School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene SNV Experience Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting The...

26
School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene SNV Experience Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting The Hague, May 2011

Transcript of School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene SNV Experience Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting The...

Page 1: School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene SNV Experience Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting The Hague, May 2011.

School Water, Sanitation and HygieneSNV Experience

Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting

The Hague, May 2011

Page 2: School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene SNV Experience Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting The Hague, May 2011.
Page 3: School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene SNV Experience Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting The Hague, May 2011.

About SNV

INGO – Established in 1965-Operated in 40 countries

Agriculture

Renewable Energy

WASH

Page 4: School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene SNV Experience Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting The Hague, May 2011.

WASH in Schools in SNV

• Cambodia: “Unlocking Toilet Doors, Unblocking Student’s

Access to School Sanitation” Initiative and WASH in

Schools advocacy.

• Lao/Ethiopia: CLTS in Schools via fun games and songs

• Tanzania: From School WASH mapping to policy changes

and advocacy for WASH in Schools.

Page 5: School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene SNV Experience Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting The Hague, May 2011.

Structure of the Presentation

About School WASH Mapping

Achievements

Challenges Ahead

Page 6: School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene SNV Experience Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting The Hague, May 2011.

School WASH Mapping - Background

• A joint initiative by SNV – UNICEF- WaterAid in 2,300 schools in16 districts (2009)

• Purpose: To get a comprehensive picture of WASH situation in all schools in the selected districts; to explore the underlying causes of the (poor) situation; and to develop strategies for improvement

• Physical mapping: Data collection

• Governance and Validation Inquiry

• District Feedback Meetings

• National Stakeholders Workshop

Page 7: School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene SNV Experience Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting The Hague, May 2011.

Overall Situation in 16 Districts

Page 8: School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene SNV Experience Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting The Hague, May 2011.
Page 9: School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene SNV Experience Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting The Hague, May 2011.

Public and Primary vs. Private and Secondary

Page 10: School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene SNV Experience Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting The Hague, May 2011.

Facts and Figures 11% of schools meet the minimum standard in pupil/DH

6% (or 174 schools) has no latrines

20% (or 562 schools) has over 100 pupil per drop hole

6% of the existing latrine is rated as “good standard”

9% of all school is rated as having “clean” latrines

1% has soap, 4% has adequate water; 6% has HW facilities

4% school has facilities for children and adults with disabilities

48% of latrines for girls has no door 43% have never been inspected on WASH situation by LGAs Latrines have never been emptied in most school

Page 11: School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene SNV Experience Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting The Hague, May 2011.

Underlying causes

Facilities (quality and

quantity)

Governance structure

Resource allocation & management

Poor WASH situation in

Schools

Page 12: School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene SNV Experience Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting The Hague, May 2011.

Severe lack of facilities

A major barrier to hygiene

education

Facilities become

abandoned or unused

Not attractive to

use by children

Heavy burden for effective

O&M

Rapid deterioration of facilities

Overcrowded

Inadequate facilities

(quality and quantity)

Page 13: School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene SNV Experience Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting The Hague, May 2011.

Weak Governance Structure

Unclear role; responsibility and ownershipUnclear and ineffective coordination on

funding and institutional arrangements at National level

No arrangement for O&M of Facilities Inadequate inspection and enforcement Low level of community participation and

consultationWeak leadership and guidance from

LGAs and Village GovernmentLow level of trust between community and

village leaders

Page 14: School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene SNV Experience Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting The Hague, May 2011.

Poor Resource Allocation and Management

• Discrepancy between schools in urban and rural/remote area • CG/LGCDG are late, fragmented; inadequate; unpredictable• Weak transparency on resource allocation• Top down direction on fund utilization• No distinction between government’s fund and parent’s

contribution• Low priority given to School WASH at all levels

Page 15: School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene SNV Experience Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting The Hague, May 2011.
Page 16: School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene SNV Experience Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting The Hague, May 2011.

Recommendations

• Focus more on quality (of the learning environment and achievement) and not

just quantity (enrolment rate)

• Strengthen national coordination and management for School WASH

• Identify champion to strengthen political support and priority for SWASH

• Strengthen SWASH monitoring, inspection and enforcement

• Explore fund flow mechanisms for SWASH from central government to schools

• Provide financial incentives for good performing schools

• Improve financial transparency at all levels

• Strengthen community involvement and ownership in SWASH

• Strengthen home and school linkages to improve the effectiveness of SWASH

Page 17: School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene SNV Experience Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting The Hague, May 2011.

