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Schools for
Madagascar
     Making the grade




Education Toolkit   Madagascar
Despite its image as a tropical paradise,
Madagascar is an island with immense challenges.
Despite its image as a tropical paradise, Madagascar is an     improvements in quality. Today, if Madagascar is to achieve
island with immense challenges. Its population of nearly 20    Millennium Development Goal (MDG) number two — a
million may live in beautiful surroundings, but the country    primary education for all by the year 2015 — it will need
remains one of the poorest in the world: Nearly 69% of the     to rely on increased external support.
population are considered ‘poor’ and 44% ‘extremely poor’.
   Education is essential to help lift the population of       Not enough classrooms
Madagascar out of poverty. It begins with working to secure    One of the major constraints facing primary education in
a primary education for all by the year 2015.                  Madagascar is that for every 100 children who enter the
   Up until the political crisis of 2009 Madagascar was on     first grade, only 60 will complete the full five-year cycle.
track to achieve Education for All. The number of children     The average Malagasy adult completes only 4.4 years of
enrolled in primary school had increased from almost 2.5       school. The low completion rate is a direct result of a lack
million in 2001-2002 to nearly 4.5 million in 2008-2009. In    of capacity: Madagascar does not have enough trained
such a poor country these primary school enrollment rates      teachers and it does not have enough classrooms.
were particularly impressive.                                     Madagascar will need to build 2000-3000 classrooms
   But the situation is now worsening; most households have    every year between now and 2015 if it is to achieve primary
experienced a loss in revenues and public budgets have been    education for all. (This figure does not include rehabilitating
cut. Poverty increases the likelihood of children not atten-   all the classrooms currently damaged or destroyed in
ding school, and the depletion in government funds has         cyclones). The environmental impact of such a building
meant a halt to the expansion of access in education and to    program is overwhelming: In a country where deforestation

                                                                                       Schools for Madagascar Making the grade 01
has already claimed almost 90% of the island’s natural           However, achieving ‘Education for All’ requires more than
forests, building this many classrooms with traditional        simply building or rehabilitating classrooms. The majority of
techniques and local forest materials would be a disaster.     pupils in Madagascar study in classrooms with poorly trained
                                                               teachers, few learning materials and even fewer amenities:
Targeting the most vulnerable                                  Just 13% of public primary schools have access to water and
UNICEF believes the greatest improvements in education         only 24% have latrines. UNICEF is working with communities
will come from targeting vulnerable communities — remote       and education officials to improve this.
communities where children’s access to a complete primary
education is the most challenging. Fourteen percent of         Contracts for success
communities in Madagascar have no school; in 19% of the        Since 2005 UNICEF has supported the Ministry of National
country’s school districts more than 40% of primary schools    Education (MNE) in developing a participatory, community-
are incomplete, offering only two to three years of educa-     based approach to school improvement in more than 3,000
tion. In addition, in many school districts cyclones damage    primary schools. Principals, teachers, students, parents and
or destroy hundreds of classrooms each year. For UNICEF, the   community leaders are brought together to identify specific
more classrooms that can be built and rehabilitated in these   actions to improve education in their community. A ‘Contract
vulnerable areas, the greater the impact on the numbers of     for School Success’ (CPRS) is drawn up where each party lists
children who can attend school. UNICEF’s innovative and        their commitments to support the agreed actions. In
environmentally friendly building techniques will ensure       Madagascar, where there is such a diversity of cultural,
that this is not done at the expense of the environment.       economic and geographic conditions, the contracts approach

