Good Practice Guides for Emergency Education
Author
The Interagency Network for Education in Emergencies (INEE)
Summary
This site provides a collection of short guides containing advice and guidelines for providing both formal and informal
education to populations in crisis and post-crisis areas. It has been created on the premise that traditional education
does not prepare communities with the life skills they need to live in these
situations. Sppecific guides are provided for:
- Health;
- Landmine Awareness; and
- Peace Education.
The site offers general advice for providing emergency education programmes,
including providing dedicated staff and schedules for teaching; adapting and vary materials for specific
audiences; and ensuring accuracy of materials and information. For each of the three topical guides, the creators list strategies
and methodologies for delivering programme content.
The
health education guide explains the need for involving health professionals in developing education campaigns,
and recommends a variety of communication strategies, including:
- health talks in the community and at health clinics
- posters
- brochures
- radio programmes
- newspaper articles
- school programmes
- song or writing contests
- peer education programmes
The
landmine awareness section recommends programmes containing not only
information on landmine identification, but how to live with landmines. It also
recommends inclusion of victims of landmines within the programme. Suggested
topics outlined include:
- Be aware of threat
- How to protect yourself
- What to do if you come across a landmine / UXO
- Behavioural change
- Landmine ban advocacy
The
peace education guide points out the necessity of evaluating a community's
readiness to discuss sensitive issues of peace and reconciliation. It provides a series of tips, including
working with the community, building baseline and subsequent measurement indicators, assessing appropriate timing,
and incorporating anecdotal evidence into the programme.
Publisher
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