To help children realise their right to a primary education of good quality, we need to: promote early learning experiences from birth guarantee children.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Outcome mapping in child rights-based programming
Advertisements

Children with Disabilities UNICEFs Approach and Country-level Programming.
Skills-based health education including life skills Making the links Unicef, New York Also go to
One Science = Early Childhood Pathway for Healthy Child Development Sentinel Outcomes ALL CHILDREN ARE BORN HEALTHY measured by: rate of infant mortality.
C ONFERENCE O N I NCLUSIVE E DUCATION F OR C HILDREN WITH D ISABILITIES September, 2011 Gerison Lansdown.
Lara Evans, Deputy Director Food Security and Livelihoods World Vision, Inc. Improving Early Grade Education through Food for Education.
Healthy Schools, Healthy Children?
Every Child Matters. Why and what? In January 2002 Victoria Climbié was murdered by her carers after a long period of abuse In January 2003 Lord Laming.
PORTFOLIO.
Head of Learning: Job description
SCHOOL PSYCHOLOGISTS Helping children achieve their best. In school. At home. In life. National Association of School Psychologists.
CHILD HEALTH NURSING.
3 High expectations for every child
One Teacher’s Experience from the province of Manitoba Sandra Pacheco Melo September, 2011.
Introduction to Strengthening Families: An Effective Approach to Supporting Families Massachusetts Home Visiting Initiative A Department of Public Health.
The purpose of this Unit is to enable individuals to develop the key principles, values and attitude which are central to high quality care practice Key.
The Dakar Framework for Action: Quality Education and EFA
Impact: Improved life chances for marginalised girls in Malawi AoC trained in learner-centred participatory teaching methods, SRH needs of girls, literacy,
Rights to Education Aung Myo Min HREIB. What is the Human Right to Education?  The human right of all persons to education is explicitly set out in the.
 HOW CAN GENDER DESCRIMINATION BE ERADICATED IN EDUCATION?  Gender discrimination can be eradicated through intensive public education to change deep.
RIGHT BASED APPROACH.
10 Early Childhood Program Standards. Relationships  Promote positive relationships with all parents and children.  Children’s learning is encouraged.
NAEYC- Early Childhood Program Standards
Promoting child rights to end child poverty Plan Rwanda CSP II Right to Access Quality & Inclusive Education 1 RENCP GA July 2015 By: Paul.
FIFTH ANNIVERSARY OF THE INTERNATIONAL CONVENTION ON PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES, Madrid, 6/7 th May, 2013 Participation of children with disabilities, Gerison.
Interstate New Teacher Assessment and Support Consortium (INTASC)
1 Critical issue module 3 Children with disabilities.
APAPDC National Safe Schools Framework Project. Aim of the project To assist schools with no or limited systemic support to align their policies, programs.
1 United Way of Mat-Su Community Plan Education Children & Youth Achieve Their Potential School Readiness Academic Completion Career & Life Skills Preparedness.
SCHOOL COUNSELING "Helping children to become all that they are capable of being." Created by Tammy P. Roth, MEd Licensed School Counselor.
A Guide to NAEYC Accreditation
Thomas College Name Major Expected date of graduation address
Goal 4 Target by target response to the Education 2030 Agenda
Why human rights budget work is important Because human rights are/should be central to governance Because human rights are/should be central to governance.
Teachers recall them, parents recognise them: good schools are places where individuals grow by walking the extra mile. Brighouse and Woods, 1999.
Mars 2006WG.ECD. ADEA1 ECD ISSUES & RECOMMENDATIONS Children Ready for Schools Schools Ready For Children.
Early Learning: Status and Way Forward Introduction to the Conference.
1 Foundations of American Education, Fifth Edition L. Dean Webb, Arlene Metha, & K. Forbis Jordan L. Dean Webb, Arlene Metha, & K. Forbis Jordan. Foundations.
Ready communities... Ready communities... Ready Children... Ready Families... Ready Schools... Ready Communities Virginia’s Definition of School Readiness.
A Focus on Health and Wellbeing Wendy Halliday Learning and Teaching Scotland.
Willmot Public School Raising learning expectations and seeing them through Ineffective schools do too much poorly, effective schools do focussed things.
Policy and guidelines on school health, nutrition, sanitation and safety (SHNSS) CELM, Mombasa Nov-Dec /26/2015 3:11 AM1.
Defining Protection Concepts, Practices, Frameworks.
Article 1 Everyone under the age of 18 has all the rights in the Convention. Definition of the child.
ASRH and related policies, legislations, guidelines, standards and plan of action.
GENDER & EDUCATION. Gender parity in education Equal participation of both sexes in different levels of education A quantitative concept.
KENYA PRMARY SCHOOL HEADTEACHERS ASSOCIATION (KEPSHA) ANNUAL CONFERENCE MOMBASA, 4 TH TO 8TH AUGUST 2014 PRESENTATION BY DR. BELIO R. KIPSANG, THE PRINCIPAL.
Sticking to Our Goals: Scholars and Donors as Agents of Women’s Empowerment and Sustainable Development The Global Women’s Fund of the Episcopal Diocese.
1 Core Competencies for Primary School Teachers in Crisis Contexts.
Buffalo City Metropolitan Municipality Development of Child and Youth Development Strategy ECD Session 13 April 2016.
International treaties with relevance to education Universal Declaration of Human Rights Free elementary education International Covenant on Economic,
A Developmentally Responsive Middle Level Education Kimberly Frazier November 20 th, 2009.
A Rights-Based Approach to EFA. EFA MDA and RBA “The EFA MDA takes a rights-based approach to education, referring to relevant standards contained in.
Gender Equality, the SDGs and Small Islands Developing States
Links with and between other Goals and Quality Frameworks
Principles Of Women Empowerment
Universal Primary/Basic Education: Goal #2
Inclusive Education and Schools:
Universal Primary/Basic Education: Goal #2
Sheldon Shaeffer Chair, Board of Directors of the Asia-Pacific
Coastlands Hotel – Durban, South Africa November 2016
Collected and presented by ELT. Supervisor Mr. Ashraf Adli
PLATFORM FOR ENGAGEMENT
SECTOR PRIORITIES AND OUTCOMES
Some thoughts from Unicef
Realising the Rights of Indigenous Children
Data Analysis Workshop on Education Indicators
Unions driving Education 2030 forward
Education SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOAL 4
By 2030, ensure that all youth and a substantial proportion of adults, both men and women, achieve literacy and numeracy By 2030, ensure that all.
Presentation transcript:

