OLPC Haiti/Background: Difference between revisions
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==Other Education Development Initiatives== |
==Other Education Development Initiatives== |
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==Summary of Educational Initiative Findings == |
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|+'''Summary of Educational Development Initiatives in Haiti''' |
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!Name of Organization |
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!Number of Children They Work With |
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!Number of Education Projects/Centers/Schools, etc. |
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|Compassion Haiti |
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|62,900 children |
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|225 child development centers |
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|Haiti Partners |
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|works with 1,400 students |
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|7 schools |
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|Partners in Health |
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|1.2 million people |
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|Not an education-based NGO |
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|Save the Children |
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|N/A |
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|N/A |
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|SOS Children's Villages Haiti |
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|At least 1,300 children (not including Herman Gmeiner Schools or SOS Girl's House Port-au-Prince) |
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|8 projects (either villages, development centers, schools, etc.) |
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|World Vision |
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|8,000 (at a minimum) |
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|At least 25 schools |
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|UNICEF |
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|80,000 (provided free education), 185,616 school-aged children + 45,520 pre-preschoolers (received learning materials) |
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|N/A |
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|Catholic Diocese of Richmond |
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|N/A |
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|60 schools |
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|'''[http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/COUNTRIES/LACEXT/HAITIEXTN/0,,menuPK:338184~pagePK:141159~piPK:141110~theSitePK:338165,00.html World Bank]''' |
|'''[http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/COUNTRIES/LACEXT/HAITIEXTN/0,,menuPK:338184~pagePK:141159~piPK:141110~theSitePK:338165,00.html World Bank]''' |
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|The World Bank has subsidized nearly 100,000 children in 1,000 schools |
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|The World Bank's [http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/COUNTRIES/LACEXT/0,,contentMDK:21896642~pagePK:146736~piPK:146830~theSitePK:258554,00.html Education for All] initiative aims to increase access to primary education, enhance the quality of education, institutionally strengthen the Ministry of Education and M&E activities. More specifically, from 2007 to 2010, the EFA program subsidized nearly 100,000 children in 1,000 schools, provided daily meals to 45,000 children, enroll 30,000 new first graders each year, and increase teacher training. The World Bank requested [http://web.worldbank.org/external/projects/main?pagePK=64283627&piPK=73230&theSitePK=40941&menuPK=228424&Projectid=P121193 additional financing] for the project in May 2010. |
|The World Bank's [http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/COUNTRIES/LACEXT/0,,contentMDK:21896642~pagePK:146736~piPK:146830~theSitePK:258554,00.html Education for All] initiative aims to increase access to primary education, enhance the quality of education, institutionally strengthen the Ministry of Education and M&E activities. More specifically, from 2007 to 2010, the EFA program subsidized nearly 100,000 children in 1,000 schools, provided daily meals to 45,000 children, enroll 30,000 new first graders each year, and increase teacher training. The World Bank requested [http://web.worldbank.org/external/projects/main?pagePK=64283627&piPK=73230&theSitePK=40941&menuPK=228424&Projectid=P121193 additional financing] for the project in May 2010. |
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Revision as of 19:50, 12 August 2010
Haiti's National Education Background
General Background: It is difficult to find a complete account of how Haiti's national education system is organized and functions. Primary education is compulsory, but families must pay school fees. <ref> Compassion International, Haiti Facts; http://www.compassion.com/about/where/haiti.htm </ref> In 1997, the government passed a 10-year universal access education plan. The government set out to increase the national education budget and start a nation-wide literacy campaign run by 30,000 literacy monitors. School attendance rose from 20% in 1994 to 64% in 2000.<ref>Library of Congress Federal Research Division's Country Profile on Haiti (May 2006); http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/profiles/Haiti.pdf </ref> Despite these successes, there remains significant exclusion and structural deficiencies in Haiti's education system. High school costs (parents must pay school fees to enroll children in public schools), limited access (especially in rural areas), and a lack of classroom space, teaching materials, basic functions are all problems that Haiti faces. <ref> Education report from the UN Special Envoy for Haiti Website; http://www.haitispecialenvoy.org/reports/education </ref>. Some studies have shown that international private schools (run by Canada, France, or the United States) and church-run schools educate 90 percent of students.<ref>Library of Congress Federal Research Division's Country Profile on Haiti (May 2006); http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/profiles/Haiti.pdf </ref> However, other reports state that public schools cover 20% of educational demand. <ref>Plan Cadre des Nations Unies pour l’Aide au Développement, UNDAF 2009-2011, 2008. p.10; http://www.undg.org/index.cfm?P=234&f=H</ref>. While exact numbers vary, it's clear that private schools make up a much larger part of Haiti's education system than public schools.