                                                                                      Schools for Madagascar Making the grade 02
is the one most likely to lead to lasting improvements in        capable of introducing effective innovations for improved
children’s education because it adapts solutions to the local    access to and quality of education. With further financial
contexts, and mobilizes local commitment to change.              resources UNICEF can use its influence to help keep
                                                                 education in Madagascar on track. UNICEF is in a good
child-friendly schools                                           position to contribute so that Madagascar does not lose
UNICEF promotes child-friendly schools — schools that are        the immense gains made in primary school enrollment
concerned with the whole child and his or her wellbeing as       and completion in previous years.
a learner. Such schools consider child-friendly teaching
methods, child protection, health and nutrition, water and       In this booklet and its short companion videos (available
sanitation, school environment and safety, environmental         at www.unicef.org/infobycountry/madagascar.html), you
protection issues, inclusion, non-discrimination and non-        will meet children from three vulnerable communities as
violence — in short, all the issues that affect a child’s        they start the new school year. Manjo attends an incomplete
motivation for coming to school, for staying there, and          school, Dorlys has no school in her village, and Angita’s
for obtaining a quality education.                               classroom was destroyed in a cyclone. Their stories are
                                                                 representative of the experiences of many children in
A better future                                                  Madagascar and explain exactly why UNICEF’s approach
UNICEF has an established reputation in Madagascar. With         to education is important.
its considerable influence at both the grassroots and policy        With your help UNICEF can support the efforts of teachers,
levels it is a strong partner to the Education Ministry. It is   parents and children in Madagascar to create a better future.

                                                                                         Schools for Madagascar Making the grade 03
Making the grade
                                            incomplete cycle schools
In Madagascar, 400,000 children (14%) between the ages of        education eventually comes to a standstill. The choices
six and ten are out of school. Of those that are in school,      available to them are to drop out of school altogether, or
15% will begin their education in incomplete schools, or         to continue to repeat the same grade over and over again
schools that offer only two or three years of the complete       in the hope that one day they will be able to move on.
five-year primary cycle. In poorer regions, like Androy in the      Sam ‘Manjo’ Manjomasy, who you will meet in the
arid South of the country, almost half of all primary schools    following pages, is a student at Ankilimanintsy II primary
are incomplete cycle schools.                                    school. It is a small rural school in Androy region that only
   Some of the children who attend these schools will go on      offers first and second grade. We meet Manjo as he starts
to continue their education at complete cycle schools, often     the second grade for the third time, with high hopes that
walking long distances to attend. For most, however, their       this will be the year his school finally makes the grade.
My name is Sam Manjomasy. I am 13 years old. My friends call me Manjo,
     which means ‘achieve well’. One day I want to be a policeman.




                                                        Schools for Madagascar Making the grade 05
[ ]
  Schools for Madagascar Making the grade 06
Sam ‘Manjo’ Manjomasy
Manjo, 13, is a student at Ankilimanintsy II primary school. This year he will repeat the second grade for the third time.


Today is the start of a new school year. I am glad that school is starting.      hands before they eat and about washing the plates and spoons. Now
I like it. This year, I will be in the second grade again. I really want to go   they do these things. Before they did not.
on to grade three, but my school only goes to grade two, and my                    Because I know everything we are learning in school it is my job to
mother can’t a ord to send me to another school.                                 help the teacher: I help her to bring in the school materials at the start
   Ten other children in my class are also repeating the second grade.           of the day and put them away at the end of the day. Sometimes she
Only one of them has repeated as many times as I have. Others drop               asks me to help the younger children with their reading or to keep the
out instead of repeating and repeating. They stay at home and help                rst grade quiet. I like it because it feels like I am a teacher too.
their parents work in the elds.                                                    When I was younger my mother wanted me to be a doctor. Later,
   I feel sad about having to repeat, but rather than drop out, I prefer         when I could think for myself, I decided I wanted to be a policeman. I
to stay in grade two. I like to learn, and I believe — I hope — one day          like the look of policemen. I like their uniforms. I also know that
they will send a second teacher to our school and then I will be able to         policemen have money to buy things. There are policemen on the
move on to grade three.                                                          road not far from the school. I always see them buying things to eat,
   Going to school is good. I can help my mother. She asks me to read            like beer and meat. I am not sure how many years I would have to go
letters and count money. She has me write any letters she needs to               to school to become a policeman. Maybe six years? I don’t know. But
send. I also teach my family. I have taught them to wash their hands,            whatever I do — doctor or policeman — I know I can only do it if I go
their faces and their feet. I have taught them about washing their               on to the third grade.

