Education  India Project #10150

Education for 100 street children in India

by Ashraya Initiative for Children, Inc.
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India
Education for 100 street children in India

Project Report | Sep 14, 2015
A Child who Reads Becomes an Adult who Thinks

By Elizabeth Sholtys | Director

Pre-primary storytelling activity
Pre-primary storytelling activity

International Literacy Day, according to UNESCO, is a day to celebrate and promote literacy, a “basic human right and fundamental building block for learning as well as a personal empowerment tool.”

As the underlying themes that underpin our work are the education, cultivation, and empowerment of the next generation of Waghri and Sikligar community members, this occasion is quite significant for us here at AIC. It celebrates the importance of one of the main efforts we undertake in our Education Program – to provide our children with the literacy skills they will need to advance throughout their lives, in order to break the cycles of poverty and marginalization, and to lead their communities by being the first educated members of their families.

In true AIC fashion, we decided to celebrate International Literacy Day with gusto, and our on-site celebration morphed into International Literacy Week. As such, we orchestrated activities and events over the course of the week leading up to International Literacy Day on September 8th.

The packed schedule of events that week included:

  • For our youngest students (playgroup and pre-primary), parent-engagement activities ranging from a letter matching game, rhymes, a discussion about assessment and achievement at AIC, and a storytelling activity wherein groups of parents and students worked together to retell and act out (with as much dramatic flair as possible!) stories in front of the entire group
  • The inauguration of literacy classes for our caregiving (maushi) staff
  • A general knowledge quiz for parent-child teams (standards 3-8) that became fiercely competitive as parents and children consulted each other and jostled to give answers
  • Art and writing activities for parents and children, wherein children taught their parents to write their own names
  • A large rally through the neighborhood and slum communities, wherein our students carried signs and shouted pro-literacy slogans, put on a street play, and confidently answered the questions of curious bystanders and community members 
  • Films about literacy

Last but not least, in preparation for the festivities, we surveyed 60 of the Education Program children in grades nursery through Standard 3 about whether they have books in their homes (and if so, how many). Sadly, but not surprisingly, out of 60 children polled, only 4 owned a single storybook; the remaining 56 children reported having not a single book in their homes. You can imagine what this means for their literacy development at what is such a crucial stage (ages 3 – 9) for these milestones.

This new information reinforces our understanding of how important the children’s hands-on access to high-quality literacy resources is during their time at the AIC Education Centre every day. It also renews our desire to establish a lending library and to gift books to the children at every possible opportunity (good attendance prizes, Diwali gifts, etc). Our goal is to ensure that by the end of the school year, 100% of our children will be able to proudly proclaim that they have at least a book or two to call their own, as well as access to a supply of continuously updated books and reading resources through a small lending project.

To kick off this goal and in honor of International Literacy Day this year, we published a books wishlist and were blown away by the response from our supporters. So far nearly 200 books have been purchased off our wishlist (we’ve had to continue adding new titles to keep up with the response!) and every evening our Education Program Director returns home from work to a lovely pile of packages at her door.

Overall, it's safe to say that International Literacy Day (or in our case, Week) 2015 was a tremendous success! The community response humbled and inspired us, and the energy and encouragement generated by our staff, supporters, and partners near and wide in celebration of this event has been absolutely exhilarating. The ability to read and write is a beautiful, powerful, worldview-expanding skill. Reminding ourselves that, step by step, slowly but surely, we are working to empower the next generation, allowing them to achieve the education and employment that will pull their communities out of vicious cycles of poverty and marginalization, makes our daily work feel all the more worthwhile.

Showing off her prize (a book!) for winning a game
Showing off her prize (a book!) for winning a game
Neighborhood rally to promote literacy & education
Neighborhood rally to promote literacy & education
Neighborhood rally to promote literacy & education
Neighborhood rally to promote literacy & education
General knowledge quiz contest
General knowledge quiz contest
Literacy classes for AIC's caregiving staff
Literacy classes for AIC's caregiving staff
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Organization Information

Ashraya Initiative for Children, Inc.

Location: Ithaca, New York - USA
Website:
Ashraya Initiative for Children, Inc.
Elizabeth Sholtys
Project Leader:
Elizabeth Sholtys
Yerwada , Maharashtra India

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