News
from the MCF
Community Engagement Workshops (Jan2008 - Nov 2008): The purpose of the workshops is to help young people see themselves as agents for change in their villages, identify issues they want to address, and develop strategies for how their children’s group can begin solving the problems. Lisle International awarded a grant through its Global Seed Fund program through the Education Resource Center (ERC) to the MCF in November 2007 for this purpose.
Commencing Jan 2008, a series of 10 workshops and 9 follow up visits have been conducted across the Himalayan State of Uttrakhand.
MCF Annual Workshop supported by SBMA/PLAN 20th -21st May 2008 focused on the Status Report by the State of Uttrakhand on the UNCRC and the survey conducted by the children on the status of the UNCRC. Sixty four children from 13 district (13 Partner Organizations) under the Umang programme (SBMA/PLAN) participated in the work shop.Feedback received from an observer of the workshop makes interesting reading….
Building
RTI awareness through children: The Silicon Valley chapter
of Asha for Education has joined forces with the MCF to promote
understanding and use of the Right to Information act in rural mountain
communities. Read More...
New
Community Engagement workshops:
We've received another grant from Lisle
Inc., and ERC to support eight localized workshops for young
people to discuss and strategize ways they can change and improve
conditions in their villages. Our January
2008 workshop taught kids how to use cartoons to communicate
about important issues.
Helping
teenage dropouts: The MCF has partnered with the Uttarakhand
Government's Mahila Samakhya project to help girls who have dropped
out of school acquire the skills they need to support themselves.
The MCF has conducted two workshops for Mahila Samakhya to help
build self-confidence and communication and leadership skills in
these young women.
The
MCF wrapped up a yearlong focus on advocacy and child policy with
a 21st
May 2007 workshop (PDF).
The focus of this campaign was to give children a voice in the state's
work to create a child policy. To this end, the young people had
been talking to other children, their communities and to local government
officials about child rights and the need for a written child policy
to guide the state, and they shared what they had done at this workshop.
This
workshop follows a groundbreaking meeting in November 2006, hosted
by the Uttarakhand government, where the children sat directly across
the table from government officials and told them what they would
like to see in the state's child policy.
Details and pictures. |