                                                                                                               Schools for Madagascar Making the grade 07
Schools for Madagascar Making the grade 08
0600 twice a week the water sellers come
                              with the cart and I buy water for the family. Twenty
                              liters costs 400 Ariary (20¢ US).



0545 My mother wakes us
up and I go outside to wash
my face and clean my teeth




                                                    Schools for Madagascar Making the grade 09
0610 We eat sweet potatoes for breakfast
Manjo: Damy, what are you doing today?
Damy: I am going to look after grandmother’s cattle.
Manjo: Vaha, what about you?
Vaha:  I will bring firewood and work in the field.
Manjo: Mother, what are you doing today?
Mother: Weaving. Are you looking forward to school?
Manjo: I am.




0620 I walk to school with the children from our
village. We carry water and wood for the canteen.

                       Schools for Madagascar Making the grade 10
Vaha Hetsagnombee
Manjo’s mother


I am very happy that Manjo is starting back to school today. He is the
only one of my three children that goes to school. Manjo’s father died
when Manjo was just two years old. So there is no one else at home.
That is why I need my other two children — my son Damy who is 14
and my daughter Vaha who is ten — at home to help me. They help
me in the eld and around the house.
  Even if I didn’t need their help I could not a ord to send all three of
them to school, so I have chosen to send Manjo. He is dynamic and
intelligent. Of my three children he is the best suited for school.
  I support our family by weaving traditional mats (tsihy) by hand.
When I nish one, I sell it and we use the money to buy food. One mat
costs 4000 Ariary (US $2). I can usually make and sell two in a month.
We also grow manioc, potatoes, beans and maize. If I just work on the
mats and don’t do agriculture I can produce four mats in a month, but
when I also work in the elds there is only time to make two. The
produce from our elds supports us all year round. If the harvest is
good we sell some of it. We do not have any animals — just ten
chickens.
  When Manjo grows up I want him to be a doctor. Doctors earn a lot
of money — and with that Manjo can help me in my life. But when I
send him o to school every day that is not what I am thinking. I am

                             Schools for Madagascar Making the grade 11
just thinking I need him to go to school so he can learn something. I       The nearest public school is more than 12 kms away. That wouldn’t
believe that if Manjo learns something he will become a chief one day       cost so much, but it is too far away. Manjo is too young to go so far to
— an authority of some sort in the region. He has the personality for it.   school, and I can’t have him stay there. I need him to come home at
  The teacher told me that Manjo must go to another school so he            the end of the day because he helps me — and I don’t want him to live
can continue his education. I listened to what she said, but then I         away from home.
dismissed it. The nearest [full cycle primary] school is six kms away.        I want Manjo to ‘run after knowledge’. I want him to earn a
That is not too far for Manjo to go, but it is a private school. It would   certi cate or a diploma and become a doctor. And I believe he will do
cost 3000 Ariary (US $1.50) each month to send him. I can’t a ord that.     these things one day, even if for now he has to repeat.




                                                                                                        Schools for Madagascar Making the grade 12
Ankilimanintsy II primary school


         constructed: 2003
      dimensions: 4 x 8 meters
    number of villages served: 4
       grades offered: 1 & 2
      number of students: 132
        number of desks: 17
       number of teachers: 1
Mameno Rova
Teacher, Ankilimanintsy II primary school


