Special Features
Dubai Cares partners with Pratham to enhance literacy and numeracy skills in India
Dubai Cares, a philanthropic organisation working to improve children’s access to quality primary education in developing countries, today announced that it has partnered with Indian NGO Pratham Education Foundation (Pratham) to launch a programme aimed at enhancing literacy and numeracy skills, as well as early childhood education in India.Dubai Cares will collaborate with Pratham and assist local communities in six Indian states by strengthening programmes focused on three core issues - enhancing the learning levels of beneficiaries in government schools across rural areas, providing school readiness among children in grades 1 and 2, as well as supporting the Central Resource Group.
The programme is expected to benefit over 1 million children over the span of three years.
Speaking on the partnership with Pratham, Tariq Al Gurg, Chief Executive Officer of Dubai Cares, said: "Our partnership with Pratham will ensure quality education for children attending schools in India and will facilitate high levels of literacy and numeracy skills. We lay a lot of emphasis on monitoring, evaluation and learning, so this program will also serve as demonstration sites to generate evidence and showcase best practice that can be replicated across the country to enhance the educational support system on a national level." Under the partnership, Dubai Cares has earmarked three programs that will reach a total of 1,053,954 direct beneficiaries. The Read India III programme will boost the skill levels in language and math for government school students in rural areas through an intense short-term teaching-learning program that will be repeated several times in the same village or school during the year. The programme will be delivered to 150,000 villages in 150 blocks across the country and will demonstrate the positive effects of short bursts of quality training.
The Urban Early Childhood Education Programme prepares primary-age children for school through physical, language, cognitive and emotional readiness. It also promotes early literacy and numeracy amongst children in Grades 1 and 2 through community classes held in homes or common community facilities.
With its emphasis on innovation and development, Dubai Cares will also support the Central Resource Group that will focus on four key functions - content creation, research and development, training and advocacy. The group’s work will allow Dubai Cares to fine-tune as well as elevate the standards of existing interventions to deliver a stronger content, training, and analyses.
Similar to many Dubai Cares initiatives, the India programme is in line with the �Global Education First Initiative’ launched by United Nations’ Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon in September 2012, aimed at renewing and reinvigorating global commitments to education. Dubai Cares attended the launch of this global initiative during the week of the UN General Assembly in New York, where Ban Ki-Moon selected Dubai Cares to be a partner in this initiative.


