cfss adm sequence of events
DESCRIPTION
TRANSCRIPT
Innovations TOWARDS BETTER ACCESS TO QUALITY basic EDUCATION
A short brief on the CFSS- ADM Experience...
Prepared by joel wayne ganibe as part of his analysis…shared only to demonstrate tools of analysis. Do not interpret anything in this presentation as “official” info from unicef or intem.
Background: Sequence of events…
The Child-Friendly School System (CFSS) was forged by a close partnership of the Department of Education and UNICEF towards fulfilling the goals of Education for All and the principles of the Convention on the Rights of Children, and ultimately, to fulfill the vision of more Filipino children enjoying their rights and having a bright future within caring and protective families and communities through the Child Friendly Movement.
Key objective of CPC5: being able to “implement national and local government capacity building to implement the CRC and to contribute to a massive mobilization in support of a CFM, at all administrative levels, and local communities and within the family.”
The CFSS story begins...
1999: Cfss is born
5th Country Program for Children (cpc 5)1999
2004
2005 2011
6th Country Program for Children (cpc 6)
CFSS story continues...
Cpc 5
1999-2004 Key objective of CPC-6:“reduction of disparities among children in national and
focus areas by at least 50%”
INTENDED OUTCOME:The Child-Friendly School System (CFSS) enriched by ADMs increases ACCESS to QUALITY basic education through an expanded network of partners and allies…
—with increased capacity to develop and effectively implement rights based policies and programmes
so that, more resources are leveraged for children (aged 6-15 y/o) in disadvantaged communities, resulting in improved education outcomes reducing disparities in education data.
story continues...
To enrich the CFSS, UNICEF’s 6th Country Program for Children (CPC 6) supported two Alternative Delivery Modes (ADM) of DepEd, designed to bridge disparities in disadvantaged areas by increasing the capacities of local stakeholders (service providers, PTCA, student body, local school boards):
MISOSA (Modified In-School, Off –School Approach) implemented in 44 CFS elementary schools confronted with large enrolments and large class sizes.
E-IMPACT (enhanced Instructional Management by Parents, Community and Teachers) implemented in 19 CFS elementary schools to strengthen multi-grade teaching in small and remote schools.
The CFSS-ADM timeline under CPC6
2005 2012
Extension
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
6th Country Program for Children (cpc 6)
DepEd memo # 410 s. 2007 (10/15/07) Trainers’Training on e-IMPACT on higher order thinking skills for the same 17 of the 21 schools given orientation
Orientation Training on e-IMPACT for 21 prospect pilot schoolsSEAMEO-INNOTECH
launches e-IMPACT for 5 pilot schools
MISOSA pilots in14 elem. Schools
2005. CFSS is piloted In 8 secondary schools2007. CFHS expandsTo 61 secondary Schools in disadvantagedsettings
DepEd Order No. 194 series of 2006 Expanding MISOSA add’l 68 elementary schools
DepEd memo # 243 s. 2008 (May 08, 2008) Adoption Of The Implementation Of The Project: Enhanced Instructional Management By Parents Community And Teachers (E-IMPACT) Teachers’ Training on e-IMPACT on higher order thinking skills for 19 schools
2005 2012
Extension
story continues...
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
already having met social marketing challenges on support for and confidence in the competencies of para-teachers, as well as the safety of alternative venues-- DepEd Order No. 19 series of 2008 prohibiting collection of any fees from school children enrolling in preschool up to Grade 4—provides a reason to “kill” the “off-school” aspect of the MISOSA. The SIMs continuetheir relevance and effectiveness in the schools however, sometimes substituting for lack of textbooks
6th Country Program for Children (cpc 6)
Start of Actual implementation of CFSS e-IMPACT in 19 pilot schools as the materials arrive in time for SY-2008-09
EVALUATION POINT: main work for the study was done through a series of school visits in selected 51 school
sites in September 2011. These covered 33 treatment schools and 18
control schools