School the World
The objective of Project Equity is to mitigate the learning losses caused by school closures and ameliorate the inequitable impact of distance learning as the primary solution in the context of a vast digital divide.
Project Equity is a multi-pronged approach using low-tech and high-tech to reach students, teachers and parents. It equips children living in rural poverty with the distance learning resources needed to stay engaged during pandemic school closures. In concert with the introduction of distance and digital learning into these communities, the project trains teachers to assess learning loss and teach remotely. The project provides a virtual support system to lower secondary school students, empowers unschooled parents to support their child’s education at home, and more!
If scaled globally, Project Equity could prevent the erasure of a decade of progress in education by avoiding record numbers of school drop-outs amongst the world’s poorest children.
Pre-pandemic, 258 million children were out of school and in low-middle income countries, more than 50% of children could not read by age 10 (WorldBank). Add another 1.6 billion children out of school due to COVID-19. The education crisis is urgent.
Globally, schools providing education to more than 168 million children have been closed for over a year (UNICEF). Children in Latin America and the Caribbean have lost four times more schooling compared to the rest of the world, and it is estimated that 3 million of these children may drop-out permanently (UNICEF).
Out of those not in school and not learning, there is no internet, they do not have access to any technology. Our solution is to leverage low-tech such as inexpensive smartphones and high-tech such as Virtual trainings for teachers over Zoom and preloaded tablets, to keep these children learning.
As evidenced by crises like Ebola, learning loss caused by school closures is most acute in children from marginalized communities. Without a digitally directed, sustained and intensive intervention, these children may never fully recover from this pandemic.
Project Equity is designed to address the disparate impact on education for the extremely poor and marginalized and rural communities.
Project Equity is a broad-based initiative designed to lessen the learning loss caused by school closures. Components include:
Phone Tutoring: Partnerships with local universities, where students tutor children in rural communities via bi-weekly calls. We trained all volunteers in tutoring techniques and managing relationships with families.
Peer-to-Peer Tutoring: The majority of our communities in rural Honduras do not have cellular access. To reach students, we created a tutoring program where older students tutor the younger students within their community.
Virtual Teacher Training Course: Focused on distance support, the importance of testing, teaching at the right level and mitigating learning loss.
Inexpensive Smartphones: We provide our Lower Secondary Scholarship recipients with inexpensive smartphones loaded with educational apps to enable learning while schools are closed or on hybrid days. Students attend instructional trainings and virtual workshops hosted by our staff and participate in our WhatsApp support groups!
Pilot Tablet Program: A low-cost tablet for each family preloaded with educational apps such as Kahn Academy and ReadAlong to help children catch up, learn at the appropriate grade level and stay engaged in their education while at home. We host trainings for families on the use the tablets. We also train teachers on how to integrate them into instruction.
School the World operates in the poorest parts of Guatemala, Honduras and Panama with marginalized, rural, and largely indigenous communities. Learning levels are low and resources scarce, particularly for girls. Teachers are poorly trained and unaccountable.
Many parents within these failing school systems cannot read or write, and are often unaware of their rights and responsibilities in overseeing their children’s education, creating a misunderstanding of the parents’ roles as first educators and a lack of accountability for remote school directors and teachers.
School the World initiates transformation at the grassroots level, partnering with parents, communities and local governments to organize around education. With education as the organizing principle of the community, local schools become the engine of sustainable development.
Our in-country program staff are born and raised in the rural areas in which we operate and are eminently knowledgeable of the needs of our communities. Their relationships with each community creates a trusting bond with parents and our partnership with local governments creates the same bond with teachers in each community.
When COVID-19 closed schools, children in our communities were sent home without any learning resources. These homes do not have electricity let alone books, internet or televisions to watch the government broadcasted lessons. We immediately pivoted to meet the new needs of our communities with our COVID-19 programming (School the World Radio, creation and delivery of work guides, WhatsApp support groups, messages for parents and students, etc.).
Through nearly 900 surveys of students and parents, it was clear that the absence of digital resources was the primary barrier from keeping children engaged. Surveys showed that students had no or little interaction with their teachers or any other type of formal schooling before the first school closures. Without broadband, television, etc. they had no access to digital learning. Even print materials were not thoroughly distributed.
We surveyed parents to figure out the correct time for Radio Program and phone tutoring. Made phone calls to parents to figure out times that work for these programs - engaging them in the solution and understanding their needs. Taking all of their thoughts into designing the solution.