National Strategy Education for All (SNA-EPT): In 2007, the Haitian Ministry of Education in cooperation with international and national partners developed a National Strategy Education for All (SNA-EPT) (read an English summary on the UN Special Envoy to Haiti's website). The plan's main priorities include:
- Improve equity in the development and protection of early childhood
- Improve equity in the access to formal and non formal education
- Improve the internal efficiency of basic and post-basic education
- Improve the external efficiency of basic and post-basic education
- Improve the overall management and governance of the system.
In addition, the Government of Haiti has identified the following top three challenges in the area of education:
- Increasing enrollment of primary school children (more than 500,000 children are not in school);
- Improving the quality of education (only 20% of primary school teachers are trained);
- Reducing the number of over-aged students in classes (each year, more than 9% of children are not promoted to the next grade).
In response to the SNA-EPT, the UN Special Envoy to Haiti is working with the Government of Haiti to identify 3-5 strategic interventions that will address the challenges above. These include teacher salary support, teacher training, tuition vouchers, school feeding, and supporting "safe" school reconstruction and rehabilitation.
Education Statistics
Categories | Numbers |
---|---|
Total adult literacy rate (%), 2000-2007 | 62 |
Primary school net enrollment/ attendance (%), 2000-2007 | 50 |
Youth literacy, 2000–2007 (M / F)<ref> Youth literacy rate – Number of literate persons aged 15–24, expressed as a percentage of the total population in that age group.</ref> | 76 / 87 |
Percentage of phone/internet users 2006 | 14 / 8 |
Primary school gross enrollment (%) 2000-2007 (M / F)<ref> Primary school gross enrollment ratio – Number of children enrolled in primary school, regardless of age,expressed as a percentage of the total number of children of official primary school age. </ref> | N/A |
Primary school net enrollment (%) 2000-2007 (M / F)<ref> Primary school net enrollment ratio – Number of children enrolled in primary school who are of official primary school age, expressed as a percentage of the total number of children of official primary school age. </ref> | N/A |
Primary school net attendance (%) 2000-2007 (M / F) <ref> Primary school net attendance ratio – Number of children attending primary or secondary school who are of official primary school age, expressed as a percentage of the total number of children of official primary school age. </ref> | 48 / 52 |
Survival rate to last primary grade (%) 2000–2007 (administrative / survey data) <ref> Survival rate to the last grade of primary school – Percentage of children entering the first grade of primary school who eventually reach the last grade of primary school. </ref> | X / 85 |
Secondary school gross enrollment (%) 2000-2007 (M/F)<ref> Secondary school gross enrollment ratio – Number of children enrolled in secondary school, regardless of age, expressed as a percentage of the total number of children of official secondary school age. </ref> | N/A |
Secondary school net enrollment (%) 2000-2007 (M/F)<ref> Secondary school net enrollment ratio – Number of children enrolled in secondary school who are of official secondary school age, expressed as a percentage of the total number of children of official secondary school age.</ref> | N/A |
Secondary school net attendance (%) 2000-2007 (M/F)<ref> Secondary school net attendance ratio – Number of children attending secondary or tertiary school who are of official secondary school age, expressed as a percentage of the total number of children of official secondary school age. </ref> | 18/21 |
UNESCO Education Statistics from 2008 Regional Averages: At this point, Haiti's "UIS Statistics in Brief" is empty.
