1 / 25

Szilvia Pallaghy, REF Project Manager A Good Start Project Carmen Anghelescu

Addressing the ECD Gap for Roma children in practice: Overview of the A Good Start Project Conference on Early Childhood Education and Care for Roma Children 4th June 2012 Brussels. Szilvia Pallaghy, REF Project Manager A Good Start Project Carmen Anghelescu

sanura
Télécharger la présentation

Szilvia Pallaghy, REF Project Manager A Good Start Project Carmen Anghelescu

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Addressing the ECD Gap for Roma children in practice: Overview of the A Good Start Project Conference on Early Childhood Education and Care for Roma Children4th June 2012 Brussels • Szilvia Pallaghy, REF • Project Manager A Good Start Project • Carmen Anghelescu • International Step by Step Association (ISSA) • Center for Education and Professional Development “Step by Step - Member of ISSA

  2. Call objectives - DG Regio • to scale-up access to quality ECEC services for disadvantaged Roma children • to rise early childhood development outcomes • to support the establishment of non-discriminatory policies in the field of ECEC • to support policy experimentation and testing of various approaches to ECEC • to raise the level of awareness and commitment of decision makers on the issue • to promote the culture of evidence-based, result-oriented intervention With support from the European Union

  3. AGS activitiesadressingkeyareaslistedinthecall • services provided for children aged 0-6 • teachers and parents trained and empowered with regards to child development • outreach activities • need based support - enrolment fee, nutrition, health service • country specific possible policy implications analysed With support from the European Union

  4. With support from the European Union

  5. Partner organizations • International Step By Step Association • Slovak Governance Institute • FundacionSecretariadoGitano • Cultural association of Roma in Slovakia • Civic Association EQUAL CHANCES • County Association of Roma Initiatives • Methodological and Pedagogical Centre Bratislava • Ruhama Foundation • Romani CRISS • National Roma Centrum • Roma Education Center “Ambrela” • Humanitarian and Charitable Association of the Roma KHAM • Romano TrajoAssociation • Unity in Diversity Foundation • College of Nyíregyháza Evaluation and capacity building by the World Bank and UNDP With support from the European Union

  6. With support from the European Union

  7. datafromthehouseholdsurveyonenrollment of allchildrenaged 3-7 in AGS, 2010 With support from the European Union

  8. Challenges in the 4 countries - addressed by AGS • lack of proper legislative framework • capacity problem, lack of kindergarten facilities • scarcity of ECEC services for age group 0-3 • qualityof ECEC services is often under the required minimum standards • segregation in kindergartens and school education system • channelling Roma children to special education, or to zero classes • insufficient preparation with the language of instruction • Poverty and material depravation, poor housing conditions • healthstatus of children With support from the European Union

  9. Preschool as a bridge to mainstream education Slovakia AGS Zborov, Abranovce - capacityproblems, language issue, inter-cultural relations • community mediators empowered parents to enrol children* • materialsupport* • tutoring forchildren attending zeroclasses* • provided financial support to establishpreschool services • employedteacher, Romani teacher assist. and kitchenassist. • informal preschool class for Roma children run by the church AGS Martin, BanskaBystrica- capacityproblems, transportation • * above • monthlykindergartenfeecovered • financingtutoringforchildreninzeroclasses • open house eventsinkindergartens and primaryschools • transportation and accompaniment With support from the European Union

  10. CommunityResourceCentresfocusedon ECEC in Romania AGS Telechiu, Craiova - isolation, extreme poverty, lack of infrastructure • community center established in the community – temporary solution • alternative, community-based and comprehensiveintervention: social worker, health mediator, education mediator and pedagogue • informal adult education (focus on mothers) • nursery/ crèche for 0-3 established in the centre (in the process of accreditation) • liason between municipalityand the Roma community With support from the European Union

  11. Supportingpreschool enrolment in Macedonia AGS Skopje, ShutoOrizari - issueswith official documentation, capacity problems, extremepoverty • assisted registration of children to obtain birth certificates, and vaccinations • financing tuition fee • material support for families • evening meetings for mothers • facilitate access to social services AGS Eastern-Macedonianlocalities - transportationissues, poverty • commitment of municipalities, jointinvestmentininfrastructure • transportationprovided, staffemployedpartlyby AGS, partlybythemunicipalities • financingtuitionfee With support from the European Union

  12. InterconnectedinterventionsinHungary AGS 6 localities low quality of services in geographically isolated communities, • Home visits by the community mediators • Meséd (Your Story) - literacy for empowernment developing parenting skills and knowledge to improve ECED outcomes for young children trainingand engagement of local Roma asmentors and facilitators • HomePre-SchoolCommunityLiasionprogram • Focus on the mainstream society - theoretical and practical part of teacher’s training modified curricula adjusted obligatorypracticemodulemodified With support from the European Union

  13. Instruments for evidence-based project implementation • Community Assessment • The application of the Household Survey • Database of beneficiary children • Continuum for Assessing Caregivers in Center and Community-based Programs • Applyingregular monitoring tools With support from the European Union

