staff, so he either has to wait until he gets home, or another child has to run home to fetch his mother to assist him. Other children in the classroom are afraid to sit near him, so he sits alone in the corner.

Education Ministry officials acknowledge that a significant number of the more than 329,000 primary school aged children who are out of school in Nepal are children with disabilities. The government promotes an inclusive education policy, requiring communities to provide education to all children without discrimination. But many children with disabilities are not provided the support they need to attend community schools, and many schools are unprepared to teach children with disabilities.

Research shows that an inclusive approach to education can boost learning for all students and combat harmful stereotypes of people with disabilities. However, the government of Nepal relies upon segregated, and often inferior, classes for children with disabilities, and separate schools for children who have physical, sensory, or intellectual disabilities.

Many children with disabilities were turned away from schools entirely, Human Rights Watch found. More than half of the families with children with disabilities interviewed by Human Rights Watch reported that their children were denied admission to schools, both public and private. Many parents were not aware that their children had the right to attend school.

International donors and United Nations agencies are seemingly aware of the lack of targeted efforts to ensure that children with disabilities are in school. But they have not done enough to ensure that funding for education is distributed without discrimination and equitably benefits children with disabilities, Human Rights Watch said.

“As funding pours into Education For All programs in Nepal, the government, the UN and international donors need to make sure that children with disabilities are not excluded,” Barriga said. “The government and its partners need to have a clear plan for integrating children with disabilities, particularly intellectual or developmental disabilities, into mainstream schools.”

The curriculum in Nepal’s schools does not take into account differences in learning ability, so children with disabilities who are in mainstream schools repeatedly fail and are more likely to repeat a grade. One 15-year-old boy with a psychosocial disability told Human Rights Watch, “I spent three years in Class 1, then three years in Class 2, then one year in Class 3. But I don’t know the alphabet. The teacher just wrote my exams. That’s why I passed.”

As a result of the lack of educational options for some children with disabilities, lack of information about options, and schools’ refusals to admit children with disabilities, some parents said they saw no choice but to lock their children with disabilities in a room or tie them to a post.

The mother of one young boy with a developmental disability told Human Rights Watch, “I offer food and bring him tea. If he does toilet in the room, I clean it up. I have to take care of the whole house; I can’t just look after him. If I spend the whole day with him, my other child will miss his bus, everything will be in disarray.” She lets her son out of the room once or twice a day to see the sun.

The government of Nepal should revise teacher training materials, train all teachers about inclusive education methods, and improve monitoring of access to and the effectiveness of education for children with disabilities, Human Rights Watch said. The government and donors, working together, need to develop awareness-raising and educational campaigns about the right to education and other rights of people with disabilities. Parliament, in consultation with disabled peoples’ organizations, should comprehensively review all domestic legislation and make amendments to comply fully with the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, Human Rights Watch said.

While it will take time for the school system to become fully inclusive of all children, the government needs to take steps toward this goal, Human Rights Watch said.

For example, the government needs to rethink the use of special resource classes, which are intended as a transition to mainstream schools but which effectively perpetuate segregation. Children in these classes range in age from 6 to 17, with some even in their 20s, and children often remain in these classes for years.

“Nepal needs to honor its obligations to protect the right of all children with disabilities to be educated in a safe, accessible, and non-discriminatory environment,” Barriga said. “Children with disabilities should not be left behind, locked up, or shut out from school and learning.”

- Human Rights Watch press release, 8/24/2011

Pay Tounen Lo

Friday, June 10th, 2011

Remember when we made a very exciting announcement back in November?

Straw Into Gold was co-authored by Ken Jaffe, ICRI’s Founder and Executive Director, and Leslie Falconer, CEO of Mother Goose Time and longtime ICRI supporter.  Ken and Leslie created a hands-on manual, packed with ideas for creating stimulating, developmentally-appropriate learning experiences for young children using found objects or recycled materials.

As we said back in November, “what is most exciting is that the ideas in the book can be implemented around the world for little to no cost, even in areas where teachers and children currently lack access to basic learning materials.”  We knew the book would be tremendously popular—but we had no idea how quickly it would be embraced by educators from around the world!