I have been the teacher here for two years. It is a small classroom and    rather than have them keep repeating. Other parents prefer to keep
it is very crowded with 132 students inside. The parents in this           sending them because they hope that one day grade three will open.
community worked together to build this classroom with their own             Most of the parents here believe that it is important to send their
money and labor. They wanted their children to be able to go to            children to school, even if means repeating the same grade. They want
school, but they didn’t have enough money to build a second                to see them going to school. They know it is a bene t.
classroom or to make this one bigger. Nor was there money to build a         Manjo is a good example. He is an excellent student. By now he
latrine.                                                                   would be in grade ve if he could have continued to progress in his
   It is really hard to teach so many children. It is especially hard to   education. Last year, and the year before that, I told Manjo and his
supervise what they are doing. Every child is di erent and some of         mother that they should send him to another school. Manjo said ‘No. I
them have problems. I need to work with them individually, but I can’t.    know that my mother does not have the money to send me
The second graders sit in the desks. Most of the rst graders sit on the    to another school. I will stay here until they open grade three.’
 oor. There are so many of them that I can’t even get to where they          Manjo is the leader of the class. He helps me with the younger
are sitting. I have asked the district education chief to send another     children by listening to them read and keeping them in order.
teacher to help me, but I am not sure if that will happen or not.          When I need someone to help me in any way — for example, to go
   When the children here nish grade two, if their parents have            with the children to do agriculture — Manjo is my assistant.
enough money, they can send them to school in Ambovombe                      I am sad. I worry that soon it will be too late for him to nish his
(15 kms away). If their parents don’t have money the children stay         education. That’s why I keep telling him to go to school elsewhere. But
here and repeat grade two with the hope that one day the district          he says ‘No, I have to stay.’ I really want to see him get an education. I
education o ce will send another teacher. If a new teacher comes we        have even thought about paying for this myself, but I don’t have the
can open grade three.                                                      money to send him to school elsewhere. That is why I have insisted
   This year I have ten children repeating the second grade. Some          that the district education chief send us another teacher and then we
parents take their children out of school and have them help at home       open the third grade.

                                                                                                         Schools for Madagascar Making the grade 15
0650 We clean the classroom,
then we line up. We raise the
flag and sing the national song.



                                      0705 The teacher takes
                                      attendance.




                                   Schools for Madagascar Making the grade 17
0830 The teacher asks me to help some
of the first-graders with their reading.



                                           0912 The teacher reads to the class.




                                                                Schools for Madagascar Making the grade 18
UNICEF plans to complete over 1,000 child-friendly schools
by 2013. These schools will have:
- a maximum of 50 children per classroom
- library books, classroom kits and teaching materials
- one latrine for every 50 girls
- one latrine for every 50 boys
- sustainable water points

