For some time now, educationists and development sector watchdogs have been questioning why scholastic outcomes remain poor, in spite of the government’s inputs into schools and a countrywide rise in school enrolment rates. Why is it that the 2016 ASER report still shows that one out of every four Class VIII students can’t read texts meant for Class II? Saajha, a Delhi-based start-up has come up with an innovative programme that could offer at the least, a partial solution — it empowers parents to become more involved in school functioning and creating a better learning environment for their children.
Conceived in 2012 by Abhishek Choudhary and Saransh Vaswani, both Gandhi fellows, and Prashast Srivastava, an Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad alumnus, Saajha works directly with parents and communities associated with 82 municipal schools in Delhi. It trains them to participate and maximise the role of school management committees, or SMCs, mandated by the Right to Education Act, 2009. Consisting of parents, teachers, social workers and the local MLA, these have since emerged as potent tools for improving school infrastructure and involving the community in the education of their children.
Consider these examples: Mumtaz Begum has started a library for children in her East Delhi neighbourhood after attending a Saajha summer camp. “I’m illiterate but want to encourage my children’s generation to read books,” she says. Another parent from a South Delhi neighbourhood, Sushma, has been instrumental in getting the municipal authorities to remove the unhygienic food vendors outside her children’s school. “I’ve also pressured them to clean up the garbage dump outside school,” she says. Shahida Begum, along with other members of her SMC, goes door-to-door to convince dropouts to return to school. “Recently, to ensure parents came for the parent-teacher meeting to school, I had its date and time announced on the loudspeaker of the neighbourhood mosque,” she says. Parents note with pride that their regular interventions have resulted in improved school functioning — reduction in teacher absenteeism, more attentive students, better midday meals and cleaner toilets.
Saajha plans to scale up its operations significantly in the near future. “We’re targeting 200 rural and urban schools in the next three years,” says Srivastava. “Additionally, we would like to impart training to 10,000 SMCs. All this will cost an estimated Rs 9.7 crore.” Its donors include Central Square Foundation, Echoing Green and Kaivalya Education Foundation. “We’re currently identifying more partners to support the scale-up,” says Srivastava. Meanwhile, Sushma is dreaming of helping her children’s school to become as good as any private school, while Mumtaz Begum hopes her daughter will grow up to become a doctor. As more parents learn to see themselves as potential, and potent, resources in the country’s education system, these dreams may be well on their way to becoming a reality.
Visit www.saajha.org or follow them on Facebook or Twitter for more information
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Parents get schooled
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