We’ve received reports back from teachers in Nepal who are using the book both in their classrooms and in teacher training programs.  Educators in rural Zimbabwe have told us that the ideas in the book adapt successfully to their extremely resource-challenged classrooms.  And perhaps most exciting of all?  The book is already being translated!

First up: Creole (Kreyol), for use in Haiti.  A talented team has adapted the language and content of the book to allow for immediate use by Haitian educators working to create an early childhood education system from the ground up.

We are thrilled to see how Straw Into Gold is used by educators around the world—if you’re one of them, please let us know your thoughts!

ICRI Video

Wednesday, January 26th, 2011

We are thrilled to officially announce the release of a new video about ICRI!

The film is under five minutes long, but we think it gives a great sense of the depth and breadth of ICRI’s work with children and families around the world.

Click on the image below to watch the video on YouTube.   Please take a look and let us know your thoughts!

More Recognition for NCLR

Friday, December 17th, 2010

As the National Center for Learning Resources program at ICRI Nepal continues to grow, it has received recognition and great interest from educators and child advocates interested in learning more about this innovative approach to increasing access to high quality early childhood education.  ICRI Nepal Country Director Dhirendra Lamsal was recently invited to present a paper on the project at the South Asia Regional Conference on Early Childhood Development.  From ICRI Nepal:

“Mr. Dhirendra Lamsal, the Country Director of International Child Resource Institute-Nepal (ICRI-Nepal) and presented a paper entitled “An Insight into an Innovative Early Care and Education Program Implemented in Public/Private ECD Centers in Nepal” under the theme of Program Transition, Quality, Content, Model and Innovation during the first South Asia Regional Confernce on Early Childhood Development held in Dhaka, Bangladesh on and from December 7-9, 2010. The Conference was jointly organized by the Bangladesh ECD Network (BEN) and the Asia Pacific Regional Network for Early Childhood (ARNEC). Besides seven plenary sessions, a total of 24 papers were presented under the theme of (i) ECD Policy, Advocacy and Networking, (ii) Program Transition, Quality, Content, Model, Innovation (iii) Inclusion, Equity and Resources (iv) Capacity Building and Professional Development including ECD Programs presented by posters (Ref: programs, abstracts presenters).

Mr. Lamsal in his presentation illuminated the effectiveness of early care and educational services delivered by International Child Resource Institute-Nepal in 19 public and private ECD Centers in Nepal. He provided an insight for transformation of dull, un-stimulating, un-interative, rudimentary teaching practices into stimulating, joyful, meaninigful and creative learning environment for the yough children. Mr. Lamsal undrlined on how ECD-pedagogy  could be transformed into daily care and education of young children with concurrent focus on how holistic development of a young child is possible in a resource poor setting. Also, he expained about community driven methods to respond to the program implementation level challenges during the presentation. Likewise, he discussed the process of taking care of young children at home and their further education in school (ECD) set-up by highlighting major gaps to be bridged by the parents at homes and the ECD facilitators at the school environment. The before and after scenario of the ECD program intervention was illustrated with successful case study of a few children served by ICRI-Nepal. Key lessons and learnings documented during this intervention with reflection on major outcomes/outputs and programmatic experiences were broadly shared during this occassion. Furthermore, the overall program goals, objectives, strategies, and activities as well as needs of up scaling the program areas, beneficiaries, stakeholders and key tools for replication of this program in other parts of the country was also discussed.

Finally, he summed up his presentation sharing a range of positive findings such as decreased drop-out rates in the ECD centers, increased understanding of the community about ECD program, and developed sense of ownership, roles and responsibilities of the community including School Management Committee in the areas of program intervention.”


Congratulations Dhirendra on your successful presentation, and on the innovative work you are doing to improve the lives of children and families in Nepal!

Another Transformation

Friday, October 1st, 2010

One of the newest schools to become involved with ICRI Nepal’s early childhood education program is the Kesh Chandra Primary School.  The school is located in the historic Hanuman Dhoka area of Kathmandu, inside the grounds of a temple.

The school caters to very low income families from the nearby community, and currently offers primary school education from grades one to five.  There is no early childhood classroom.  However, many of the older children bring their younger siblings to school each day, as their parents must work and have no other options for child care.  This means that children as young as 2 spend most of their day sitting silently at desks, and don’t get the developmentally-appropriate learning environment they need.  They also distract the teachers and older siblings from age-appropriate instruction for the primary school students.