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Manjo's Story Part I

  • 1. Schools for Madagascar Making the grade Education Toolkit Madagascar
  • 2. Despite its image as a tropical paradise, Madagascar is an island with immense challenges. Despite its image as a tropical paradise, Madagascar is an improvements in quality. Today, if Madagascar is to achieve island with immense challenges. Its population of nearly 20 Millennium Development Goal (MDG) number two — a million may live in beautiful surroundings, but the country primary education for all by the year 2015 — it will need remains one of the poorest in the world: Nearly 69% of the to rely on increased external support. population are considered ‘poor’ and 44% ‘extremely poor’. Education is essential to help lift the population of Not enough classrooms Madagascar out of poverty. It begins with working to secure One of the major constraints facing primary education in a primary education for all by the year 2015. Madagascar is that for every 100 children who enter the Up until the political crisis of 2009 Madagascar was on first grade, only 60 will complete the full five-year cycle. track to achieve Education for All. The number of children The average Malagasy adult completes only 4.4 years of enrolled in primary school had increased from almost 2.5 school. The low completion rate is a direct result of a lack million in 2001-2002 to nearly 4.5 million in 2008-2009. In of capacity: Madagascar does not have enough trained such a poor country these primary school enrollment rates teachers and it does not have enough classrooms. were particularly impressive. Madagascar will need to build 2000-3000 classrooms But the situation is now worsening; most households have every year between now and 2015 if it is to achieve primary experienced a loss in revenues and public budgets have been education for all. (This figure does not include rehabilitating cut. Poverty increases the likelihood of children not atten- all the classrooms currently damaged or destroyed in ding school, and the depletion in government funds has cyclones). The environmental impact of such a building meant a halt to the expansion of access in education and to program is overwhelming: In a country where deforestation Schools for Madagascar Making the grade 01
  • 3. has already claimed almost 90% of the island’s natural However, achieving ‘Education for All’ requires more than forests, building this many classrooms with traditional simply building or rehabilitating classrooms. The majority of techniques and local forest materials would be a disaster. pupils in Madagascar study in classrooms with poorly trained teachers, few learning materials and even fewer amenities: Targeting the most vulnerable Just 13% of public primary schools have access to water and UNICEF believes the greatest improvements in education only 24% have latrines. UNICEF is working with communities will come from targeting vulnerable communities — remote and education officials to improve this. communities where children’s access to a complete primary education is the most challenging. Fourteen percent of Contracts for success communities in Madagascar have no school; in 19% of the Since 2005 UNICEF has supported the Ministry of National country’s school districts more than 40% of primary schools Education (MNE) in developing a participatory, community- are incomplete, offering only two to three years of educa- based approach to school improvement in more than 3,000 tion. In addition, in many school districts cyclones damage primary schools. Principals, teachers, students, parents and or destroy hundreds of classrooms each year. For UNICEF, the community leaders are brought together to identify specific more classrooms that can be built and rehabilitated in these actions to improve education in their community. A ‘Contract vulnerable areas, the greater the impact on the numbers of for School Success’ (CPRS) is drawn up where each party lists children who can attend school. UNICEF’s innovative and their commitments to support the agreed actions. In environmentally friendly building techniques will ensure Madagascar, where there is such a diversity of cultural, that this is not done at the expense of the environment. economic and geographic conditions, the contracts approach Schools for Madagascar Making the grade 02
  • 4. is the one most likely to lead to lasting improvements in capable of introducing effective innovations for improved children’s education because it adapts solutions to the local access to and quality of education. With further financial contexts, and mobilizes local commitment to change. resources UNICEF can use its influence to help keep education in Madagascar on track. UNICEF is in a good child-friendly schools position to contribute so that Madagascar does not lose UNICEF promotes child-friendly schools — schools that are the immense gains made in primary school enrollment concerned with the whole child and his or her wellbeing as and completion in previous years. a learner. Such schools consider child-friendly teaching methods, child protection, health and nutrition, water and In this booklet and its short companion videos (available sanitation, school environment and safety, environmental at www.unicef.org/infobycountry/madagascar.html), you protection issues, inclusion, non-discrimination and non- will meet children from three vulnerable communities as violence — in short, all the issues that affect a child’s they start the new school year. Manjo attends an incomplete motivation for coming to school, for staying there, and school, Dorlys has no school in her village, and Angita’s for obtaining a quality education. classroom was destroyed in a cyclone. Their stories are representative of the experiences of many children in A better future Madagascar and explain exactly why UNICEF’s approach UNICEF has an established reputation in Madagascar. With to education is important. its considerable influence at both the grassroots and policy With your help UNICEF can support the efforts of teachers, levels it is a strong partner to the Education Ministry. It is parents and children in Madagascar to create a better future. Schools for Madagascar Making the grade 03