  14. Outputsat the end of December 2011 • More than 9000 home visits to families in the project • 776 Roma children enrolled with support from AGS: 483 in kindergarten, 203 in primary school and 90 in other forms of ECD (mother-child programs) • 172 Roma mothers and 451 children participated Your Story program • 186 teachers and 36paraprofessionals trained • More than 300 students (future teachers) participatedactivities • More than 800 children received materialsupport • In Macedonia, 351parents and children obtainedofficial documents/birth certificates; more than 1000children were assisted with vaccination • About 100 community motivation events held • Good-practice guides and policy papers inpreparation With support from the European Union

  15. Promoting high quality services to Roma children and families by building capacity of professionals and paraprofesionals - ISSA‘s role in AGS: • To promote high quality ECEC services based on ISSA Principles of Quality Pedagogy in center, community and home based learning environments • To build the capacity of professionals and paraprofessionals so that they are able to address the specific needs of Roma children and their families, to support the early learning and holistic child development • To promote principles and practices of social justice and intercultural participatory approach in the framework of inclusion With support from the European Union

  16. ISSA members who provided capacity building activities in the project: • Hungary – Partners Hungary Foundation • Macedonia – Foundation for Educational and Cultural Initiatives of Macedonia • Romania – Center for Education and Professional Development “Step by Step” • Slovakia – Wide Open School Foundation With support from the European Union

  17. Kindergarten and Primary School Teachers • Roma Teaching Assistants • Mediators (community, health) • Community center staff • Family/Health Assistants • Roma Parents • Local authorities Target groups: • Teachers trained in all 16 communities: 186 • Mediators trained in all 16 communities: 36 In numbers: With support from the European Union

  18. Types of capacity building activities: • 1-3 days training workshops (AGS – EU funds) • Follow-up meetings, mentoring (AGS – Bernard van Leer Foundation additional funding support) • Thematic discussions during community evening events (AGS – EU funds) With support from the European Union

  19. Content areas of trainings: • Child centered philosophy, child’s holistic development approach and child development in early years • ISSA’s Principles of Quality Pedagogy – putting knowledge into practice following the seven Focus Areas of Quality • Education for Social Justice – combating discrimination, understanding and celebrating diversity • Parent support – strengthening parenting skills • Home-School-Community Liaison Program • Mentoring skills, mediation and whole community approach • Integrated services for ECD of children from birth to 3 years old With support from the European Union

  20. Lesson learnt by providing capacity building activities in all four countries: • The trainings alone are not effective if they are not accompanied by assistance and support to practitioners through mentoring to improve their competences. • Building the capacity on the level of kindergarten/community center has to be accompanied by building strong local capacity on ECD of Roma and non-Roma professionals/experts to support the daily activities of practitioners. • The capacity building activities are just a piece of a greater system of support for improving children’s learning, development and their lives. • Building specific competences in workforce to facilitate better communication with Roma families and communities and to create a network of support. • Changing attitudes and shifting values takes time! The improvements might be slow but most important is to make them last! With support from the European Union

  21. The biggest challenges: • Creating a common understanding of what quality means, especially in poor environments • The prejudice that high quality is determined exclusively by expensive environments, not mainly by the quality of interactions, the teaching/learning strategies, building on children’s strengths and partnering with families • Lack of a platform for communication on the local level, limited institutional and professional cooperation • Assuring the consolidation of the changes/improvements seeded through the capacity building activities during the project time. With support from the European Union

  22. What makes the difference for long lasting capacity building investment? • Create a pool of professional-anchors on the local level (Roma and non-Roma) • Providing on-going support/mentoring for professionals and paraprofessionals working in communities through professional-anchors • Providing professional resources that can help practitioners in their daily practice • Meeting the specific needs of families, communities and also of practitioners working in those communities With support from the European Union

  23. ISSA resources used in the projects and developed for the project: • ISSA Principles of Quality Pedagogy: The Competent Educator for the 21st Century • A self-assessment/assessment/monitoring tool aiming to nurture the understanding of quality practices in early childhood services: Assessing Quality Practices in Inclusive Early Childhood center/community /home based learning environments, Scoring Sheet • Instrument for monitoring child’s progress following the child’s holistic development approach: Child Assessment Instrument, Scoring Sheet • Building Opportunities in Early Childhood from the Start: A Teacher’s Guide to Inclusive Early Childhood Services With support from the European Union

  24. Lessons learned • Two years of subsidized or free kindergartens for all • Inclusive and integrated approach to ECEC • Variety of basic quality services (home-based and community-based services for children 0-3/ kindergarten for children 3-6) • Quality human resources (teachers, health workers) • Community empowerment with focus on mothers • Greater focus is needed in urban settings With support from the European Union

  25. Contact: Szilvia Pallaghy, REF Email: szpallaghy@romaeducationfund.org Carmen Anghelescu, ISSA Email: carmen.anghelescu@stepbystep.ro With support from the European Union

More Related