To further the cause of children in secondary education.
By Sujeet Rajan
NEW YORK: More than three million dollars have been announced to seven non-profit organizations in India for innovative projects that will increase the participation, quality, and relevance of secondary education for economically disadvantaged and marginalized children.
The announcement was made today by a partnership of philanthropic organizations at the ongoing 2014 Global Philanthropy Forum, in Redwood City, California. The Partnership to Strengthen Innovation and Practice in Secondary Education, the MacArthur Foundation, The MasterCard Foundation, Human Dignity Foundation, Intel Foundation, and an anonymous donor, made the announcement. Altogether 23 investments will support innovative initiatives that provide learning opportunities and life and livelihood skills for underserved youth between the ages of 12 and 19 in East Africa, Nigeria, and India.
The Partnership also announced the addition of two new members to its ranks this year: Dubai Cares and Comic Relief. In all, grants totaled $15,788,327 for this year and a commitment of an additional $13 million was announced in the next year for innovative projects in developing countries. The seven Indian organizations who will receive the grants are:
- International Center for Research on Women: $550,000 to adapt and test an in-school model that engages industry and prospective employers to help prepare girls for employment after completing secondary school.
- Lend-A-Hand India: $510,000 to teach employment-relevant skills to secondary school children in Gujarat.
- STIR Education (Schools & Teachers Innovating for Results): $500,000 to convene networks of educators in secondary education to identify, test, and scale promising innovations that improve teaching and learning outcomes.
- Aga Khan Foundation: $499,883 to improve opportunities for out-of-school adolescents in Hyderabad, through training on employment-relevant skills in partnership with Mahita, a local nongovernment organization.
- Going to School: $403,478 in support of an initiative that uses storytelling to teach employment-relevant and transferable skills to students in grades 8 and 9 in Bihar, with the goal of promoting transition to and retention in secondary school.
- American India Foundation: $403,283 to help increase demand for education and enable girls to attend secondary school in the Kutch district in Gujarat.
- Centre for Budget and Policy Studies: $186,500 to assess the government-certified Open and Distance Learning model as an effective option for secondary level education for marginalized children.
The total grants include an investment of more than $5 million to support the Education Development Center in Rwanda, which will provide secondary students with work-readiness skills and school-to-work transition support and will incorporate these programs into the secondary education system nationwide.
“Girls with higher levels of education on average marry later, have smaller families, survive childbirth at higher rates, experience reduced incidences of HIV/AIDS, have children more likely to survive to age five, earn more, and contribute to higher rates of economic growth at the national level,” said MacArthur President Robert Gallucci, in a statement. “Secondary education is a critical step in a young person’s journey to higher education or the workforce,” said Reeta Roy, President and CEO of The MasterCard Foundation, in a statement. “This partnership is testing new ideas and scaling approaches that have the potential to transform how education is accessed, while improving the quality and relevance of what is being taught.” The other grants announced are:
- Adeso: African Development Solutions: $498,000 to support a mobile education project seeking to provide children with employment-relevant skills in Kenya.
- Africa Educational Trust: $419,000 to improve learning and retention in Northern Uganda.
- Aga Khan Foundation USA: $300,000 in support of a community engagement initiative seeking to educate girls in the sciences in Kenya.
- Bixby Center for Population, Health, and Sustainability at the University of California, Berkeley: $600,000 to pilot an educational enrichment program in partnership with the Center for Girl Child Education that combines school- and community-based safe spaces to reach secondary school-aged girls in rural communities outside of Zaria City in Kaduna, Nigeria.
- Center for Change and Community Development: $480,000 to produce and distribute a film and television and radio programs designed to increase demand for girls’ education in Nigeria.
- CEDA International: $300,000 to expand a mentoring program in conflict-affected regions of Uganda that provides women with opportunities to learn leadership and life skills.
- International Institute for Educational Planning: $585,000 to support the expansion of the post-primary education portion of a global online resource tool designed to connect education policymakers, practitioners, and researchers to evidence-based methods for improving student learning outcomes.
- Kentalis International Foundation: $409,000 in support of a pilot on innovative teaching skills for deaf learners in Tanzania.
- Kenya Community Development Foundation: $750,000 to scale up the Global Give Back Circle model in Kenya, which integrates mentoring, private sector investment, and local community support to provide marginalized girls with education and employable skills.
- Mercy Corps: $500,000 in support of a financial literacy curriculum targeting girls in Nigeria developed by private sector employers to ensure labor-market relevance.
- Population Council: $498,000 to expand access to secondary school education for teenage mothers in Kenya.
- Stichting Cordaid: $500,000 to expand and test the Performance Based Financing education model in Shabunda District, South Kivu, Democratic Republic of Congo. The model provides financial resources to schools on the basis of performance.
- The Global Fund for Children: $650,000 to identify and strengthen innovative, cost-effective secondary-level alternative education models that address access barriers and quality learning outcomes for adolescent girls in the conflict-affected regions of Northern and Western Uganda.
- Voluntary Service Overseas: $591,917 to increase secondary school completion rates and support students in accessing vocational training, higher education, and employment opportunities in Tanzania.
- War Child Canada: $500,000 to support “Making Waves”, a radio-based learning project targeting girls in South Kivu, Democratic Republic of Congo.
Take a look at the video below to see a glimpse of the work by the Partnership to Strengthen Innovation and Practice in Secondary Education as it supports efforts to increase education access and improve learning outcomes for marginalized populations in developing countries, including in India and Africa:
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NGO = indirectly distroying a country.