With support from Porticus, Bainum Family Foundation and the Bernard van Leer Foundation, AKF developed resource materials and adapted existing programming to support educators, families, and children during these particularly difficult times. These innovations build on a suite of resources that the Aga Khan Development Network (AKDN) has developed to help educators and families support children’s learning at home during the COVID-19 crisis.
Conduct Rapid Assessment Surveys
As schools and Anganwadis shut down, AKF had to quickly figure out how to support its staff and families from a distance. In April 2020, AKF conducted surveys with 341 households in Bihar, Uttar Pradesh and Telangana to better understand the lockdown’s impact on community access to health, education and ECD resources. Findings indicated concerns around reduced learning opportunities and feelings of uncertainty around how parents can support their children with limited learning materials.
Responsive Caregiving and Early Learning Programme
Prior to COVID-19, AKF India implemented a pilot project on Responsive Caregiving and Early Learning in September 2019 in 60 villages in the Bahraich district of Uttar Pradesh. The programme aims to develop a deeper understanding of responsive care among caregivers and frontline workers. It emphasises the importance of play and stimulation, a reduction in harsh disciplinary practices, and engages with different segments of caregivers – mothers, fathers and grandparents.
Before the onset of the pandemic, AKF worked with Anganwadi workers to facilitate 12 sessions with caregivers. The focus of the sessions was to create a space for young parents to support one another. During the sessions, they discussed their own experiences from childhood, expressed how they feel as a caregiver, and learned new ways to support the needs of their young children – creating daily routines, ways to make a more responsive and stimulating environment, the importance of storytelling, and how to create low-cost toys and picture books.
Due to the pandemic, AKF had to suspend all in-person sessions. However, AKF worked to assure the crisis did not further reduce access to services critical for child development. Building off of the momentum from the in-person sessions, AKF adapted key messages from the Responsive Caregiving and Early Learning Programme into 30 posters with images that offer parenting tips and ideas for in-home activities parents can do to help their child reach important developmental milestones, particularly while schools and Anganwadi centres are closed.
Each week, Anganwadi workers circulate the information by sharing one parenting tip and two activities with caregivers on various platforms – as audio, images and text messages over WhatsApp, using Interactive Voice Recording Support (IVRS) and in-person during home visits. Through this collective effort, the posters reached over 17,000 parents and caregivers.