Involving Communities to Keep Children in School
Posted on Friday, April 16th, 2010 at 6:00 amAnge Kamugisha, Education Liaison Officer, Rwanda

Rachael and Sarah pictured carrying out household chores in 2009 when Concern went to check why they'd dropped out of school. Photo: Rwanda, Concern Worldwide
I cannot imagine the sadness of watching my child grow up without the chance to go to school, learn to read and write, or have opportunities to achieve her potential.
And yet, here in my native Rwanda, each time I meet an out-of-school child, I feel a measure of that sadness.
Lack of access to basic, quality primary education is one of the root causes of extreme poverty, and disproportionately affects girls: the majority of the world’s 72 million out-of-school children are girls.
In Rwanda, the gender gap in primary education reached its goal of zero in 2005, and the gender gap in literacy is close to zero. For a nation that is among the 16 poorest in the world, that is no small achievement.
The Rwandan government has also recently introduced an initiative to provide free basic education to children for a period of nine years. However, poverty still keeps many children from attending school.

Akimanziye, a pupil at Gakenke district school, presents to a Parent Teacher plenary meeting. Photo: Rwanda, Concern Worldwide
Two girls I met in 2009 are living proof of this fact. Rachael, who is 12 years old, and Sarah, who is 8, both dropped out of school soon after enrolling.
As part of my role as Education Liaison Officer for Concern, I help set up and train parent–teacher committees (PTCs) in communities to identify children such as Rachel and Sara who have dropped out of school.
PTC members make home visits to encourage them to resume classes, and also engage their parents in discussions, and organize meetings at village level to discuss the importance of primary education.
But that is not all: Concern also works with schools to set up children’s committees: these give children a voice and ensure that they share input and influence decisions on the issues that affect them in their schools.
Last April, I accompanied parent–teacher committee members on a visit to Rachael and Sarah’s home in the remote village of Amarongi, in the southern province of Gatwaro.

In 2009, PTC members were elected and trained in 73 target schools. Photo: Rwanda, Concern Worldwide.
When we arrived, we found the two sisters busy working—doing household chores. They told us that they did not attend school because they had no notebooks, pencils, or clean clothes. Lack of these basic supplies is often a barrier to attendance for the poorest children.
Since that visit, members of the parent–teacher committee have worked closely with Rachael and Sarah’s mother to show her the value of education in her daughters’ lives. Through the Concern-supported program, the PTC members were also able to raise money to provide books and uniforms to the girls.
This week, I went back to the primary school in rural Gatwaro. After almost a year, I saw Sarah and Rachael again. This time, they were not working: they were in a classroom studying, wearing their new uniforms and bright smiles.
The words of their mother, Barakagwira Bonifrida, gave me faith in the impact of the program and in the hope of a future full of promise for the girls: “Now I am sure that my children will reach secondary school. If nobody had helped me, I think my daughters would have regretted all their lives that they did not go to school.”
Improved communication and collaboration at local level between parents and teachers, including home visits, is at the core of Concern’s education program in Rwanda.
Parent-teacher committees include more than just parents: they involve local authorities—and children themselves—to improve schools and increase enrollment and retention.
Concern is now working with 73 schools in Rwanda’s poorest communities, and our efforts to scale up parent–teacher committees are gaining momentum: they are now set to be adopted at the national level by the Ministry of Education.