From Mapping to Action: Achievements to Date

• MOU Between 4 Ministries responsible for Sanitation and

Hygiene signed in 2010 and is being operationalised

• National School WASH Guidelines to be developed by 4

Ministries with support from SNV and UNICEF (2010)

• National Strategic Plan for School WASH (2010 – 2015)

• National Sanitation and Hygiene Policy is being developed (with

higher priority and attention given to WASH in Schools)

• Thematic Working Group for School WASH established in 2010;

chaired by MOH and MOEVT; supported by SNV and UNICEF

Page 18: School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene SNV Experience Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting The Hague, May 2011.

18

Education Sector Development

Committee (ESDC) (Meets 4 times/year)

School WASH Technical Working Group

(SWASH-TWG)Co-Chairs: MOEVT & MOHSW

Supporting DPs: UNICEF & SNV(Meets 6 times a year)

Household Sanitation & Hygiene Technical Working Group

(HHSH-TWG)Co-Chairs: PMO-RALG & MOHSWSupporting DPs: WSP & WaterAid

(Meets 6 times a year)

Education Sector Development

Committee Task Force(Meet 4 times/year)

Education Sector Cross Cutting Issues Technical Working

Group (Meet 4 times/ year)

Health Sector(HSSPIII)

Technical Committee – Health SWAp

(Meets twice/ year)

Water Sector Development Programme

Water Sector Working Group (WSWG)

(Meets 4 times a year)

Thematic Working Group:

Rural Water Supply &

Sanitation Component

(Meet 8 time/ year) National Sanitation & Hygiene

Technical Committee (NSHTC)Chair: MOHSW

(Meets 4 times a year)

National Sanitation & Hygiene Steering Committee

(NSHSC)Chair: MOHSW

(Meets 2 times a year)

Health Promotion (Sanitation, Hygiene, Environmental Health

Management and Climate Change)

Technical Working Group(EHM & CC-TWG)

Chair: MOHSW(Meets 12 times a year)

Environmental Health & Climate Change Sub-

GroupCo-Chairs: NEMC &

MOHSW(Meet 6 times/year)

MOHSW Management

Committee(Meets weekly)

Thematic Working Group:

Urban Water Supply & Sewerage

Component (Meets 8 times

a year)

Page 19: School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene SNV Experience Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting The Hague, May 2011.

Reflection on the 6 key messages

• Contribute evidence: Yes, very much

• Increase investment : Potentially high

• Demonstrate quality : Not yet showed results

• Monitor WASH in Schools: Still weak with no

enforcement, need to be linked to performance monitoring

and incentive-based fund allocation• Involve multiple stakeholders: Starting • Engage those who set policies: Yes, very much

Page 20: School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene SNV Experience Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting The Hague, May 2011.

Taking WASH in Schools to Scale - Challenges

Ahead!• Low priority for WASH in Schools: A difficult trade-off

• Teachers participation: Workload vs. motivation and incentive

• Engaging community and parents participation: Building trust &

cohesion; changing of mind-set

• Enforcing minimum standard vs. fund availability

• Investing in WASH in Schools: Some for All or All for Some?

• Coordination at all levels: Agreeing on roles; responsibilities and

mandates; harmonizing guidelines and standards.

• Performance monitoring

• Uncoordinated Funding for WASH in Schools

• Political interference vs. Political support

Page 21: School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene SNV Experience Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting The Hague, May 2011.

Priority: Desks, Chairs or Latrines?

Page 22: School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene SNV Experience Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting The Hague, May 2011.

Why should there be vast differences?

Page 23: School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene SNV Experience Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting The Hague, May 2011.

What can be done to bridge these gaps?

Page 24: School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene SNV Experience Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting The Hague, May 2011.

And more equity for children?

Page 25: School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene SNV Experience Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting The Hague, May 2011.

CLEAN AND HEALTHY SCHOOLS• Better health and well-being for school children• Better learning achievements, better learning outcomes

INCLUSIVE SCHOOL WASH• More girls to attend and stay in school • More opportunities for children with disabilities

IMPROVED SCHOOL HYGIENE AND SANITATION• Improve hygiene practices at home• Influence positive S&H behavior in family & community

Investing in WASH in Schools – Investing in a Healthier, Happier and Brighter Future

Call to Action - Why WASH in Schools?

Page 26: School Water, Sanitation and Hygiene SNV Experience Call to Action – WASH in Schools Meeting The Hague, May 2011.

Thank You!

1