Categories | Numbers |
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Percent of population under the age of 18 <ref>UN Office of the Special Envoy for Haiti; http://www.haitispecialenvoy.org/key_statistics/</ref> | 50% |
Schooling expense per family <ref>La Stratégie Nationale d’Action pour l’Education pour Tous (SNA EPT), 2007. p. 20; http://www.hausaid.info/uploads/La%20strategie%20nationale%20d%27action%20pour%20l%27education%20pour%20tous,%20Janvier%2007.pdf</ref> | 109 USD per year |
Schooling expense as a percentage of income for a low-income family <ref> Plan Cadre des Nations Unies pour l’Aide au Développement, UNDAF 2009-2011, 2008. p.10; http://www.undg.org/index.cfm?P=234&f=H</ref> | 40% |
Education share of the budget <ref>UN Office of the Special Envoy for Haiti; http://www.haitispecialenvoy.org/reports/education/</ref> | 9% |
Gross enrollment ratio in basic and post-basic education <ref>Plan Cadres Des Nations Unies pour l'Aide au Développement, UNDAF 2009-2011, 2008. p.11; http://www.undg.org/index.cfm?P=234&f=H</ref> | 124% (due to a large number of over-aged students in the system) |
Percentage of over-age children attending school <ref>UNICEF Humanitarian Action Report 2008; http://www.unicef.org/har08/files/har08_Haiti_countrychapter.pdf</ref> | 50% |
Percentage of children enrolled in primary school that will make it to sixth grade <ref>UNICEF Humanitarian Action Report 2008; http://www.unicef.org/har08/files/har08_Haiti_countrychapter.pdf</ref> | 40% |
Number of children ages 6-11 that are out of the educational system <ref>La Stratégie Nationale d’Action pour l’Education pour Tous (SNA EPT), 2007. p. 18; http://www.hausaid.info/uploads/La%20strategie%20nationale%20d%27action%20pour%20l%27education%20pour%20tous,%20Janvier%2007.pdf</ref> | 400,000 (or 22% of total) |
Percentage of educational demand that public schools cover <ref>Plan Cadre des Nations Unies pour l’Aide au Développement, UNDAF 2009-2011, 2008. p.10; http://www.undg.org/index.cfm?P=234&f=H </ref> | 20% |
Number of schools affected by the January 2010 earthquake <ref>UN Office of the Special Envoy for Haiti; http://www.haitispecialenvoy.org/key_statistics/</ref> | 4,992 (23% of all schools) |
PDNA Sector/PDNA SubSector | Cost of Private Damages (USD) | Cost of Public Damages (USD) | Cost of Private Economic Losses (USD) | Cost of Public Economic Losses |
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Culture (3.23%) | 4,350,000 | 21,402,000 | 15,500,000 | 8,150,000 |
Education (40.96%) | 437,771,309 | 41,150,419 | 140,056,013 | 8,005,975 |
Food Security and Nutrition (21.56%) | 292,500,000 | 2,500,000 | 35,000,000 | |
Health (30.72%) | 101,875,000 | 94,604,600 | 86,172,381 | 187,627,388 |
Sports and Leisure (.76%) | 3,500,000 | 7,750,000 | 400,000 | |
Water and Sanitation (2.77%) | 14,080,000 | 19,104,632 | 418,752 | 8,838,505 |
TOTAL LOSS IN SOCIAL SECTOR | 854,076,309 | 186,511,651 | 277,147,146 | 213,021,868 |
OLPC's work in Haiti
Deployments: In a partnership with the Inter-American Development Bank, 13,700 XOs have been purchased for students and teachers in 60 Haitian schools. This number includes 10,000 laptops from the Give One Get One program. Hundreds more have been deployed in smaller pilots by independent NGOs. Following the earthquake in January 2010, almost 3,000 used XOs have been donated by individuals around the world through the OLPC for Haiti project.
Waveplace: Waveplace is a non-profit organization that raises money to purchase XOs for Caribbean children, creates training materials that teach digital media skills, and inspires teachers to use computers in new ways. From February to September of 2008, Waveplace donated 23 XOs to students from the Mercy & Sharing John Branchizio School in Port au Prince, Haiti. Waveplace also provides XO and Etoys training. Following the January 2010 earthquake, Waveplace returned to Haiti in March to organize a two week workshop at Matènwa Community Learning Center for 20 trainee mentors and 26 children. The workshop aimed to train mentors who can each train an additional twenty mentors to lead eight Waveplace pilot projects using XO laptops and Squeak Etoys. OLPC also re-donated 200 laptops being used by 40 mentors and 160 children in Haiti. Check out the Waveplace Haiti blog entries and their OLPC wiki page
Other Education Development Initiatives
Summary of Educational Initiative Findings
Name of Organization | Number of Children They Work With | Number of Education Projects/Centers/Schools, etc. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Compassion Haiti | 62,900 children | 225 child development centers | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Haiti Partners | works with 1,400 students | 7 schools | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Partners in Health | 1.2 million people | Not an education-based NGO | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Save the Children | N/A | N/A | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
SOS Children's Villages Haiti | At least 1,300 children (not including Herman Gmeiner Schools or SOS Girl's House Port-au-Prince) | 8 projects (either villages, development centers, schools, etc.) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
World Vision | 8,000 (at a minimum) | At least 25 schools | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
UNICEF | 80,000 (provided free education), 185,616 school-aged children + 45,520 pre-preschoolers (received learning materials) | N/A | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Catholic Diocese of Richmond | N/A | 60 schools
Other ResourcesHaiti Education Resources
OLPC in Haiti
Education Initiatives Resources
Other
Notes<references /> |