This project is one of the 2014 WISE Awards winners.
The project works with street children (including families living and working on the street and others at risk), one of the most marginalized sectors of society. The aim is to provide child-friendly education and life skills, including road safety awareness and reproductive health focusing on hygiene, HIV, and other STDs. The project seeks to provide the target group with a path away from the streets through non-formal education (NFE) at the Drop-In Center (DIC) and the Transitional Home provided through the Child-Friendly School (CFS).
The aim of the CFS is to reintegrate children into the public school system and society at large and therefore de-stigmatize them. A progressive non-formal education project was introduced in 2012 using innovative training tools. These focused on techniques of working with children of varying capacities and levels of learning, monitoring and evaluation, learning through play, and self-learning. The total number of children in the CFS was 37 in 2012 and 30 in 2013. Thirty-three children were reintegrated into public schools.
Through non-formal education around life skills children can develop a desire to learn and acquire the tools to protect themselves on the streets and support their social reintegration. FACE trains them to become peer educators who can spread their learning and skills. CFS seeks to build confidence and skills among young people so they are able to escape the cycle of street living and be reintegrated into the public schools .
Many young people have benefited from the life skills program implemented on the streets and in the DIC. Since the beginning of the project the outreach team has provided Life Skills to 19,661 contacts. Nearly 27,800 have accessed literacy education on the streets while in the DIC 10,372 contacts received life skills education, and 9,904 contacts received Non-Formal Education. A hundred and thirteen children attended the CFS. Of these, 33 children were reintegrated into the public school system.
In the coming years the project seeks to:
The project aims to achieve this by: