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An Interview with Dileep
Ranjekar, CEO - Foundation
You
are one of the few NGOs which work with State Governments.
What are the pros
and cons of working with the Government?
When over 90% of
elementary education in the country happens in government schools
(especially in the 600,000 villages across the country) there is no way
anyone can impact education without actively and constructively working
with the Government. It is the government that has the infrastructure,
a large organisation and most importantly the experience to work in
education at a large scale.
We
preferred to make efforts to impact the larger system (even if it was
slow) than creating fewer islands of excellence – which anyway exist in
pockets of the country. Therefore, all our efforts begin with
discussions with the state governments of the states we work in (we
have signed MoUs with Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka for instance). Our
experience with the governments of Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka has
been very encouraging.
There
are so many good people in the government. We found that like in any
other large organisation, the normal distribution curve applied in this
organisation as well.
We
decided to focus on what is good than what is not good. It is a very
motivating experience when a cluster resource coordinator or a block
education officer or director of a department shows complete
involvement and guides us to achieve better results in our programs and
intervention. In all our programs, we work shoulder to shoulder with
the government education functionaries and the community
representatives.
We are
always asked questions by many on the impact of “change in the
government” in states. We do not feel political change in the
leadership of the state would impact our work. Education is too
important for any political party and for any government. Besides, we
are only adding and supplementing to the system and not subtracting
anything from the system.
Thus,
any government would welcome our working with them. In our day to day
work, we have practically no interaction with the political leaders –
we work primarily with the education functionaries at both senior and
the grass-root level.
In
people’s mind, there is a very strong association of Azim Premji
Foundation with Wipro and therefore with IT. They do not realize that
our Foundation has no linkage with Wipro at all.
Yes, we
have experimented usage of IT effectively to enhance the curricular
learning of the children as well as to create excitement in the
schools. The CD based, child centric and interactive curricular content
in local languages that we have developed is today being used by over
600 schools and 169, 000 children.During this academic year, it would
be used in over 6000 schools in 5 states benefiting over 1.7 Mln
children.
Research
has established that the content are positively influencing the
learning of the children in relevant subjects and the attendance of the
children is significantly up on the days they are scheduled to work on
the computers.
Our
vision on using IT enabled education is to make learning “play”,
assessment “fun” and to be able to provide the same quality of
education “to all”.
Many
people say that we have two countries; Bharat and India. And use of IT
in Education is for India and not Bharat because in Bharat there are
schools where there is no power. So how can you use computers and hence
IT?
Azim Premji Foundation
is very much aware of both the faces of our country.
Yes,
there are problems about power in Bharat sometimes, but it is
heartening to see the overwhelming response that IT gets in the
villages. In fact, the thought of introducing computer enabled
curricular education came to us through the feedback the parents of
these remote villages gave to us.
When we
asked them what their ambitions about their children’s future were -
they expressed their aspirations as “we want our children to work on
computers” and “we want our children to be able to speak in English”.
There is
solid response from parents of children studying in rural schools to
the introduction of computers as a tool for learning. We would like to
emphasize here that our focus is on using computers as a tool for
curricular learning and not on computer education.
The
problem of shortage of power and low voltage did lead us to experiment
with solar energy that is affordable. In Hochihalli village in Kadur,
Karnataka, the Foundation has devised a cost-effective power pack that
can generate sufficient power to provide backup to six computers. This
is in addition to a step up stabiliser.
How are
you trying to bring a balance between quantity and quality?
India
currently has about 35 Million children “out of school” and about 157
Million children in the school. Over 75% of these schools have
multigrade teaching wherein one teacher teaches children in several
grades in one classroom at the same time.
The
Foundation began its efforts with issues related to quantity. We soon
realized that the state governments are making significant efforts to
get the out of school children in the schools and are also working
towards building more schools/classrooms etc. We therefore decided to
focus on “quality of education” and what happens inside a school.
Today
our programs are either focused on building the accountability for
learning among the key stakeholders (the Learning Guarantee Program is
one such program) or in demonstrating “proof of concept” that can be
replicated at a large scale in the government system (The Accelerated
Learning Program and the Child Friendly School are examples of such
programs).
Of the 41
CDs on educational content that you have devised, how many are based on
the curriculum?
Nearly
95% of our educational CDs are based on the curriculum.
The rest
deal with co-curricular activities.
The CDs
have presently been translated into Hindi, Kannada, Telugu, Tamil and
Oriya.
Soon we
may have translations in Gurmukhi for schools in Punjab.By March 2005,
we plan to have 120 CDs that will cover the entire gamut of curricular
modules for children in standard 1 to standard 8.
How can other NGOs benefit from the CDs developed
by you. Are they free or for some minimal costs?
NGOs working in the field of education can make use of the content in
the CDs. The CDs are free for all government schools anywhere in India.
For
non-government schools that cater to children from socio-economically
weaker sections, the CDs would be free.
Other
schools can have it at a very nominal charge, say Rs.50 per CD. The
only condition that we have is that teachers have to be trained to use
the CDs as an effective supplement to classroom teaching, before the
schools can use them.
Recent
research studies on the effectivenes of using technology as a tool for
education has shown that the CDs work best in places where the teachers
are completely involved in using them. In government schools, the
government has to make the arrangements for this training.
Even if you do not enter all the states
of India and limit your interventions to a few states, can you develop
CDs in those states, so that NGOs in these states have good support
material?
The CDs
can be used by people in any state. States like Pondichery, Uttar
Pradesh, Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh have already shown interest in
procuring the CDs.
We
already have CDs in most South Indian languages.
