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Education in conflict and crisis – using models and methodologies differently Why are non-formal and complimentary education models important in conflict.

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Presentation on theme: "Education in conflict and crisis – using models and methodologies differently Why are non-formal and complimentary education models important in conflict."— Presentation transcript:

1 Education in conflict and crisis – using models and methodologies differently Why are non-formal and complimentary education models important in conflict settings? What are the benefits and limitations in operating education programs outside of the formal system? Is there room for integration into the formal system in the future? E. Schweitzer, Harvard April 2008

2 Issues to address  Absence and destruction of materials and infrastructure  Death or absence of teachers  Dysfunction of ed management system/payroll/examination systems etc  Absence of budget to pay ed system staff  Displaced and dysfunctional populations  Transition Programming needs Out of school / over age children Gaps also in parental education and training if conflict is long term – 2 generation syndrome – need for ECD and parenting skills  Language of instruction/curriculum/materials for refugees in other countries

3 How to distinguish formal from non-formal/community institutions?  Overlapping types of delivery – sometimes methodologies and systems the same Bosnia – home based schooling to support education during siege of Sarajevo Kosovo – parallel formal education system but run underground – is this formal or non formal? Difference in programming run in formal school facilities and with government support and programming run outside the government system – this is increasingly rare. Most programs are using govt. facilities. Schools started by INGOs but with community support – many are like this in conflict affected areas.

4 Non traditional institutions: Community Schooling in Conflict  Type 1. Community schools – can be existing community schools started prior to war or disaster can be schools started during the war or in the aftermath during a vacuum in education ( Educo in El Salvador) - can catalyze change if carefully supported and managed. Can be managed by community and still have government support or NGO support

5 What are the effects?  Revitalize communities and act as a focus for community regeneration and solidarity  Provide continuity of education and stability for children  Can have a protective role - in refugee camps, particularly for girls.  Provide the opportunity for education innovation

6 What are some issues?  Can attract unwanted attention to children and be seen as targets  Can be used to indoctrinate children  Are very vulnerable to lack of funding if the situation is economically unstable  Are usually fee paying – this runs against much thinking on the need for free primary education  Do not address youth needs beyond primary

7 Type II. Methodologies are common, but type of delivery situation differs- Accelerated Learning  Accelerated Learning – what is it ? A systematic approach to teaching the whole person, with specific elements that enable the students to learn faster across the age ranges. Similar to effective teaching and learning – child friendly environments, active learning…. HOWEVER “A/L” labelled programs in conflict/post conflict settings do not always use the formal concepts of A/L – curriculum can just be “catch up” compressed with no new learning techniques

8 Contexts for A/L use at basic ed. Levels in Africa  Post Conflict Settings – overage children who have missed out on schooling, poor infrastructure and teacher supply  Conflict settings/refugee camps – again targets out of school, disenfranchised  Also used in non conflict settings Vulnerable/inaccessible groups with poor school attendance – pastoralists, rural girls, service personnel ( S. Sudan) Drop outs – poor performers - Brazil

9 Uganda – a post conflict setting  Put in place to address children who missed schooling because of war – aims to get children back into the formal system.  Govt. supported with centers in primary schools, teachers recruited from local communities  Five year curriculum compressed to three 1-3, 4-5 – a third year under development – two tracked, one to finish formal schooling and one with a vocational component.

10 Liberia – also post conflict  Modeled on Uganda, addressing over age out of school children  Addresses only basic subjects at lower grades  Implemented by consortium of INGOs as non formal after school program  Difficulties include large class sizes, difficulty of curriculum, confusion over facility use, not enough connection between “formal” and “non formal” systems

11 North Darfur- conflict in rural areas  Many children out of school and in refugee camps – reaches 35,000 children 60% of which are girls. – protective aspect  Run largely by INGOs – to mainstream into regular camp schools  Very poor conditions, lack of staff and materials

12 Issues for further exploration  Can pull children and teachers from traditional classes to non traditional system  May be unsustainable because of INGO funding for teachers  When over age issue is settling down, may be inappropriate as children skip a grade  Insufficient evaluation of programs, M and E weak, data on mobile populations difficult to access to measure success  Little data on costs  Should it be short term or a feature of an education system?  A/L non traditional faces prejudice from communities and educational systems ( Kenya, Phillipines)  Need to accredit community based teachers  Certification of schools and graduation qualifications very important for children returning home.


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