Project Asha Nutanhat Development Society 2011 – 12 Proposal by Tanushree and Somesh, AID Penn State

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Project Asha Nutanhat Development Society 2011 12 Proposal by Tanushree and Somesh, AID Penn State Slide 2 Purulia, West Bengal Drought prone, semi-arid region 31% of Purulias 2.5 million people live below the poverty line (according to WB government) Purulia has one of the highest rate, 11.8%, of out-of-school children of age 6-14 (ASER08) Slide 3 Mission statement of Nutanhat Development Society (NDS) To help the less privileged in our community by making them aware of developmental issues; To utilize resources optimally and bring in a sustainable change in society; To educate, organize and build capabilities in community members; To enable them to demand social justice, a clean and green environment, and self-reliance. Slide 4 Project Asha Aim Creating an environment to promote education among the less privileged tribal and backward children in Purulia. Helping drop-outs and non-enrolled children to avail of this opportunity to learn in centres designed for self- growth. Target Population Children up to class IV from 10 remote villages of Hura block, Purulia. The affected population mainly comprises indigenous tribal communities (Santhals, Kherias, Mudis, Mundas) and dalits (scheduled castes, and other backward castes). Slide 5 Situation Large drop-out rate amongst tribal children No one at home or in the community to guide or teach them properly Most parents are illiterate and there is no environment in the village for education. The government-run primary schools are practically non- functional Child to teacher ratio is 100 : 1 Slide 6 Project facts Budget approved in 2008-09: Rs. 4,09,350 2009-10 : Rs. 2,97,884 2010-11 : Rs. 4,10,396 Persons Involved: 300 students 10 teachers 1 Supervisor (Rasaraj) 1 Office staff (Nakul) 1 Project coordinator (Kabori) Project poster in NDS office Slide 7 Performance evaluation methods Site visits in 2008 (Simanti), 2009 (Arijit, Somesh), 2010 (Rini) Quarterly conference calls to NDS project coordinators and grassroots workers Quarterly report from NDS with performance data of each student Slide 8 Distribution of students Gender Class Slide 9 Overall student performance Slide 10 Student performance: Bengali Slide 11 Student performance: English Slide 12 Student performance: Math Slide 13 Project performance: Dropout Slide 14 Project performance: Graduation ratio Slide 15 Project performance: Bengali readiness Slide 16 Project performance: English readiness Slide 17 Project performance: Math readiness Slide 18 Observations Steady progress in performance across all skills and villages; Some villages are performing better than others; Progress in English / Math is as good as Bengali; The standard of education in outgoing class is more or less equally distributed among villages. Photo Courtesy: Kokonad Sinha, Ritendra Datta Lot of interest among parents and kids; More villages want this kind of schools. Slide 19 Future and concerns How to sustain: Look for government funding o No response Cooperation of local panchayet o Hope for some minimal amount Implementation of a fee structure o Requires involvement in livelihood generation of the locals o Propose to follow up implementation of NREGA in the locality Look for more external funding o Requires our help: we are preparing a detailed report on the project progress and model Slide 20 Budget for 2011 - 12 Please open the Google Docs Slide 21 Proposition Vote to fund NDS for Rs. 403,850.00 for 2011-12