  • 5. Making the grade incomplete cycle schools In Madagascar, 400,000 children (14%) between the ages of education eventually comes to a standstill. The choices six and ten are out of school. Of those that are in school, available to them are to drop out of school altogether, or 15% will begin their education in incomplete schools, or to continue to repeat the same grade over and over again schools that offer only two or three years of the complete in the hope that one day they will be able to move on. five-year primary cycle. In poorer regions, like Androy in the Sam ‘Manjo’ Manjomasy, who you will meet in the arid South of the country, almost half of all primary schools following pages, is a student at Ankilimanintsy II primary are incomplete cycle schools. school. It is a small rural school in Androy region that only Some of the children who attend these schools will go on offers first and second grade. We meet Manjo as he starts to continue their education at complete cycle schools, often the second grade for the third time, with high hopes that walking long distances to attend. For most, however, their this will be the year his school finally makes the grade.
  • 6. My name is Sam Manjomasy. I am 13 years old. My friends call me Manjo, which means ‘achieve well’. One day I want to be a policeman. Schools for Madagascar Making the grade 05
  • 7. [ ] Schools for Madagascar Making the grade 06
  • 8. Sam ‘Manjo’ Manjomasy Manjo, 13, is a student at Ankilimanintsy II primary school. This year he will repeat the second grade for the third time. Today is the start of a new school year. I am glad that school is starting. hands before they eat and about washing the plates and spoons. Now I like it. This year, I will be in the second grade again. I really want to go they do these things. Before they did not. on to grade three, but my school only goes to grade two, and my Because I know everything we are learning in school it is my job to mother can’t a ord to send me to another school. help the teacher: I help her to bring in the school materials at the start Ten other children in my class are also repeating the second grade. of the day and put them away at the end of the day. Sometimes she Only one of them has repeated as many times as I have. Others drop asks me to help the younger children with their reading or to keep the out instead of repeating and repeating. They stay at home and help rst grade quiet. I like it because it feels like I am a teacher too. their parents work in the elds. When I was younger my mother wanted me to be a doctor. Later, I feel sad about having to repeat, but rather than drop out, I prefer when I could think for myself, I decided I wanted to be a policeman. I to stay in grade two. I like to learn, and I believe — I hope — one day like the look of policemen. I like their uniforms. I also know that they will send a second teacher to our school and then I will be able to policemen have money to buy things. There are policemen on the move on to grade three. road not far from the school. I always see them buying things to eat, Going to school is good. I can help my mother. She asks me to read like beer and meat. I am not sure how many years I would have to go letters and count money. She has me write any letters she needs to to school to become a policeman. Maybe six years? I don’t know. But send. I also teach my family. I have taught them to wash their hands, whatever I do — doctor or policeman — I know I can only do it if I go their faces and their feet. I have taught them about washing their on to the third grade. Schools for Madagascar Making the grade 07
  • 9. Schools for Madagascar Making the grade 08
  • 10. 0600 twice a week the water sellers come with the cart and I buy water for the family. Twenty liters costs 400 Ariary (20¢ US). 0545 My mother wakes us up and I go outside to wash my face and clean my teeth Schools for Madagascar Making the grade 09
  • 11. 0610 We eat sweet potatoes for breakfast Manjo: Damy, what are you doing today? Damy: I am going to look after grandmother’s cattle. Manjo: Vaha, what about you? Vaha: I will bring firewood and work in the field. Manjo: Mother, what are you doing today? Mother: Weaving. Are you looking forward to school? Manjo: I am. 0620 I walk to school with the children from our village. We carry water and wood for the canteen. Schools for Madagascar Making the grade 10