In most
North Indian institutions, the medium of instruction is Hindi.
So the
CDs can definitely make good support material for NGOs in all such
states.
Many
Corporates with large budgets work with a lot of NGOs in a lot of
states with limited infrastructure of two people handling the entire
CSR programme.
Would you advice them to get focussed on just one state to get better
measurable impact?
Not many corporates work
on a national level. Most corporates limit their activities to a small
radius around them. And there is nothing wrong in that.
For CSR
to be effective, there needs to be a long term commitment and
continuous quality inputs in your programs.
For
instance, work does not stop with building a school for employees’
children.
The
company must make sure that the school is delivering learning, that
best practices are in place, that the children are developing in the
manner planned.
CSR must
include sustainability and credibility and must go beyond a mere brand
building and image enhancement exercise.
If your
program is genuine and is delivering the results, the brand and image
will anyway follow.
We
believe in using existing systems in society and governments to make
them more sustainable. We constantly monitor our own work to make sure
we are on the right track.
Therefore,
all our programs have a base line, rigorous monitoring systems and
periodic evaluation of the program.
Can you offer one day sharing programmes
with large NGOs and large Corporates on scalable projects?
We can most certainly offer one-day sharing programmes with NGOs.
Over the
last three years, the Foundation has gained knowledge in the field of
education especially in rural India.
We have
also done a lot of research and documentation. Our studies on Learning
Guarantee Programme, ComputerAssisted Learning Centres, Accelerated
Learning Programme and Technology Initiatives have just been completed
and will be placed on our website for sharing with all those who would
want to know about the same.
Azim
Premji Foundation is also in a process of building talent and knowledge
base towards being a resource centre for organisations working in the
education domain.
A lot of
potential donors - NRIs, Individual Indian donors and small companies-
who feel that their small contribution of a couple of lakhs cannot make
a significant difference - are not giving funds because they are not
sure about the credibility of NGOs.
Would you give them the opportunity to give funds to community through
you. How can it work?
We can
definitely guide potential donors.
With our
experience in grassroots education, we have come across several,
promising experiments in quality education.
We can
identify these projects so that potential donors can fund them.
E-nabled experiments require huge funds due to capital costs of
hardware, and donors can support these projects through us.
Wherever
donors want their visible identity to be built for their significant
financial contributions, the same can also be done.
As a
policy, Azim Premji Foundation does not supply hardware.Even in
schools, we do not normally participate in the funding or construction
of infrastructure. But we are aware of where funds are needed, and we
can thus direct donors towards these needs.
How is Azim Premji Foundation different
than Wipro's CSR?
Azim
Premji Foundation and Wipro are two different companies, the only thing
being common that both the organisations are focused on education.
While
the Foundation works in the field of elementary education in rural
schools, Wipro, through its Wipro Applying Thought in Schools Programme
addresses the education issues in urban schools.
Wipro
also has an educational Forum that connects educationists from all over
India and facilitates sharing of educational initiatives.
The
Foundation and Wipro CSR are looking at a synergy in most of their work.
What are your views on NGO Governance?
NGOs are
driven by people with passion for a cause.
A person
in the NGO sector has an understanding of the grassroots, and a good
social perspective.
But when
it comes to governance, accounting practices and measurement of
results, they need to take a look at the way corporates function.
How can NGOs enhance their credibility?
NGOs can
enhance their credibility by their the results they produce! NGOs
should have accountability and transparency.
NGOs
should measure their impact to see whether the process they have
adopted is taking them where they want to be.
Capacity
building as another important part of increasing credibility. The
effort has to move from being individual focused to organisation /
institution focused.
With
capacity-building excercises, more people can be trained to do
different jobs for the organisation. There has to be not just islands
of excellence but an entirely institutionalised approach to running an
NGO.
The
Foundation sees itself recruiting varied type of individuals in the
future as well --- they could be psychologists, social workers,
managers, researchers, documentation experts, educationists and
counsellors.
We would
like to systematize every aspect of our work so that the models we
create are easily replicable, on any scale.
How do you measure the impact of your
programmes?
We have
just come out with our research documents on our various programmes.
While the baseline and midline studies are conducted by us, we also use
outside agencies to evaluate and carry out the endline studies.
Our
programmes have very definitive goals, and these are measured
constantly. For instance, the study on Learning Guarantee Programme
conducted in 900 rural government schools, is just out.
While 40
were ‘winning schools’ (schools that guaranteed learning, according to
the conditions laid out in the program) there were 860 schools that
participated but did not reach the goal.
But the
fact that these non-winners considered themselves worthy of stringent
evaluation itself proved that they had come a long way in the race to
become winning schools after becoming part of the Learning Guarantee
Programme.
This is
in itself a measure of the impact of this programme.
Can you
share values of your team?
When we
started the Foundation, we had practically no experience in the field
of education.
What we
probably brought to the table was a burning desire to make change,
passion to contribute to the education domain in the country and an
uncompromising integrity of purpose.
We also
brought some experience to work in a professional manner, experience to
manage large organisations, experience to develop people and build
capacity.
We do
not look at our work as “social work” but an effort to contribute
solving a large problem before the nation in a systematic manner.
We have
over 100 full time professionals working with the Foundation and over
1000 program based volunteers
In our
organisation, we want to bring in the best from “development” and
“corporate” organisations.
We want
to have the passion, dedication, selflessness and social awareness from
the development organisations and transparency, professional way of
working, result / measurement orientation from the corporate
organisations.
Interview by Mala
Kumar, Bangalore.
This interview appeared on the
website http://www.developednation.org
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