 |
Datum: |
Monday, 07. May 2007 |
| Von: |
Faith Macharia |
| An: |
|
| URL |
www.fawe.org |
|
eLearning für Mädchen und Frauen
(Interview) Wenn Armut von Erziehung
und Bildung ausschließt, sind meist Frauen und Mädchen
betroffen. Das Forum for African Women Educationalists (FAWE)
will die Erziehung von Frauen und Mädchen im Süden
und Osten Afrikas fördern, Ziel ist eine Erziehung für
alle. Faith Macharia von FAWE beschreibt im Interview mit
eLearning Africa, welche Wege das Forum dafür beschreitet.
Text in Englisch.
eLA: What would you say are the main factors that
prevent females from participating in education? Based upon
your experience, can you explain why this exclusion occurs?
Faith Macharia: The factors affecting the situation of girls
and women, which include those affecting their ability to
participate in education, are many and various. Among them
are poverty, cultural beliefs and practises such as early
marriage, female circumcision, HIV/AIDS, fathers who are not
willing to pay for their daughters’ education as they
feel it not important, child labour, gender-based violence,
and sexual abuse, to name a but few.
Exclusion from formal education is also a result of extreme
poverty, especially among African women, most of who have
no source of income and are wholly dependent on their husbands.
There is also a lot of polygamy and extramarital affairs,
practised by men with impunity. Women are easily sent away
from their homes by their husbands with no support for their
children, and to add to this, they cannot afford to seek legal
redress. Girls’ education is not given priority due
to the cultural belief that girls are meant for marriage,
to bring dowry to the home.
eLA: Which of the factors can FAWE address with its
work?
FM: FAWE has been working and continues to work in the following
areas. We source financial support and then provide needy
girls with tuition fees to help them access and complete their
education cycle. We then work in close partnership with the
government and in particular with the Kenyan Ministry of
Education to influence policies that will, in turn, address
the challenges facing girls’ and women’s education.
And last but not least, we create demonstrative interventions
in that the organization identifies needy areas and begins
to address them at the micro-level. Once these interventions
have proven successful, FAWE works with the Ministry of Education
to scale this up nationally. An example of success is the
Centres of Excellence, which attempt to ensure that all our
schools are gender responsive and that teachers are in a position
to use gender-responsive pedagogy in their teaching, etc.
eLA: Involving women in school activities has a positive
impact on female education, as well as involving the community
in policy development, particularly where culturally sensitive
issues are concerned. How is FAWE working on that?
FM: The involvement of women in FAWE's work is at two levels.
To begin with, FAWE is a membership organization with members
and branches countrywide. These members run programmes at
the national, district, or grassroots level that are geared
toward supporting girls and at assisting women acquire education
for development.
At another level, women collaborate in FAWE's activities by
working with the girls as mentors in areas such as HIV/AIDS
education, providing them with information on harmful cultural
practises like female genital mutilation, and explaining the
sexual maturation process and drug-related issues. They also
serve as role modals for the girls. We encourage FAWE members
to write proposals for funding at the grassroots level based
on their specific needs.
eLA: How would you define gender responsive education?
FM: Gender responsive education is education that addresses
all the gender concerns of boys and girls, men and women.
As such, the teaching and learning methodologies must use
gender-responsive pedagogy. In addition, the teaching and
learning materials must be gender responsive in the use of
language and illustrations. Another key area is ensuring that
the school environment is gender responsive. This touches
on the provision of appropriate sanitary facilities and that
gender-appropriate infrastructure is put in place for all
the learners irrespective of their gender.
eLA: How can eLearning support women’s education?
FM: I’d say that eLearning can support the education
of women and girls by providing an alternative in terms of
access. As girls and women have been marginalised for very
long, this avenue will ensure another means by which they
can access education, especially those who are not able to
join formal learning environments. eLearning is also in a
position to help women and girls access additional information
outside formal school learning that will influence their lives,
such as information related to their health, social well-being,
empowerment, and management of finances. All these will go
a long way in improving their lives and those of their families.
eLA: You are coordinator of the FAWE Kenya Chapter.
How are the national chapters linked with each, other and
how do you create synergies?
FM: All 33 chapters operate within the FAWE mandate, goals,
and strategic objectives, which guide the operations of all
the chapters. This has ensured that they can share experiences
and learn from one another and from the various challenges
met during implementation. All the chapters share a common
vision and mission. They are all membership organizations.
The chapters carry out inter-chapter visits; they host certain
activities together to synergize and learn from each other’s
experiences. The programme officers based at the regional
office visit the chapters with a view toward addressing any
challenges and ensuring that activities carried out fall within
the overall FAWE goal and mandate.
eLA: How do you cooperate with governments? Is there sufficient
commitment?
FM: FAWE Kenya has a long working relationship with the government,
mainly through working with the Ministry of Education. The
partnership between FAWE Kenya and the Ministry is anchored
on the premise that the Ministry, through its reform processes,
is extending a welcome hand to strategic partnerships that
will enhance its mandate to provide quality education and
training to all girls and boys, men and women inclusively.
In this wide partnership, therefore, FAWE Kenya brings in
one key strategic strength in mainstreaming gender in Education
training and research. This is realized through our core functions,
namely:
Influencing education policies for gender responsiveness
Undertaking demonstrative interventions with communities to
demonstrate best practices in gender and education
Advocacy to correct the imbalances of gender in education
across the wide educational spectrum
Working with Ministry of Education, development partners,
and other stakeholders to scale up the best practices in gender
issues activities and education.
In addition, FAWE Kenya has, over the years, undertaken demonstrative
interventions with communities to illustrate best practices
in gender and education, FAWE has supported this process through
the setting up Of Centers of Excellence in Athwana, Meru District,
and A.I.C Kajiado.
eLA: Dear Faith, many thanks for your time.
Visit the FAWE website at www.fawe.org
Interview zuerst erschienen auf eLearning
Africa. Die Veröffentlichung erfolgt mit freundlicher
Genehmigung. Foto © FAWE
- Zurück zur Rubrik "Medien & Kompetenz"
- Zum Forum "Medien & Kompetenz"
|