Investing in the young generation!
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Project Duration
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Lead organisation
Organisation of Special Needs Education Teachers
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The organisation of Special Needs Education Teachers (OSNET) is a Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO) established and registered to operate in the Tanzania Mainland. OSNET initially started its activities as an alliance of eight (8) members on 06/09/2013 before its official registration, later in October 2014 when another seven (13) members joined to make the total number of fifteen (21) members. OSNET principally deals with the fundamental role in contributing improvement of academic, social-economic welfare of the community of people with disabilities based on the National Development Vision 2025, which requires effective participation of the civil society groups. Currently, OSNET has organised special needs education clubs to over 400 students from three Primary schools and one secondary school in Musoma.
OSNET deals with the capacity building of entrepreneurial training for both disabled and nondisabled students from both secondary and Primary schools in Musoma town. Royal Dutch Kentalis organisation specialises in diagnostics, education and care for children and youth with hearing and communication challenges. In Tanzania, Kentalis has been operating since 2012. Together with Archbishop Mihayo University College of Tabora (AMUCTA), they have an innovative bachelor training for Special Education-Hearing Impaired that has around 60 graduates. The graduates work with Tanzanian deaf education experts on an early reading method for deaf children in primary school since 2016. In this project, Kentalis provides experts for coaching on the job of the team of Special Education (SE), non-SE, management and students’ interaction in three pilot schools.
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Organisation
The organisation of Special Needs Education Teachers (OSNET) is a Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO) established and registered to operate in the Tanzania Mainland. OSNET initially started its activities as an alliance of eight (8) members on 06/09/2013 before its official registration, later in October 2014 when another seven (13) members joined to make the total number of fifteen (21) members. OSNET principally deals with the fundamental role in contributing improvement of academic, social-economic welfare of the community of people with disabilities based on the National Development Vision 2025, which requires effective participation of the civil society groups. Currently, OSNET has organised special needs education clubs to over 400 students from three Primary schools and one secondary school in Musoma.
OSNET deals with the capacity building of entrepreneurial training for both disabled and nondisabled students from both secondary and Primary schools in Musoma town. Royal Dutch Kentalis organisation specialises in diagnostics, education and care for children and youth with hearing and communication challenges. In Tanzania, Kentalis has been operating since 2012. Together with Archbishop Mihayo University College of Tabora (AMUCTA), they have an innovative bachelor training for Special Education-Hearing Impaired that has around 60 graduates. The graduates work with Tanzanian deaf education experts on an early reading method for deaf children in primary school since 2016. In this project, Kentalis provides experts for coaching on the job of the team of Special Education (SE), non-SE, management and students’ interaction in three pilot schools.
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Project
Investing in the young generation project invests in coaching and mentoring of around 1000 deaf learners in mixed schools (with both hearing and hearing impaired learners). The project aims to boost confidence as well as gain respect for each other’s difference, mutual trust, communication skills, confidence in public speaking and disability rights training. The Special Education(SE) teachers(specialised in Hearing Impairment HI) in these boarding schools are key change agents. They are the primary reference persons for the deaf due to their communication skills. In most schools, SE teachers are either de-motivated by lack of support from the management, lack of cooperation from their colleagues, or just have not thought about active engagement and mentorship of deaf and hearing students in the context of (future) advocacy for citizen ’s rights.
Under the Organisation of Special Needs Education Teachers (OSNET) leadership and coaching, the project engages 1800 students (deaf and hearing) as well as 300 SE-HI teachers of all 20 schools. Sign language clubs in the schools will act as a medium for skills training, confidence and trust building, positive engagement between deaf and hearing students, mobilisation of teachers, school management, local deaf associations, and state agents. In innovative ways, such as arts competition and public speaking events, secondary school students are prepared for an active citizenship role in the future. The school environment in the 20 locations (all over Tanzania)is energised and stimulated for an encouraging attitude towards deaf learners.
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Investing in the young generation project invests in coaching and mentoring of around 1000 deaf learners in mixed schools (with both hearing and hearing impaired learners). The project aims to boost confidence as well as gain respect for each other’s difference, mutual trust, communication skills, confidence in public speaking and disability rights training. The Special Education(SE) teachers(specialised in Hearing Impairment HI) in these boarding schools are key change agents. They are the primary reference persons for the deaf due to their communication skills. In most schools, SE teachers are either de-motivated by lack of support from the management, lack of cooperation from their colleagues, or just have not thought about active engagement and mentorship of deaf and hearing students in the context of (future) advocacy for citizen ’s rights.
Under the Organisation of Special Needs Education Teachers (OSNET) leadership and coaching, the project engages 1800 students (deaf and hearing) as well as 300 SE-HI teachers of all 20 schools. Sign language clubs in the schools will act as a medium for skills training, confidence and trust building, positive engagement between deaf and hearing students, mobilisation of teachers, school management, local deaf associations, and state agents. In innovative ways, such as arts competition and public speaking events, secondary school students are prepared for an active citizenship role in the future. The school environment in the 20 locations (all over Tanzania)is energised and stimulated for an encouraging attitude towards deaf learners.