To help children realise their right to a primary education of good quality, we need to: promote early learning experiences from birth guarantee children safe, protective, and gender- sensitive spaces, free them from violence and abuse, and ensure their health and well-being raise teacher morale, status, and motivation mobilise community support for education Achieving quality education

Above all, to help develop learning environments which promote and demonstrate a broad definition of quality -- quality learners: healthy, well-nourished, ready to learn, and supported by their family and community quality content: with relevant curricula and adequate materials for literacy, numeracy, and the essential knowledge and skills for life quality teaching-learning processes: with child-centred and (life) skills-based approaches and technology applications to reduce disparities and promote learning Achieving quality education

quality learning environments –policies and practices which prohibit harassment, humiliation, violence, corporal punishment, and substance abuse –facilities with adequate classrooms, clean water supplies, and sanitation facilities –services which promote safety and physical and psycho-social health quality outcomes: with defined learning outcomes (knowledge, attitudes and skills) and suitable ways to assess them, at classroom and national levels And gender-sensitive throughout… To develop and put in place this broad definition of quality, we need rights-based, child-friendly schools...

Is a child-seeking school –actively identifying excluded children to get them enrolled in school and included in learning –treating children as subjects with rights and States as duty-bearers with obligations to fulfil these rights –demonstrating, promoting, and helping to monitor the rights and well-being of ALL children in the community A rights-based, child-friendly school:

Is a child-centred school –acting in the best interests of the child –leading to the realisation of the childs full potential –concerned about the whole child: her health, nutritional status, and well-being –concerned about what happens to children before they enter school and after they leave school A rights-based, child-friendly school:

Above all -- has an environment of good quality Inclusive of children Effective with children Healthy and protective for children Gender-sensitive Involved with children, families, and communities A rights-based, child-friendly school:

A Child-Friendly School (CFS) -- INCLUSIVE of children Does not exclude, discriminate, or stereotype on the basis of difference Provides education that is free and compulsory, affordable and accessible, especially to families and children at risk

CFS -- INCLUSIVE of children Respects diversity and ensures equality of opportunity for all children (e.g., girls, working children, children with disabilities, victims of exploitation and violence) Responds to diversity -- meets the differing circumstances and needs of children (based on gender, social class, ethnicity, and ability level)

CFS -- EFFECTIVE with children Promotes good quality teaching and learning processes –instruction appropriate to each childs learning needs, abilities, and learning styles –active, co-operative, democratic, gender- sensitive learning Provides structured content and good quality materials and resources

CFS -- EFFECTIVE with children Enhances teacher capacity, morale, commitment, status, and income -- and their recognition of child rights Promotes quality learning outcomes –defines and helps children learn what they need to learn (e.g., literacy, numeracy, life skills, child rights) –teaches children how to learn

CFS -- HEALTHY and PROTECTIVE for children (The FRESH Approach) Ensures a learning environment of good quality -- healthy, hygienic, safe, and gender-sensitive –adequate water and sanitation facilities and healthy classrooms –healthy policies and practices - e.g., free of drugs and tobacco, corporal punishment, and harassment –a venue for health ministry services - micronutrient and vitamin supplements, de- worming, school nutrition, counselling

CFS -- HEALTHY and PROTECTIVE for children Provides life-skills based health education Promotes both the physical and the psycho-socio- emotional health of teachers and learners Helps to defend and protect all children from abuse and harm Provides positive experiences for children

CFS -- SENSITIVE TO GENDER Promotes gender equality in enrolment and achievement Eliminates gender stereotypes Guarantees girl-friendly facilities, curricula, textbooks, and teaching Socialises girls and boys in a non-violent environment and encourages respect for each others rights, dignity, and equality

CFS -- INVOLVED with children, and communities Child-centred: –promotes child participation in all aspects of school life Family-focused: –works to strengthen families as the childs primary caregivers and educators –helps children, parents, and teachers establish harmonious collaborative relationships

CFS -- INVOLVED with children, families and communities Community-based: –encourages local partnerships in education –acts IN the community for the sake of children –works with other actors (duty-bearers) to ensure fulfilment of childrens rights