  • 12. Vaha Hetsagnombee Manjo’s mother I am very happy that Manjo is starting back to school today. He is the only one of my three children that goes to school. Manjo’s father died when Manjo was just two years old. So there is no one else at home. That is why I need my other two children — my son Damy who is 14 and my daughter Vaha who is ten — at home to help me. They help me in the eld and around the house. Even if I didn’t need their help I could not a ord to send all three of them to school, so I have chosen to send Manjo. He is dynamic and intelligent. Of my three children he is the best suited for school. I support our family by weaving traditional mats (tsihy) by hand. When I nish one, I sell it and we use the money to buy food. One mat costs 4000 Ariary (US $2). I can usually make and sell two in a month. We also grow manioc, potatoes, beans and maize. If I just work on the mats and don’t do agriculture I can produce four mats in a month, but when I also work in the elds there is only time to make two. The produce from our elds supports us all year round. If the harvest is good we sell some of it. We do not have any animals — just ten chickens. When Manjo grows up I want him to be a doctor. Doctors earn a lot of money — and with that Manjo can help me in my life. But when I send him o to school every day that is not what I am thinking. I am Schools for Madagascar Making the grade 11
  • 13. just thinking I need him to go to school so he can learn something. I The nearest public school is more than 12 kms away. That wouldn’t believe that if Manjo learns something he will become a chief one day cost so much, but it is too far away. Manjo is too young to go so far to — an authority of some sort in the region. He has the personality for it. school, and I can’t have him stay there. I need him to come home at The teacher told me that Manjo must go to another school so he the end of the day because he helps me — and I don’t want him to live can continue his education. I listened to what she said, but then I away from home. dismissed it. The nearest [full cycle primary] school is six kms away. I want Manjo to ‘run after knowledge’. I want him to earn a That is not too far for Manjo to go, but it is a private school. It would certi cate or a diploma and become a doctor. And I believe he will do cost 3000 Ariary (US $1.50) each month to send him. I can’t a ord that. these things one day, even if for now he has to repeat. Schools for Madagascar Making the grade 12
  • 14. Ankilimanintsy II primary school constructed: 2003 dimensions: 4 x 8 meters number of villages served: 4 grades offered: 1 & 2 number of students: 132 number of desks: 17 number of teachers: 1
  • 15.
  • 16. Mameno Rova Teacher, Ankilimanintsy II primary school I have been the teacher here for two years. It is a small classroom and rather than have them keep repeating. Other parents prefer to keep it is very crowded with 132 students inside. The parents in this sending them because they hope that one day grade three will open. community worked together to build this classroom with their own Most of the parents here believe that it is important to send their money and labor. They wanted their children to be able to go to children to school, even if means repeating the same grade. They want school, but they didn’t have enough money to build a second to see them going to school. They know it is a bene t. classroom or to make this one bigger. Nor was there money to build a Manjo is a good example. He is an excellent student. By now he latrine. would be in grade ve if he could have continued to progress in his It is really hard to teach so many children. It is especially hard to education. Last year, and the year before that, I told Manjo and his supervise what they are doing. Every child is di erent and some of mother that they should send him to another school. Manjo said ‘No. I them have problems. I need to work with them individually, but I can’t. know that my mother does not have the money to send me The second graders sit in the desks. Most of the rst graders sit on the to another school. I will stay here until they open grade three.’ oor. There are so many of them that I can’t even get to where they Manjo is the leader of the class. He helps me with the younger are sitting. I have asked the district education chief to send another children by listening to them read and keeping them in order. teacher to help me, but I am not sure if that will happen or not. When I need someone to help me in any way — for example, to go When the children here nish grade two, if their parents have with the children to do agriculture — Manjo is my assistant. enough money, they can send them to school in Ambovombe I am sad. I worry that soon it will be too late for him to nish his (15 kms away). If their parents don’t have money the children stay education. That’s why I keep telling him to go to school elsewhere. But here and repeat grade two with the hope that one day the district he says ‘No, I have to stay.’ I really want to see him get an education. I education o ce will send another teacher. If a new teacher comes we have even thought about paying for this myself, but I don’t have the can open grade three. money to send him to school elsewhere. That is why I have insisted This year I have ten children repeating the second grade. Some that the district education chief send us another teacher and then we parents take their children out of school and have them help at home open the third grade. Schools for Madagascar Making the grade 15
  • 17.
  • 18. 0650 We clean the classroom, then we line up. We raise the flag and sing the national song. 0705 The teacher takes attendance. Schools for Madagascar Making the grade 17
  • 19. 0830 The teacher asks me to help some of the first-graders with their reading. 0912 The teacher reads to the class. Schools for Madagascar Making the grade 18
  • 20. UNICEF plans to complete over 1,000 child-friendly schools by 2013. These schools will have: - a maximum of 50 children per classroom - library books, classroom kits and teaching materials - one latrine for every 50 girls - one latrine for every 50 boys - sustainable water points