According to Zemen Ashenafi, CCA training has significantly improved the teaching and learning process.
The classes have become more interactive, with increased student engagement. Students’ reading habits have improved, and they are now involved in more creative activities.
Additionally, she observes that CCA training has motivated and increased the drive of teachers to teach.
Ensuring equitable access
Ethiopia’s Education Statistics Annual Abstract reported that in 2015/16, only 8.1% of children with special needs were enrolled in primary schools and 1.5% in secondary education.
Challenges in supporting children with special needs in mainstream schools include a lack of awareness and capacity to implement special needs education activities and a lack of educational resources.
Ethiopian schools also need to be safer and more accessible for female students. This includes ensuring the availability of separate latrines for girls, hiring female teachers, and developing and delivering life skills training, counseling, and adolescent girls’ empowerment programs.
Thanks to GEQIP-E, there has been significant progress in ensuring equitable access to education. Over 72% of primary schools are now equipped to support girls’ enrollment and retention through the establishment of gender clubs at the school level.
In historically disadvantaged regions, such as Afar, Somali, and Benishangul-Gumuz, the gross enrollment rate of girls in upper primary schools has improved significantly, increasing from a 2017 baseline of 39% to 45% in 2023.
To meet the needs of children with special needs, GEQIP-E established 1,400 Inclusive Education Resource Centers nationwide. These centers provide essential services to over 148,528 students, 52% of whom are girls with special needs.
GEQIP-E has also prioritized training over 10,000 teachers and experts in inclusive settings, enabling them to teach children with special needs effectively.
Says Semira Kemal, a special needs student in Addis Ababa: “I’ve received different materials from the resource center in my school. My stylus was broken, and I got a new one from here. I also got a slate and voice recorder; these all are helping me a lot.”
“In the past, our society used to hide their special needs children at home,” said Ejeta Mekonnen. “Through these centers, we have provided support for eyeglasses. We have also provided support for wheelchairs. In the past, students’ parents had to carry them to school, but now they successfully use wheelchairs to go to school and learn.”
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