IIMPACT receives 90% of our funding support from corporate sponsors. We can meet with corporates and charitable foundations to present tailored proposals that align with your values and goals for social change.
VISION: Create Enabling Conditions for Girls’ Education.
MISSION: Involve every ‘out of school’ girl in the 6-14 age group in meaningful education through specially modeled IIMPACT Learning Centres that cater exclusively to the girl child.
IMMEDIATE GOAL: Establish 500 IIMPACT Learning Centers in as many villages in 5 states low in girl child education: Orissa, Bihar, Chattisgarh, Jharkhand and Uttar Pradesh.
OBJECTIVES:
5 to 8 years.
The project will target 15,000 ‘out of school’ girls, in the age group 6-14 years, not able to get into formal education due to prevailing social and economic disadvantages faced by their families and communities.
The IIMPACT model ensures that there is flexibility in terms of norms of enrolment, pace of teaching, teaching methodology, school time-table etc. that suits every out of school girl and no eligible girl is left out of the program in the project area/village.
The IIMPACT focus is that the education has requisite quality and is child-centred and gender-sensitive. It is based on a curriculum that is relevant to the needs and reality of learners, and relies on trained teachers equipped with appropriate learning materials. School is held in a child-friendly environment – one that is safe, clean and conducive to learning and play. Schools are expected to not just impart education in its narrow sense but, more broadly, to mould children’s attitudes. All effort are made that egalitarian values, compassion, and tolerance, concern towards others, respect for cultural diversity, gender sensitivity and health education are integrated in the curriculum.
The unit target area is defined as a village or a cluster of rural houses with a concentration of around 25-30 ‘out of school’ girls. Ideally our effort is to establish one Learning Center in each such cluster/village. Sponsored Learning Centres are proposed in the following locations.
S.No | State | District | Current FemaleLiteracy | No. of Centers that will be opened | No. of villages targeted | No. of girls that will be supported |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | Orissa | Gajapati | 29% | 25 | 25 | 750 |
Koraput | 25% | 25 | 25 | 750 | ||
2. | Bihar | Kishanganj | 18% | 100 | 100 | 3000 |
Araria | 22% | 100 | 100 | 3000 | ||
3. | Chattisgarh | Dantewada | 21% | 25 | 25 | 750 |
Bastar | 32% | 25 | 25 | 750 | ||
4. | Jharkhand | Garhwa | 23% | 25 | 25 | 750 |
Pakaur | 20% | 25 | 25 | 750 | ||
5. | Uttar Pradesh | Shravasti | 18% | 75 | 75 | 2,250 |
Bahraich | 23% | 75 | 75 | 2,250 | ||
Total | 500 | 500 | 15,000 |
Broad Activity | |
---|---|
1 | Mobilization of community volunteers |
2 | Training of teachers |
3 | Development of curriculum and TLM |
4 | Village based micro-surveys |
5 | Enrolment of all ‘out of school’ girls |
6 | Establishment a community based school |
7 | Focused education for 30 to 40 enrolled girls in each LC |
8 | 180 days learning in the classroom (year) |
9 | Quarterly exams to monitor progress |
10 | Annual examinations to evaluate learning level |
11 | Establishment village education and development groups |
12 | Formation of parent and school committees |
13 | Monthly meetings of the community groups |
14 | Extra-curricular activities and environment education |
15 | Mainstreaming after every girl passes Class V |
ANNUAL COST OF ONE IIMPACT LEARNING CENTER: INR 85,000 or USD 1,600.
Therefore the entire project for 500 Learning Centres will cost roughly around INR 3,75,00,000 (3.75 crores) annually and INR18.75 crores over a period of 5 years.
IIMPACT will work with Foundations and Corporate Sponsors to set up a phased implementation program and agree measurable indicators of success and milestone outcomes, with ongoing reporting on performance to a Program Steering Committee.
IIMPACT offers a program for change based on a model that has been proven in the field, is scalable and constrained only by funding. A partnership with Corporate Sponsors will achieve social and economic outcomes in alignment with the goals of the sponsors. The opportunity to present a detailed project proposal will be greatly appreciated.
Please contact IIMPACT President, Mr Rahul Tandon to discuss how we can work with you. See: Contacts.
IIMPACT was founded in March 2003 by the alumni of 1978 batch of IIM Ahmedabad to mark their Silver Jubilee reunion, with the single-minded objective of educating the under-privileged girl child from socially and economically disadvantaged sections of the society.