As school closures persisted and children were falling further behind, we knew that a deeper intervention was required.
Project Equity is designed to make digital learning accessible to these rural communities. It accounts for lack of cellular access, internet and electricity while still bringing advanced digital tools like tablets and smartphones into homes and ensuring that educators know how to teach remotely, get children caught up and teach at the right grade level.
- Increase the engagement of learners in remote, hybrid, and physical environments, including strategies and tools for parental support, peer interaction, and guided independent work.
Project Equity is aligned with all dimensions of the Challenge. However, the primary objective is to make digital learning accessible to these rural impoverished areas, by engaging students, parents and teachers. Through other dimensions, such as the health and well-being of our students (WhatsApp support groups), support to teachers to adapt their pedagogy and personalized instruction (Virtual Teacher Training) and collaborative projects with parents and creative play (Tablet Program, Parent WhatsApp groups and Phone Tutoring), we are ensuring that children living in rural Central America remain engaged in learning during and following this pandemic.
- Growth: An organization with an established product, service, or business model rolled out in one or, ideally, several communities, which is poised for further growth.
Scholarship students have been given an inexpensive smartphone and are part of our WhatsApp Support Groups.
Our Teacher Training has already trained 2,200+ teachers in Guatemala and Honduras and both the MOEs and the teachers themselves have given rave reviews. Teachers are now in the second phase, which trains them on how to work with their students remotely as schools are now in a hybrid capacity. We are implementing the third part of this program, “in-classroom coaching”, which will help teachers put the lessons they learned into action, in areas that are low COVID-19.
Our Tablet Program is in 5 GUA communities and we are hosting workshops on how to use a tablet as well as the preloaded educational applications.
Our Tutoring Programs have been implemented in both Guatemala and Honduras. 4,103 children are being tutored over the phone in Guatemala and 656 children are receiving peer tutoring in Honduras.
- A new business model or process that relies on technology to be successful
Our work is innovative in several respects:
1. We begin each intervention with a unique public-private
partnership. Local government pays for 50% of infrastructure materials,
philanthropy covers 50%, and the community donates land and labor. This
simultaneously stretches philanthropic resources and broadens ownership in the school’s
success.
2. Our strategy is unique and disruptive in the depth of commitment asked
of local communities. With a written agreement, they donate land, labor and
scarce funds for books and attend five years of parent training.
3. Our parent training is innovative and disruptive, empowering parents to become “the first educators” and to hold truant teachers and complicit government agencies accountable. Empowered parents stop chronic teacher absenteeism, one of the most egregious failures of government for poor, marginalized rural communities.
4. Our innovative COVID programming ranges from WhatsApp support groups for at-risk girls, a “radionovela” for parents, inexpensive smartphones for scholarship recipients, a phone tutoring program, and a virtual “catch-up” teacher training program.
5. Project Equity is innovative because it brings what would be thought as "impossible" technology Into the homes of children in rural extreme poverty, allowing them to get the same learning as someone in the urban school system.
- Crowd Sourced Service / Social Networks
- Internet of Things
- Software and Mobile Applications
- Women & Girls
- Infants
- Children & Adolescents
- Rural
- Poor
- 1. No Poverty
- 4. Quality Education
- 10. Reduced Inequality
- Guatemala
- Honduras
- Panama
- United States
- Guatemala
- Honduras
- Panama
- United States
- Nonprofit
5-10
We know the ins and outs of rural communities in Central America. Our staff is born and raised in the types of communities we serve, so they know the true needs of each community.
- Individual consumers or stakeholders (B2C)
- Financial (e.g. improving accounting practices, pitching to investors)
- Public Relations (e.g. branding/marketing strategy, social and global media)
- Monitoring & Evaluation (e.g. collecting/using data, measuring impact)
- Yes, I wish to apply for this prize
Project Equity, and our COVID-19 programs address all of this. Please see links below:
- No, I do not wish to be considered for this prize, even if the prize funder is specifically interested in my solution
- No, I do not wish to be considered for this prize, even if the prize funder is specifically interested in my solution
- No, I do not wish to be considered for this prize, even if the prize funder is specifically interested in my solution
- No, I do not wish to be considered for this prize, even if the prize funder is specifically interested in my solution
- No, I do not wish to be considered for this prize, even if the prize funder is specifically interested in my solution