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Literacy empowers women in Bihar

India’s Total Literacy Campaign (TLC) used a new system by making local administrators and community organisations – not central bureaucrats – responsible for implementation. What has been TLC’s lasting impact on the women who administered the programme, worked as volunteer teachers and were taught literacy and numeracy skills?

In 2002, ten years after the TLC ended in India, a study assessed its legacy in the Begusarai District of Bihar, a state where there are strong cultural limitations on women’s independence and rights. The researcher found that by getting large numbers of local people involved, this had offered women unique opportunities to escape social constraints and sexual segregation – essentially to ‘come out of purdah’.

Across India, the TLC prepared ten million voluntary trainers for 68 million people in literacy skills in basic reading, writing, and numeracy. Courses were designed to gain these skills in 200 hours. TLC was implemented in Begusarai by the local branch of a national non-governmental organisation (NGO) – Bharat Gyan Vigyan Samiti (BGVS) – which works on a range of women’s education, health and livelihoods issues. BGVS registered 246,000 women and 188,000 men for classes in the 1,100 district villages. As classes for women and men had to be organised separately, over 16,000 women were recruited as teachers.

BGVS played an important role in Begusarai by questioning social constraints on women’s participation in public life. Key findings from interviews with former participants are that:

Discrimination based on location, caste, and gender still restricts the women of Begusarai. The district’s female literacy rate for 2001 of 36 percent is significantly below the national average of 64.4 percent. However, many local women continue with activities related to the TLC’s Post-Literacy Phase – publishing a local newspaper, running libraries, savings and other self-help groups and supplementary classes to increase school enrolment.

The TLC experience in Begusarai suggests that:

Source(s):
‘Crossing boundaries and stepping out of purdah in India’ by Mora Oommen, chapter eight, ‘Beyond access: transforming policy and practice for gender equality in education’, Oxfam GB, edited by Sheila Aikman and Elaine Unterhalter, pp166-180, 2005 Full document.
‘Beyond access: transforming policy and practice for gender equality in education’, Oxfam GB, edited by Sheila Aikman and Elaine Unterhalter, 2005 Full document.

id21 Research Highlight: 26 June 2006

Further Information:
Mora Oommen
Health and Human Development Programs
Education Development Centre
55 Chapel St
Newton, MA 02458-1060, USA

Tel: +1 617 9697100 ext 2845
Fax: +1 6175274096
Contact the contributor: moommen@edc.org

Education Development Center, Inc

Bharat Gyan Vigyan Samiti
Basement of Y.W.A.
Hostel No. II,
Avenue - 21, G-Block,
Saket, New Delhi 110 017,
India

Tel: +91 011 2656 9943
Fax: +91 011 2656 9773
Contact the contributor: bgvs@vsnl.net

Bharat Gyan Vigyan Samiti

Sheila Aikman
Oxfam GB
Oxfam House
John Smith Drive
Cowley, Oxford OX4 2JY, UK

Tel: +44 (0)1865 472173
Fax: +44 (0)1865 472993
Contact the contributor: saikman@oxfam.org.uk

Oxfam GB

Other related links:
'Do literacy programmes for indigenous people ignore gender?'

'Partnerships will improve girls’ education'

'Literacy learning in urban slums'

'Literacy Exchange: World Resources on Literacy'

'Literacy skills – proven pathway out of poverty'

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