The Role of Nongovernmental Organizations in Primary Education : A Study of Six NGOs in India

Nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) extend education to underprivileged children in India, and develop innovations that improve the quality of primary education. In this study of six NGOs working with school-age children in India, the author shows the potential benefits of a government-NGO alliance to achieve universal primary education. The author emphasizes several areas in which collaboration can be particularly fruitful. 1) Targeting under-served children: The Government could support the efforts of NGOs to bring out-of-school children into schools, through timely supply of teachers, classroom space, and other resources. Targeted action is needed to reach different types of out-of-school children - those who work, those who live in slums, those on the street, those who are members of tribes, or of migrant families, and those who live in places without schools. To encourage young, first-generation learners to stay in school, requires a supportive, and nurturing environment. To help make learning interesting, and worthwhile for such children, teachers in government schools could receive special training in new methods developed by NGOs. 2) Enhancing quality: Improving the quality of education requires working closely with key agents of change, such as teachers, school heads, school management committees, and village education committees. To develop a cadre of trainers for primary school teachers, teacher training institutes would do well to evaluate, and learn from NGO models for teacher training. Teachers need a range of knowledge, and skills to teach underprivileged children effectively. Here again, NGO models would be a useful tool for teacher training institutes. NGOs, and the government could collaborate in developing appropriate, and flexible learning assessment tools, in line with innovative teaching, and learning methods. But without safeguards, large-scale replication by the government of such NGO innovations as the "alternative school" and the "voluntary teacher" could lower the quality of education. 3) Government-NGO links: The Government and NGOs will need to share a common vision on how to achieve universal primary education if India is to reach this goal. NGOs can be credible partners with the government in shaping policies for primary education. This entails collaboration, rather than parallel initiatives by NGOs. To stay at the cutting edge in education, NGOs should continually evaluate, and refine their models. If NGOs are to play a policy role in education, two areas that have been neglected will need to be addressed - NGO capacity building, and organizational development.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jagannathan, Shanti
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2001-01
Subjects:ACHIEVEMENT, ACTION RESEARCH, ADAPTATION, ADDITION, ADOLESCENT GIRLS, ADOLESCENTS, ADULT EDUCATION, ADULT LITERACY, AGE GROUP, AIR, ATTENDING SCHOOL, BASIC EDUCATION, BASIC LEARNING, BASIC LEARNING NEEDS, BASIC NEEDS, CHILD DEVELOPMENT, CHILDHOOD CARE, CLASS SIZES, CLASSROOMS, CLIMATE, COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION, COMPULSORY EDUCATION, CURRICULUM, CURRICULUM REFORM, DISADVANTAGED CHILDREN, EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, EDUCATION, EDUCATION ADMINISTRATION, EDUCATION OFFICERS, EDUCATION PROGRAMS, EDUCATION PROJECTS, EDUCATION SYSTEM, EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS, EDUCATIONAL PROVISION, ELEMENTARY EDUCATION, ENROLMENT RATES, FAMILIES, FEMALE LITERACY, FINANCIAL RESOURCES, FORMAL EDUCATION, FREE EDUCATION, GER, GIRLS, GROSS ENROLMENT RATIO, HUMAN DEVELOPMENT, HUMAN RIGHTS, ILLITERACY, IMPROVING ACCESS, INNOVATION, INSTRUCTORS, INTERVENTION, INTERVENTIONS, INVESTMENT IN EDUCATION, LEADERSHIP, LEARNING, LEARNING ACHIEVEMENTS, LEARNING LEVELS, LET, LITERACY, LITERACY PROGRAMS, LITERACY RATE, LOCAL COMMUNITIES, MOTIVATION, NER, NET ENROLMENT RATIO, NON- FORMAL EDUCATION, NON-FORMAL EDUCATION, NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS, OUT OF SCHOOL CHILDREN, OUT-OF-SCHOOL CHILDREN, PAPERS, PARENT TEACHER ASSOCIATIONS, PARENTS, PARTNERSHIP, PEDAGOGY, POPULATION GROWTH, POTENTIAL BENEFITS, PRE-SCHOOL EDUCATION, PRIMARY EDUCATION, PRIMARY EDUCATION SECTOR, PRIMARY SCHOOL, PRIMARY SCHOOLING, PRINCIPALS, PRIVATE SECTOR, PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT, PROGRAMS, PUBLIC EDUCATION SYSTEM, PUPILS, QUALIFIED TEACHERS, QUALITY CONTROL, QUALITY OF EDUCATION, READING, REGULAR TEACHERS, REMEDIAL CLASSES, RESOURCE CENTERS, RESOURCE CENTRES, RURAL EDUCATION, RURAL POOR, SCHOOL HEADS, SCHOOL IMPROVEMENT, SCHOOL INFRASTRUCTURE, SCHOOL MANAGEMENT, SCHOOL MANAGEMENT COMMITTEES, SCHOOLS, SIBLINGS, STREET CHILDREN, TEACHER, TEACHER SALARIES, TEACHER TRAINING, TEACHER TRAINING INSTITUTES, TEACHERS, TEACHING, TRAINING CENTRES, TRAINING INSTITUTES, UNIVERSAL ACCESS, UNIVERSAL PRIMARY EDUCATION, UPE, VILLAGE EDUCATION, VOLUNTARY SECTOR, WORKERS, WORKING CHILDREN, YOUNG CHILDREN, YOUTH, YOUTH CLUBS,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/01/891730/role-nongovernmental-organizations-primary-education-study-six-ngos-india
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/19714
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