Because of ICRI Nepal’s past success in helping other primary schools add early childhood classrooms, the District Education Office reached out to us and asked us to help the teachers and staff at Kesh Chandra.  ICRI Nepal staff has begun visiting the school to complete a needs assessment and to work with the teachers, staff, and parents to develop a vision for the new early childhood program.

There are a number of challenges at this particular site.  The existing classroom space is extremely small and cramped.  All five grades of the primary school are currently packed into a very small area, with makeshift cubicles dividing the grades.  There is little light and poor ventilation.  There are no materials other than outdated textbooks, and no space for the children to move freely.

And yet, there is a dedicated staff, a supportive principal, and many bright young minds eager to learn.  Not to mention the involvement of ICRI Nepal, which is already speaking to the temple leadership about freeing up additional space within the compound for an early childhood classroom.

Visiting Kesh Chandra, it is hard to imagine the school someday containing a vibrant, developmentally-appropriate child development space.  However, as I’ve shared in previous weeks, ICRI Nepal is certainly capable of achieving this kind of transformation.  I’ve already told you about how they turned a closet into a classroom.  How they help teachers to rethink their entire concept of early childhood education.  How they can craft a beautiful learning environment out of found objects and locally-made materials.  And how they even convinced a group of teachers to give up their own office space to make a better learning environment for young children.

So I have no doubt that they will be able to achieve a remarkable transformation for the young children currently sitting silently behind their desks in the dark, cramped classrooms at Kesh Chandra Primary School… but these kinds of transformations are only possible with the support of people like you.  We need to continuously raise funds to pay for the costs of renovating buildings, training teachers, purchasing materials, and hiring staff.  A donation of any amount helps us to make developmentally-appropriate early childhood education a reality for children and families in Nepal.  On behalf of ICRI Nepal, I want to thank you so much for your interest and support, and ask you to please consider making a donation today.

It Takes a Village

Friday, September 24th, 2010

As discussed in our last post, ICRI Nepal– like all of ICRI’s offices around the world–has a comprehensive approach to child advocacy.  We believe that children don’t exist in isolation.  We work to help the whole child—and that means supporting the child’s family, the child’s school, and the child’s community, however we can.  This is why our programs encompass HIV/AIDS prevention, community economic development, maternal/child health, and a range of other subjects.  It’s all part of our effort to empower the village to raise the child.


At the same time, early childhood education is at the heart of ICRI’s international programs, and ICRI Nepal is no exception.  I want to feature just a few more of the early childhood classrooms that have been impacted by ICRI Nepal’s National Center for Learning Resources.

ICRI Nepal has been working with the Pragati School since 2005.  The school serves a very large number of children from mixed caste/mixed income backgrounds.  However, like many schools in Nepal, there is simply not enough space to accommodate all of the children easily.

Since the school staff was eager to add an early childhood classroom, ICRI Nepal brought in several volunteers to renovate and paint an unused room off the school’s courtyard.  The classroom was soon filled with children, and the teachers, staff, and parents were very proud of the new addition to their school community.

At the same time, there were serious structural problems with the early childhood space, including a lack of windows, which caused problems with light and ventilation.  ICRI Nepal worked hard to engage the school community in a series of meetings and visioning workshops, so that everyone could have input into a strategic plan for improving the early childhood classroom and the school as a whole.

(old early childhood classroom)

And what was the result?  The teachers volunteered to give up their office space, two rooms adjacent to the main courtyard.  The rooms were small, but lined with windows and full of light.  Although the teachers had enjoyed this space for many years, they decided that it was more important to utilize it as a learning environment for young children.

The entire school community pitched in to craft the new early childhood rooms.  ICRI Nepal commissioned and designed new furniture and materials for the space.  Teachers from the school began attending National Center for Learning Resources trainings.  And ICRI Nepal staff worked side by side in the classrooms with the teachers, parents, and the very supportive school administration.

What’s resulted is a beautiful early childhood learning environment.  The children are engaged.  The teachers are caring.  The principal is supportive.  The parents are delighted.  And working together as a team, they’ve achieved something remarkable.

Supporting Prisoners and their Children in Nepal

Monday, September 13th, 2010

Pokhara, Nepal is a major tourist destination, drawing travelers from around the globe who wish to explore the nearby Annapurna mountain range.  The center of the town is lined with shops, restaurants, and cafes overlooking the beautiful lake and the spectacular Himalayan peaks in the distance.

Just a short walk from the tourist area of town, however, lies a starkly different place.  Kaski Prison, Pokhara houses over 200 male and female prisoners.  There are also several young children living at the jail– in Nepal, a child under the age of 5 whose mother is incarcerated typically lives with her inside the prison.  Around the age of 5 these children are usually placed in group homes and foster homes throughout the country by Prisoners’ Assistance Nepal or one of the other organizations in the Network for Children, Prisoners, and Dependents (NCPD).

ICRI Nepal facilitated the formation of NCPD, a coalition of grassroots organizations working to support prisoners and their children, in 2001. We have remained deeply involved with the organization and with its efforts to improve the wellbeing of families impacted by Nepal’s prison system.

In recent years, ICRI Nepal and NCPD have received funding from the United Nations Development Programme and the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime to implement HIV/AIDS prevention, vocational training, and psychosocial support programs at Kaski Prison Pokhara and in prisons elsewhere in Nepal.

I must admit that I had serious qualms about the idea of sending young children into a prison environment, where their health and education would likely be compromised.  After visiting Kaski Prison Pokhara and other Nepali jails, however, I looked at the situation in a somewhat different light.  Unlike prisons in the United States, which tend to isolate prisoners and discourage group affiliation, the Nepali prisoners live collectively.  The prisoners elect their own leaders, are responsible for much of their own care and support, and are encouraged to form affinity groups.  The young children residing in the prison freely interact with their mother and form strong attachments to her, and also received copious attention from their numerous “aunties” residing in the same cells.

Despite the hard work of ICRI Nepal, NCPD, and other NGOs, the Nepali prisons I visited were severely overcrowded and living conditions were quite dire.  Still, I was so proud of our extremely dedicated ICRI Nepal staff who work in Pokhara, Chitwan, and other locales.  They treat all prisoners and their families with dignity and respect, and have worked hard to design new and effective educational programs and income generating projects for the prisoners, such as mushroom farming and candle making.  Our UN-funded projects have been highly successful in increasing knowledge, skills, and behavior around HIV risk reduction and general health.  They also provide the prisoners with a chance to learn, to increase their skills, and to better provide for their families.  As one participating female inmate told me, “sometimes this is the only thing I have to look forward to.”

(ICRI Nepal staff working at Kaski Prison Pokhara)

Luka Mari (or Duck, Duck Goose)

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

Another early childhood center that has seen a total transformation after working with ICRI Nepal is the Balmandir Thecho ECD Center.  The Centre is run by the National Children’s Organization, Balmandir.  Most of the children’s parents are day laborers, and as such there is high turnover and a high level of poverty amongst the student population.

When ICRI Nepal was first invited to work at this school, children as young as 2 years old were sitting behind desks all day, working out of textbooks.  It took many months of meetings, tranings, and conversations to convince the administration to allow the children to have greater freedom of movement.  In the end a compromise was reached—low round tables in the 2 to 3 year old room and colorful, stackable, movable tables and chairs in the 3 to 4 year old room.  Staff and parents are very proud of the new tables and chairs, which can be easily moved aside to allow the children to roam the small classrooms freely.

Although the Centre has little to no resources for materials, the teachers are very dedicated and have worked with ICRI Nepal staff to create activity centers full of found objects and locally-made materials.  The teachers have also transformed the curriculum based on what they’ve learned at the National Center for Learning Resources trainings hosted by ICRI Nepal.

On the day I visited the school, the youngest children was enthralled with a pile of homemade blocks that had been painted with Nepali and English characters.  The older children were ecstatically singing songs written by their teacher while they drew pictures on bits of recycled paper and cardboard.

I was invited to sit in a circle with the children to play a “special Nepali game” called Luka Mari.  Everyone closed their eyes, waiting for the “tapper” to choose them—and when they did, chased that person back around the circle to their empty spot.  It took me a few rounds to catch on, but I soon realized that this was the same game of Duck, Duck Goose I’d enjoyed in my own classrooms as a child!