Early Childhood Development

Where communication and media are central to early childhood development


Average Rating: 5 out of 5 (1 ratings submitted)

Schooling in Uganda


Summary

Schooling in Uganda: Through Children's Eyes was part of a broader research project that looked at the challenges facing primary schools in Uganda, Kenya, and Zimbabwe. The project attempted to access the voices of pupils, parents, teachers and policy makers in order to hear a variety of different views about the role of primary education, problems currently being experienced, and ideas about what might be done to address these. According to the organisers, Through Children's Eyes proved a creative and effective way of capturing young children's perspectives.

The book is a series of photographs taken by a group of Ugandan children, from peri-urban schools in Kampala, documenting key components of their schooling experience. The children are all part of a project based at Makerere University called the Minds Across Africa Schools Club project, which promotes children's reading and writing in 150 schools in Kampala. In the last few years there has been a massive expansion in enrolment in primary schools in Uganda.

”The majority of these schools are struggling to provide the basic resources needed to meet this expansion. The photographs in this book document the impact of this change, and record the way in which both staff and students are trying to cope, often with great fortitude and creativity, with the enormous challenges they face.”

Publisher

Languages

English

Contact

Minds Across Africa Schools Club project

Makerere University

PO Box 7072

Kampala, Uganda

Tel: +256 41 543 872/532 207

Fax: + 256 41 543 888

Source


Placed on the Communication Initiative site July 25 2005
Last Updated July 25 2005



How useful did you find the knowledge and contacts on this page to your work?


5
Average: 5 (1 vote)
Your rating: None

Help Seed The CI Network

Jobs and more...

Poll: Marginalised Young Girls

What is the most persistent problem facing marginalised female children?