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Challenges and Possibilities in Reaching the Under-Threes. Presented at the South Asian Regional Conference on Early Childhood Care and Education New Delhi, August 2012 Zakiya Kurrien Centre For Learning Resources, Pune. Interventions in the earliest y ears m ake a difference.
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Challenges and Possibilities in Reaching the Under-Threes Presented at the South Asian Regional Conference on Early Childhood Care and Education New Delhi, August 2012 ZakiyaKurrien Centre For Learning Resources, Pune
Interventions in the earliest years make a difference The Evidence Interventions which combine appropriate nutrition together with psychosocial stimulation have a greater impact on both physical growth and psychological development Interventions during children’s first 2 and 3 years (including prenatal care) are more likely to forestall deficits in psychosocial development than during their preschool years ECCE programmes can improve parent-child interaction, and impact on feeding and other caregivingbehaviours
Interventions can becharacterised as : Child – Focused Direct interventions with children Usually centre - based Parent – Focused Direct contact with parents, usually mothers • Parent meetings • Home visits • Joint – Focused • Direct interventions for children and parents • Centre - based services • Plus • Parent meetings and home visits
Reaching the under-threes in their homes An initiative of Centre For Learning Resources (CLR) Conditions that support home-based interventions Most children in this age group being taken care of within the family Resource constraints for starting creches / daycare centres Children at highest risk are younger than those attending balwadis and anganwadis (preschool centres) Caregiver education as an ECCE strategy needs to be systematically explored
Designing the approach The Overall Approach Combined Participation and CLR Technical Inputs Observation, interviews, discussion with parents and families Curriculum for caregiver education, communication materials, training programmes
Building capacity for home-based interventions • Educate anganwadi workers (ECCE workers) and other field workers about pre-natal health, child health and nutrition, and psychosocial stimulation • Train them as effective ‘communicators’ of messages related to holistic child care • Assist government agencies and NGOs to implement home-based interventions for improvement of early child care within families
Field-based ‘Communicator’ Family / Community Members Meetings Meetings Home visits Field- based training of communicators by master trainers, & monitoring Help TOTs for Master Trainers (Intensive programme) Discussion Feedback Caregiver & Child CLR Technical Support : • Assistance in designing programmestrategies •Training for effective communication • Modules • Visual Aids, Videos, Exhibitions Discussion Feedback
CLR Education Package for parents and other caregivers of the birth - 3 years age group HealthlNutritionlPsychosocial Development • Focus on • Understanding holistic child development and role of caregivers • Prime messages in : • Pre-natal health • neo-natal care, child and maternal health • child nutrition • importance of psychosocial stimulation and how to provide it • child protection and age-appropriate child-rearing • Play materials (from daily objects and waste material) • Gender equity in caregiving practices Available in Hindi, Marathi, Telugu, Oriya
Curriculum for Caregiver Education • Basic Knowledge Related to Child Development • Concept of holistic child care - health, nutrition, psychosocial stimulation, emotional well-being • Role of parents and other caregivers within the family • Developmental characteristics of under-threes • Individual differences (Each child unique) • Understanding that learning begins at birth; benefits of early infant stimulation, play,caregiver-child interaction
Curriculum framework for main domains of holistic care for under-threes
Making inputs locale-specific Adapting the generic content of the CLR Education Package to local needs • 1. Pre-intervention survey tools, to understand: • Existing caregiver knowledge about pre-natal health, neonatal care, child nutrition, child health and psychosocial stimulation • Caregiver behaviour: observation of caregiver-child interaction • 2. Use of Rapid Rural Appraisal (RRA) for contextualising interventions Guide Book
Components of the CLR Education Package Manual for Communicators Discussion Photographs Other Visual Materials Pictorial Handouts for Caregivers Home-visit Guidelines
Communication Approach • Devised for illiterate, semi-literate audience • Constructive rather than compensatory approach • Active learning by caregivers • Materials suitable for anganwadi (ECCE) workers / ‘communicators’ who may have modest literacy levels • Visual communication Playthings made during meetings Sound makers Puzzles Mobiles Puppets Picture Books
Training programme for communicators and master trainers Includes all inputs designed for caregivers (i.e. content of Education Package) Plus For Communicators : Interactive communication techniques How to plan and conduct effective caregivers’ meetings How to conduct effective follow-up home visits Plus For Master Trainers : How to organise and conduct effective training programmes for local communicators
Community-based advocacy for holistic child care • Exhibitions • Videos • Songs • Organising ‘Child Care Days’
Activities during ‘Child Care Day’ in villages
Summing up CLR technical support for holistic child care : Pre-natal - 3 years age group Generic education package for caregivers, which can be contextualised Field-tested communication approach Community-based channels for message delivery Materials suitable for ‘communicators’ who may have modest literacy level Training programmes and training materials Community awareness-raising and advocacy for responsive parenting: Materials and strategies