CUSTOMERS.COM® RESEARCH FROM THE PATRICIA SEYBOLD GROUP
Innovation
in Education: School Children
Improve their Families' Livelihoods
At URDT, It Takes a Child to Raise a Village
By Patricia B. Seybold, CEO and Sr. Consultant
November 25, 2009
NETTING
IT OUT
One of the toughest challenges
in education is finding ways to motivate and inspire kids who come from poor,
disadvantaged backgrounds. Children who
come to school hungry, distracted by problems at home, and ill-prepared, are
hard to engage and to teach. In many parts of the world, parents who never
went to school and are struggling everyday to make ends meet, often prefer
to keep their able-bodied kids at home to help earn money on the family's
farm or business, or to tend the younger kids and do housework. Even when they
do let their kids go to school, these parents often aren't supportive.
As soon as the child comes home after school, he or she is put to work for
the family. There's no time or energy for studying and little apprec-iation
for the child's academic achievements.
This is the story of an
innovative approach to educating children from poor and disadvantaged families
that is succeeding beyond anyone's expectations.
Not only are children graduating with honors, they cause their families' incomes
to increase by 20 percent while they are attending school! Uganda Rural Development
and Training Programme (URDT) has created an innovative and replicable approach
to primary and secondary education that can be applied all over the world—even
in developed countries—wherever there are children from disadvantaged
homes who need a different kind of education: education that is designed
to em-power kids, not pour information into their heads.
URDT'S
EDUCATIONAL INNOVATIONS
Since 2000, Uganda Rural
Development and Training (URDT) in Kagadi, Kibaale District, has been running
a Girls' School for 240 girls that has brought
increased health, prosperity, and peace to the surrounding villages in over
four counties of rural, western Uganda—a region in which the average
income is $1 a day.
Here are some of the real innovations that the URDT founders, the dedicated
teachers at this school, and their willing and eager female students have co-designed
over the past decade:
• Unique Co-Curriculum.
Academics plus training in visionary leadership and integrated
development.
• Two-Generation
Education. Kids teach their parents much of what they learn.
Parents are encouraged to take local courses.
• Back Home
Projects. Kids and their families commit to designing and completing
a project designed
to improve the family's lifestyle each term. The kids
are graded on the accomplishments of their families each semester.
• Community
Outreach thru Drama and Radio. The children teach core values
of human rights, gender equality, nutrition and sanitation, environmental
sustainability,
and peace and justice by writing and producing plays in their
communities and
by producing radio programs that reach a broad population. Girls Education Movement.
Educating girls in cultures in which girls' education
is not the norm is now recognized as a fundamental lever for systemic and long-term
change. URDT's Girls' School has been active in the Girls' Education
Movement. Its girls have won awards and have been recognized as leaders by
the international community.
Expanding and Replicating the Model
Yet URDT's leaders
are convinced that their model for innovative education and child-led development
will work with boys and girls, in regular schools
as well as boarding schools, in urban settings as well as rural settings.
For the last two years, URDT has also been running the public primary and
secondary schools in neighboring districts and is already achieving remarkable
results for both boys and girls, their families, and their communities. The
Uganda Ministry of Education is following their work closely with an eye to
incorporating this model into the national curriculum.
THE GENESIS
OF THE URDT GIRLS' SCHOOL
First: A Grass Roots Self-Help Initiative
URDT began in 1987 in the
small trading center of Kagadi in western Uganda, when its three founders,
Mwalimu Musheshe (an agronomist), Ephrem Rutaboba
(a water and sanitation expert), and Sylvana Franco Veltkamp (who had spent
much of her early career working for the United Nations), met with village
and tribal leaders and asked them if they'd like to improve the living
and economic conditions of their communities. After receiving a warm welcome,
the team began with a series of participatory planning workshops in which they
asked the men and women, old and young, how their current living conditions
were, how they would ideally like them to be, and what they wanted to do to
change their current circumstances to achieve their visions.
Next: A Demonstration Farm and Vocational Institute
Over the next 12 years, URDT grew from two guys and a truck showing people
how to protect their wells, build latrines, prevent disease, and grow more
profitable crops to a bustling 80-acre campus with a demonstration organic
farm, a vocational and technical institute, human rights and land rights advocacy,
tools and training for craftspeople, and many extension services. Kagadi town
had grown to be a thriving trading center with over 30 stores. Three women
graduates of the Institute had launched a thriving community savings bank which
provided loans to businesses and farmers.
The Opportunity: Educate Girls as Change Agents
In the late 1990s, Mwalimu
Musheshe, by then, well respected in the community, was approached by a successful
businessman and asked if he could help. The
businessman wanted to find a bright girl from a poor rural family and give
her the advantage of a world-class education. He wanted to send her abroad
to receive a top quality education in England or Switzerland. Musheshe asked, “How
much money do you plan to spend?” The benefactor replied: “$20,000.” Musheshe
said, “With $20,000, I could start a school for hundreds of girls like
that.” So he did.
GIRLS SCHOOL CO-CURRICULUM
The URDT Girls' School uses the approved Ugandan public school curriculum
for primary and secondary students: English (the country's official language),
math, science, history, social studies, physical education, and art. To that
core curriculum the Girls' School has added:
• Technologies
for Creating1 – Visionary
leadership, strategic planning, systems thinking
• Vocational
Training – Carpentry,
tailoring, building and construction, metalwork, mechanics,
home improvements, agriculture, and energy-saving technologies
• Entrepreneurship – Business
management, micro-enterprises, savings and credit
• Preventive
Healthcare – Adolescence
and sexuality, HIV/AIDS, water and sanitation
• Sustainable
Agriculture & Food Security – Organic
farming, animal raising
• Human
Rights & Family Cooperation – Domestic
violence, gender roles, land rights
Girls
from the Uganda Rural Development and Training Programme (URDT) Girls School

© 2009
URDT
This
report continues...
1) Technologies
for Creating is a methodology for mastering the creative process that was
developed by Robert Fritz and taught
to the founders and leaders of URDT, along with Peter Senge's Leadership
and Mastery course in systems thinking. With Robert Fritz's help, Technologies
for Creating has been adapted for use at URDT by Sylvana Franco and is part
of the core curriculum in all of URDT's educational programs.
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