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1200
teachers mobilized to prevent child abuse and support gender-sensitive
Lifeskills Teaching and Learning for HIV Prevention in Zimbabwean
Primary schools
United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), Zimbabwe
September 01, 2006
Harare - In the
wake of increasing reported cases on child abuse and the growing
vulnerability of Zimbabwe’s children, the United Nations Children’s
Fund (UNICEF) in partnership with the Ministries of Education, Sport
and Culture and Higher and Tertiary Education, with an NGO the Flemish
Office for Development Co-operation (VVOB) have embarked on a four
year in-service life skills education and gender training programme
for all teachers across the country.
The
programme, which began with a five day training of more than 1200
teachers from 18 districts, was launched in the capital this week.
The project will then be scaled up nationally.
"Teachers
are the pillars of the education system and key change agents in
Zimbabwean communities," said UNICEF Representative in Zimbabwe,
Dr Festo Kavishe. "Through this programme we want to assist
teachers to be more effective facilitators of life skills learning,
promote children’s ability to say ‘no’, prevent and detect child
abuse, know how to seek action, and to counsel children in need
of care and support."
This
in-service training programme, the first of its kind in Zimbabwe,
will equip the teachers with skills to assist pupils in real life
situations. The training will be in:
- Learner-centred
Lifeskills methodology – Teachers will strengthen their skills
in using participatory methods to equip children with confidence-building,
self-awareness, assertiveness, coping with one’s emotions, interpersonal
communication, negotiation, decision-making and problem solving
skills. These skills are critical for life in a world with HIV
and AIDS.
- Counseling
- Teachers will receive basic counseling skills, so as to help
pupils with the various emotional and social challenges they
encounter.
- Child Abuse
prevention – Awareness creation of children's rights and how
and where to seek action when these are violated.
- Gender
- teachers are being taught how to recognize gender sensitive
situations in the classroom and how to deal with them to promote
gender equity and empowerment of boys and girls in schools and
communities.
While
there is an existing national curriculum on HIV/AIDS, programme
audits and field monitoring reports reveal that HIV/AIDS education
is not being effectively taught in schools. In part this is due
to the intergenerational communication barriers on sex and sex-related
issues between teachers and their pupils. This is also because the
school curriculum is over-loaded and teachers lack the necessary
resource materials, motivation and supervision to deliver. This
programme aims to remove these barriers to create a generation of
well informed and balanced pupils.
This
integrated life skills education and gender training programme aims
to empower children to protect themselves most importantly from
abuse. The AIDS epidemic and resulting orphan and economic crisis
in Zimbabwe has made many children vulnerable to abuse. Despite
a public outcry against child sexual abuse, a child friendly judiciary
system, reported cases continue to rise. Anecdotal evidence from
local NGO’s and clinics around the capital also show that there
is a sharp increase in abuse. Last year alone, a local NGO recorded
an average of 11 cases of sexual abuse in its area of operation
every single day. School and community-based support systems remain
weak.
"In
these trying times, there is a growing need to make use of those
people we have around us," said UNICEF’s Dr Kavishe. "Obviously
parents must continue to be the front line in their children’s protection,
but teachers are highly respected and spend significant amounts
of time daily influencing behavoiur formation and development among
children. This training gives teachers the know-how to play that
role. Every community must continue to support and now ensure teachers
have the respect and support they deserve."
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