Monday, May 20, 2013

The women of Pratham Series: Pushpa Mauri

3:18:00 PM
                                                   By Pia Brar

Pushpa Mauria has been working with Pratham since 2004. She is from the Jaunpur District in the Varanasi Division of Uttar Pradesh, where she first experienced Pratham’s influence on a community. Mauria explained that she heard of the organization from the eleven people of her village that were already involved with Pratham. The work they were doing interested her, but she did not yet feel the drive to become involved herself.


“Initially I did not see the point of teaching with no salary, and so I stayed home,” she said. “But after
talking to some people I understood how significantly volunteering my time could help children’s learning.”

Mauria began her work with Pratham by gathering a group of twenty-five students from her village and surrounding areas with the aim to improve their reading levels. Mauria worked with these children for a month and fifteen days and was able to bring fifteen out of the twenty-five children up to the “Reader Level”,
 enabling them to read full paragraphs with fluidity and understanding.

Because of her dedication to her work, Mauria has had the opportunity to work in and travel to
multiple districts in Uttar Pradesh over the years.

“Though I may receive a small pay check, I value working at Pratham” she said. “I have been able to
travel to various places for work and training, which I would not  have had the chance to do otherwise, and
I’ve had the opportunity to meet many important people, especially government officials.
I got to speak with them... and they would listen.”

Mauria is now currently working in Dadri, Uttar Pradesh, where she has been promoted as the leader
of Block Resource Group of the area and oversees the training for and the evaluation of projects in Dadri. However, she is known for her ability to mobilize a community.

“I go into the villages and speak to the parents. We hold meetings where we use the Read India
testing tool to show the parents which learning level their children are at compared to where they
should be. By doing this we demonstrate how effectively Pratham can help,” she said.

Upon reflection of the near decade Mauria has spent with Pratham, she states, “I can now lead meeting
 and to speak to large audiences, I have the courage to teach in a classroom. My work has expanded
my frame of mind and helped me understand larger issues faced by a society.” 




Monday, May 13, 2013

Second Chance: Educating Girl Dropouts in India’s Remote Corners

2:59:00 PM

                                              By Sarita Gupta

255 girls from Odisha who had dropped out of school completed their 10th standard education after nine months of remedial training and sat for their board exams. The results came out last week: 158 of them (62%) passed, with one even coming in the first division.

This is not big news in a country the size of India, and the only ones celebrating aside from the girls and their families was a small team gathered around a conference table at the headquarters of Pratham. I happened to be visiting a similar batch of girls in Chhattisgarh a day earlier, who will be taking their exams in mid-May. Here is what I saw of their determination and the barriers they are overcoming to get what most of us think of as our birthright and take completely for granted.

I grew up with a daily reminder that being born a girl in India in the early 20th century could be a raw deal. My grandmother lived with us and she was illiterate. Her parents were not poor, they simply saw no reason to educate their daughter. My grandmother was married at 13 and widowed at 25. which consigned her and her two children to a life of utter dependence on her in-laws. Transported to the US when her son (my father)moved there, she lived in a cocoon, secure in the family bosom but in a narrow world where her considerable intelligence was wasted on chewing over the family gossip and magnifying every slight.

It is still not easy for a girl to be educated and make her own life choices in today’s India, even as the country has gained wealth and power unimaginable to my grandmother’s generation. Leave aside issues of safety or employability where huge gender gaps exist. Even in something as gender neutral as educating the nation’s children, girls lag: only 40 Indian girls out of every 100 that begin primary school will complete 8th grade.  This number, shocking as it is, masks even bigger gaps between urban and rural, and between middle and lower income families.

The reasons for dropping out of school are many and complex—one study cites 20 of them—but the end result is the same. An uneducated child faces a bleak future. The girls and women I met in Chhattisgarh had heartrending reasons for dropping out. Several did so to get married. Two lost their fathers and had to start earning a living to support the family. Yet all of them had made the decision to come back and finish 10th grade.

They did not make this decision by themselves. There was a small army of people pushing them forward. In the vanguard of this army is the Pratham community organizers, who go door-to-door to survey who is in school and if not, why not. When they find an older girl or woman dropout, they spend considerable time convincing them and their families to enroll in a nine-month program which includes daily study with an instructor in the village plus a monthly stay at a residential camp. The families have to commit to handling the girls’ chores while they go away for five days every month.

The camp has an administrator and three faculty members to provide instruction in Hindi, English and math. There is another group at Pratham headquarters that has taken apart the standard curriculum, applied “western” pedagogical methods to it, and painstakingly created new teaching and learning materials.

I ask the girls in Chhattisgarh what they plan to do after they graduate. Silence. Except for two government workers who need to pass 10th grade in order to be eligible for promotion, the rest have not dared to dream of an altered future.

My father, born to an illiterate mother, planned to drop out of school when he was 13 so that he could help out in the family business. The only one against this plan was an uncle who somehow saw his potential and moved heaven and earth to get him educated. My father in turn made sure that no effort or expense was spared to educate his four daughters, all of whom went to Ivy League universities in the US, and became financially independent. In two generations my family was able to rewrite the destiny for its girls. It will happen to you too, I tell the Chhattisgarh girls.

This is the drive behind Pratham and what motivates its 2,000 staff and 60,000 volunteers: the chance to recreate a new India in which every child has learnt well and has the means to become a productive, prosperous citizen. The 255 girls from Odisha are proof it can be done. Chhattisgarh will be close behind.

Sarita Gupta is founder and president of Indico, International Nonprofit Development Consultants. She recently began working with Pratham USA.


Monday, May 6, 2013

The Women of Pratham Series: Poonam Sandhu

1:40:00 PM
By Pia Brar, Intern


Poonam Sandhu has been working with Pratham since
 2003 and is now the “Head coordinator” 
for Pratham’s centre in Dadri, Uttar Pradesh.

Poonam became a volunteer at a small mandir 
school her village.

“I always wanted to support the children who came from troubled households, 
who didn’t go to school, or so wondered on the streets,” she said.

During her time at the school, she began to realize that the teaching methods 
were not engaging enough and the students were not learning well. Poonam 
then heard about the classes Pratham operated and soon visited the centre
 to witness the innovative teaching methods she had been hearing about.

“By seeing the Pratham classes, I was keen to work and asked the teacher 
how to get involved. She helped me contact Pratham and I have committed to 
my work ever since,” she said.

Poonam was promoted and transferred from her village to the more urban setting 
of Dadri, leaving her own two children behind. “Initially this was extremely hard,
” she said, “but I realized my children have their grandparents to watch over, 
a good home and good schools, but what about the other children? 
The ones who have none of these? Those are the ones I really need
 to help and that’s why I do what I do.”

For the past decade, Poonam has dedicated her time to Pratham and to her
 young students. She spends her days organising ten-day Learning Camps to be run 
in the government schools of Dadri, teaching in the camps and ensuring that the 
Read India program is implemented effectively in her area.

Poonam’s driving force is something close to her heart. “I strongly believe girls should 
have the opportunity to be educated,” she stated. ”Luckily, I had that opportunity, 
and I’m a girl, but every girl should have this right. In India, it is important to
 help the parents understand this, so that is what I am fighting for.” 

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