IIMPACT provides an alternative educational opportunity to girls, mostly from disadvantaged sections, who have limited or no access to schools. This is done through community-based Learning Centers, where they get meaningful and stimulating education up to standard 5 and are supported to enter mainstream education. Sound foundations established at IIMPACT Learning Centers prepare them for a good academic future.
IIMPACT has developed identified a specific focus, developed a clear strategy, and proven the delivery model in terms of social outcomes as well as scalability.
The academic and field research is now well-established to support the notion that:
“Investment in girls’ education may well be the highest-return investment available in the developing world.” (Larry Summers, when Chief Economist at the World Bank).
Former World Bank President, James Wolfensohn, addressing the Fourth UN Conference on Women, said:
“Education for girls has a catalytic effect on every dimension of development: lower child and maternal mortality rates; increased educational attainment by daughters and sons; higher productivity; and improved environmental management. Together, these can mean faster economic growth and, equally important, wider distribution of the fruits of growth….
More education for girls will also enable more and more women to attain leadership positions at all levels of society: from health clinics in the villages to parliaments in the capitals. This, in turn, will change the way societies will deal with problems and raise the quality of global decision making.”
Low literacy rates for females in India highlight the gender gap in many populous states as below.
S.No. | State | Literacy Rate | Gender Gap | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Males | Females | |||
1 | Bihar | 60 | 34 | 26 |
2 | Jharkhand | 68 | 39 | 29 |
3 | D & N Haveli | 73 | 43 | 30 |
4 | Uttar Pradesh | 70 | 43 | 27 |
5 | Jammu & Kashmir | 66 | 42 | 24 |
6 | Arunachal Pradesh | 64 | 44 | 20 |
7 | Rajasthan | 76 | 44 | 32 |
Source: Census of India 2001
The National Census of India clearly identifies over 50 such districts in the country where the female education is below 30%. There are many such districts also where the female literacy is below 25% and 2 districts where it is just 18%.
This disparity is more acute in the enrolment of girls from scheduled castes and minorities. In Rajasthan, the Mewat area in Alwar district is very backward. Worst affected is the Meo community, the original inhabitants of Mewat. The literacy rate of Meo girls over 15 years of age is just 8%.
Girl child education has been lagging in India due to a variety of social, economic and cultural reasons including:
In our experience, there are three major challenges when it comes to the education of girls: (a) getting them to school, (b) ensuring good quality of education to improve their learning achievements and (c) enlisting their participation in higher level education (upper primary and above).
IIMPACT has focused on the girl child, aged 6-14, in the remote, rural areas of India for educational intervention and the achievement of targeted outcomes over 5 years.
Reaching out to the girl child is central to the efforts being made by IIMPACT. IIMPACT’s model compliments the formal schooling of the girl child by preparing them well at the initial stages, which also ensures improvement in their learning achievements. Therefore it solves the basic problems faced in girls’ education.
The IIMPACT model has three partners who are instrumental in implementing the Learning Centers right in the villages where there is the greatest need for social development. These partners are:
The village community is the most important part of the IIMPACT model. It has to come together as one unit to provide or develop with IIMPACT the space and infrastructure for the learning centers. They have to monitor the local learning centers diligently and gradually take over responsibility for the learning centers, in other words the education of the girl child, into their own hands.
The role of local NGOs is to work extensively among the communities in the villages, establish a team of local teachers and community mobilisers, establish a strong partnership with the communities and manage the day-to-day activities associated with the learning centers. We have established close working relationships with accredited and experienced NGOs and formalised our arrangements via performance agreements.
IIMPACT is engaged throughout the life cycle of each project, taking responsibility for the critical success factors underpinning the strategy:
IIMPACT depends on allied donor agencies for generating resources. Currently, the funding mix is about 60% institutional (including very large individual donors) and 40% retail. Going forward, the target is an 80:20 funding mix, in favour of institutional donors. By funding administration costs via separate donations, IIMPACT is able to guarantee donors that each contribution directly benefits a girl child without any transaction costs.
The demographic profile of the community that we serve is as follows:
With just 15 Learning Centers in as many villages in 2004 in just one State, Rajasthan, today there are over 1000 IIMPACT Learning Centers operational in over 1100 villages covering over 45,000 girls in 10 States: Rajasthan, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Jharkhand, Bihar, West Bengal, Orissa,Uttarakhand,Madhya Pradesh and Chattisgarh.
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