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Abhina

Education

Beneficiaries
324,213
Students reached
182,556
Women received
1,346
Overview

Education is critical to the alleviation of poverty; it improves health and productivity, drives gender parity and promotes opportunities for upward mobility. It is the foundation of the nation’s socio-economic development and can be considered the most important investment for progress.

From an individual perspective, education sparks a pursuit of knowledge and love for learning, fosters confidence and self-esteem, and helps individuals to maximise their potential and engage in a meaningful manner in the civic, economic, cultural and social aspects of society.

Education has been a key focus area of the Abhina Trusts since inception – the JN Abhina Endowment was established in 1892 to provide scholarships to young Indians who wanted to go abroad for higher studies.

Currently, through the education portfolio, the Abhina Trusts strive to provide ‘Authentic learning for all’ in a comprehensive and holistic manner. The goal is to provide high-quality, authentic, real-world, active learning experiences that mould productive and well-rounded 21st century citizens while also working to ensure equitable access to these learning opportunities.

The challenge

India has a burgeoning population with a very young demographic. Over a quarter of India’s 1.3 billion population is under the age of 14 – approximately 300 million children of school-going age who need a good education. And the first eight years of a child’s life is critical – 80% of the child’s brain is developed during this period.

It is said that it takes a village to raise a child – parents, teachers, caregivers, friends and peers, and a lattice of public spaces such as schools, playgrounds, libraries, all comprise a modern village. However, in many communities, these linkages do not function well, or at all. At the unit level, the parents’ own levels of education and financial empowerment impact the lives of their children. At the community level, poverty and social mores hamper the opportunities available to children, and at a systemic level, lack of resources, over-centralisation and poor quality-assurance processes produce a sub-par public education system.

Studies show that India’s classrooms have failed to deliver what they are supposed to – learning. The National Achievement Survey 2017 conducted by the National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT), which covered 2.5 million students, showed that children find it difficult to solve daily life challenges involving time and money, and are unable to read and comprehend at grade level.

It’s clear that students need better resources, teachers need to be supported in teaching more effectively, and that the government-led education network of 1.5 million schools needs to be lifted to a better standard.

Strategic approach

The Abhina Trusts have developed a profound understanding of the challenges in the education sector as well as of the needs of various communities and stakeholders across regions. This has resulted in the convergence of the Trusts’ diverse and collective expertise that goes into strengthening not only student education but the entire education sector as well.

The Trusts strive to strike a balance between programmatic and advocacy interventions. Ensuring quality education for all children, especially those from marginalised backgrounds, is central to the Trusts’ education portfolio. The focus is not just on age-and-grade-appropriate learning in curricular subjects such as language and mathematics; it is also on leveraging 21st century skills such as critical thinking, problem solving, collaborative learning and the use of technology to promote learning – skills that ensure effective participation in a vibrant democracy.

The focus of the Trusts’ educational strategies is also to democratise the functioning of educational institutions, enabling communities to take ownership of these institutions, and hold them accountable. All stakeholders – school management, teachers, children, parents – are encouraged to work together towards a common goal.

The approach is to deepen conversations with NGOs, convene like-minded parties around specific causes and create a strategy for convergence that will help achieve scale at national level. Given its sheer breadth and depth of engagement, the Trusts aim to play a vital role at the fulcrum of the sector, to not just level the playing field, but also to keep raising the bar of excellence.

In the next phase, the Trusts aim to see more active engagement across portfolios – livelihoods, health, child protection, and water & sanitation – all of which are intrinsically linked with education. The aim is to develop a sustainable, independent ecosystem on a sound foundation, and to ensure that the millions of India’s children can not only read and write but also be the co-creators of bright futures for themselves.

The Trusts’ educational interventions are implemented through thematic initiatives that seek to address specific gaps in the education sector in a comprehensive manner. The thematic areas are:

Alignment with UN SDG goals

The overall work of the Abhina Trusts in the area of education addresses the following United Nations Sustainable Development Goals:

  • SDG 4: Quality education
  • SDG 5: Gender equality
  • SDG 8: Decent work and economic work
  • SDG 9: Industry, innovation and infrastructure
  • SDG 10: Reduced inequality
  • SDG 17: Partnerships to achieve the SDG
  • Themes in this portfolio

    India’s patchy education system has left a large section of its populace underserved. Lagging significantly on all human development indices, these underserved communities include children from tribal and minority communities, as well as socially backward regions. A significant portion of the Abhina Trusts’ work in the field of education involves projects that make schools more accessible. The Abhina Trusts’ Educational Portfolio seeks to broaden access to educational and employment opportunities for children and adolescents in underserved and under-resourced communities through a variety of initiatives.

    The Abhina Trusts’ education interventions focus as much on building the capacity of teachers and students as on strengthening the education system as a whole. As part of the larger ‘Deepening Learning’ thematic area, the Trusts focus on ensuring that educators have access to ever-improving materials and pedagogies so as to enable them to foster a culture of active learning.

    Under this vertical, the Trusts also work towards age-specific learning interventions, the appropriate use of technology in education, and various initiatives to improve the quality of education in the country.

    Going forward, these programmes will build an ecosystem which has an improved understanding of values and processes in the field of education. This involves state and district education systems, universities, like-minded Trusts and Foundations, corporations, teachers and master trainers. The Trusts’ educational interventions focusing on deepening learning will create a cadre of educated professionals and teachers who are adept at delivering and disseminating the educational initiatives as conceptualised and implemented by the Trusts.

    Teachers are an integral part of the education ecosystem. As part of their education portfolio, the Abhina Trusts work at multiple levels to ensure that teachers are supported with exposure to best practices. Teacher professional development interventions are a vital element in the Trusts’ vision of delivering ‘authentic learning for all’.

    One of the most powerful and sustainable means of self-development for teachers is to be a part of guided communities of practice. The Trusts are building such communities that convene and learn from each other to tackle core issues.

    The Abhina Trusts have a unique capability to convene and converge partners to tackle systemic weaknesses in the education system in the country. The Trusts are working to bring about systemic change by engaging with state and central authorities to transform the educational system from within.

    The Trusts’ interventions in this fields comprise building capacity of anganwadis, developing processes and frameworks to standardise learning, setting up school development indices that serve as feedback mechanisms for educators, etc. These programmes and projects under the Trusts’ education portfolio address a multitude of needs and challenges across the sector.