By Rose Hennessy | Brighter Communities Worldwide
Thank you so much for donating to this project making sure that children have a clean, safe, healthy environment at school with access to clean water, latrines and health education. This programme involves the children directly as they form health clubs to review their school environment, identify risks and create an action plan to address them.
Activities over the last few months have included the children, who are members of the health clubs in each school, training for their role. They have been learning now to carry out an environmental review of their school, planning and carrying out action days that address these areas and informing and involving the rest of the children in the school, for example – rotas to clean the classrooms, keeping the tippy tappys filled with water for handwashing and getting involved in the actions days.
For World Environment Day several schools planted trees to improve their school environment and help to combat climate change in the future. The children enjoyed the trainings and learning more about Healthy School programme, good health, hygiene and sanitation. Each member of the health club receive a t-shirt to identify them as members. There was great excitement when these were distributed after each training.
To mark Global Menstrual Hygiene Day in May, 500 children from 13 schools gathered at Londiani Township school for workshops and games, learning about menstrual health, discussing issues, seeing the reusable sanitary kits and how to use them. To show their commitment to #EndPeriodStigma, they made menstrual bracelets, the global symbol for menstruation. Celebrating the day provided the students with information, showing them that menstruation is a normal part of life and can no longer be ‘womens’ business but ‘community business’. The students enjoyed the games, mixing between schools and entertaining each other with poems, songs, stories and speeches.
Construction of pit latrine blocks for girls and boys and rain water harvesting projects continues in the schools and earlier this month, visitors from Ireland and the UK spent time a Kiptugumo Primary school where a new latrine block with washroom for girls is under construction. The visitors enquired about the impact of COVID-19 on the school.
The School Principal, Mr Kiptoo, told them that the number of girls attending the school has fallen sharply since the pandemic – schools were closed for 9 months during Kenya’s lockdown and many children simply never returned. Mr Kiptoo said that boy pupils now outnumber girl pupils by two to one. Large numbers of teenage girls, including primary school pupils aged 13 and 14, became pregnant during the lockdown. Many of these girls have never returned to school, while others who are trying to resume their studies are understandably distracted by the needs of their babies, and their academic performance is faltering. Meanwhile, many of the boys are under pressure from parents to abandon school and earn money.
Project reports on GlobalGiving are posted directly to globalgiving.org by Project Leaders as they are completed, generally every 3-4 months. To protect the integrity of these documents, GlobalGiving does not alter them; therefore you may find some language or formatting issues.
If you donate to this project or have donated to this project, you can receive an email when this project posts a report. You can also subscribe for reports without donating.