Education and Child Protection
Technical and Policy Resources
Department of Education and Child Protection Publications
Save the Children's education and child-protection programs help children learn, develop and receive a quality education from childhood through young adulthood, and protect children from abuse, neglect, exploitation and violence in all regions of the world.
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Our education programs make it easy for children, their families and community volunteers to participate, even for those who have missed years of schooling or have never been to school, and include lessons that are meaningful to children's lives and local culture. In addition, »ÆÉ«ÊÓƵtrains teachers, some for the very first time, in new techniques to improve their effectiveness in the classroom. Our child-protection programs focus on the most vulnerable children while aiming for the safety and well-being of all children.
Latest Publications
Basic Education
- Enjoying Books Together At Home 2015 (PDF 3.6 MB)
- Literacy Breakthrough: Global Ripples from our Programs 2015 (PDF 183 KB)
- Enjoying Books Together: A Guide for Teachers on the Use of Books in the Classroom 2014 (PDF 1.2 MB)
- »ÆÉ«ÊÓƵStands for Inclusive Education 2014 (PDF 339 KB)
- Beyond School Walls: A Boost for Readers 2013 (PDF 3.1 MB)
- Literacy Boost: Cross Country Analysis Report 2013 (PDF 463 KB)
- The Right to Learn: Community Participation in Improving Learning 2013 (PDF 5.3 MB)
- Save the Children's Literacy Boost Toolkit: Introduction 2012 (PDF 344 KB)
- Community Strategies for Promoting Literacy Flipbook 2010 (PDF 2.5 MB)
Child Protection
- Child Safeguarding Policy & Our Committment to Child Safeguarding
- Children's Ebola Recovery Assessment: Sierra Leone 2015 (PDF 2.0 MB)
- Child Protection Minimum Standards in Humanitarian Action 2012 (PDF 2.8 MB)
- Child Friendly Space in Emergencies: A Handbook for »ÆÉ«ÊÓƵStaff 2008 (PDF 566 KB)
- Child Protection in Emergencies: Priorities, Principles and Practices 2007 (PDF 365 KB)
Cross-Cutting Publications
- Enjoying Books Together At Home 2015 (PDF 3.6 MB)
- Enjoying Books Together: A Guide for Teachers on the Use of Books in the Classroom 2014 (PDF 1.2 MB)
- Opportunity to Learn (OTL): A Framework for Supporting Learning 2014 (PDF 2.1 MB)
- »ÆÉ«ÊÓƵStands for Inclusive Education 2014 (PDF 339 KB)
- Ending the Hidden Exclusion: Learning and Equity in Education Post-2015 2013 (PDF 1.9 MB)
- Food for Thought May 2013 (PDF 1.3 MB)
- State of the World's Mothers: The Power and Promise of Girls' Education 2005 (PDF 1.0 MB)
Peer Reviewed Articles
Learning emerged as a central theme within post-2015 debates. Central to these efforts were a focus on literacy, and specifically early-grade reading. This article identifies significant challenges raised by the current framing of emergent literacy in international educational development circles. Specifically, we examine how the Early Grade Reading Assessment, or EGRA, one very influential oral reading assessment tool based largely on an American reading assessment called DIBELs, has shaped the educational quality debate in the past decade and what important elements might be missing from this dominant view of reading. To do so, the article first considers the historical development of EGRA. We discuss concerns with the model of reading embedded in EGRA. We then examine the evidence, to date, of the impact of EGRA-informed interventions in places like Liberia, Malawi, and Kenya. The article concludes with implications for the future of literacy and international educational development, especially in light of discussions within the Learning Metrics Task Force to make early grade reading a central indicator of educational quality in the post-2015 agenda.
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Children’s reading skill development is influenced by availability of reading materials, reading habits, and opportunity to read. Save the Children’s Literacy Boost data has replicated this finding across numerous developing contexts, but international large-scale reading assessments do not capture detail on current home literacy. The consistent positive association of reading skills with home-based materials and reading habits, and the negative association with chores suggest that in developing contexts, opportunity to read outside the classroom is as important to development of reading skills as opportunity to learn these skills inside the classroom. Without data on home literacy environment, calls for action center only on schools and policies, and thus incompletely address learning and equity. Results of Literacy Boost program evaluations find that participants with reading opportunities outside of schools learned more than non-participating peers. Children from homes without books, without readers and without reading opportunities, as well as struggling girls, benefited more from provision of opportunities to read outside the school than did more advantaged peers. With the same teachers, reading instruction quality, and limited class time, an enhanced home/community literacy environment generated greater learning. Including indicators of home literacy environment alongside skill assessments, whether large scale or small, can best inform effective support for learning and equity.
Over the past decade, international and national education agencies have begun to emphasize the improvement of the quality (rather than quantity) of education in developing countries. This trend has been paralleled by a significant increase in the use of educational assessments as a way to measure gains and losses in quality of learning. As interest in assessment has grown, low-income countries have begun to adopt and adapt international and other assessments for a variety of uses, including the comparability of national quality with other countries, improved ways of measuring reading achievement, and further attempts to reach marginalized populations within a country. The present group of papers provides multiple perspectives on the debate currently underway about the best approaches to create and use learning assessments in low-income countries.
Early Childhood Care & Development
- ECCD Baseline Report - Bhutan 2015 (PDF 1.0 MB)
- IDELA Technical Working Paper 2015 (PDF 636 KB)
- Growing the Evidence for Children: Measuring Development and Early Learning Globally 2014 (1.1 MB)
- »ÆÉ«ÊÓƵand Children's Early Learning: Our International and U.S. Qualifications, Programs and Leadership 2014 (431 KB)
- Emergent Literacy: Investing Early for Exponential Outcomes 2013 (1.5 MB)
- Laying the Foundations: Early Childhood Care and Development 2012 (PDF 3.1 MB)
- The Promise of Preschool in Africa 2012 (PDF 983 KB)
- State of the World's Mothers: Investing in the Early Years 2009 (PDF 3.7 MB)
Education in Emergencies
- More and Better: Global Action to Improve Funding Support and Collaboration for Education in Emergencies 2015 (PDF 628 KB)
- Walk the Talk: Review of Donors' Humanitarian Policies on Education 2015 (PDF 2.7 MB)
- What do Children Want in Times of Emergency and Crisis? 2015 (PDF 1.6 MB)
- Futures Under Threat: The impact of the education crisis on Syria's children 2014 (PDF 1.7 MB)
- Attacks on Education 2013 (PDF 1.3 MB)
School Health & Nutrition
- Menstrual Hygiene Management Operational Guideline (PDF 2.8 MB)
- Program and Implementation Resource Toolkit 2016 (ZIP 453 KB)
- School Health & Nutrition Program Update: Issue 11: 2014-2015 2014-2015 (PDF 3.5 MB)
- Malaria-control in schools in Mali: Results from a Cluster Randomized Control Trial in Sikasso Region 2012 (PDF 2.3 MB)
- Attacks on Education 2013 (PDF 1.3 MB)
- Common Approach to Sponsorship-funded Program for School Health and Nutrition 2010 (PDF 639 KB)
- School Health and Nutrition Health Education Manual (PDF 1.8 MB)
- FRESH Monitoring and Evaluation Guidance for School Health: Appendices (PDF 279 KB)
- FRESH Monitoring and Evaluation Guidance for School Health: Evaluation Guidance (PDF 5.0 MB)
- FRESH Monitoring and Evaluation Guidance for School Health: Thematic Indicators (PDF 490 KB)