Results for Development, with support from the Rockefeller Foundation, is exploring innovative models for skills delivery at the secondary school level in Africa and Asia. Please email education@resultsfordevelopment.org with questions about the ISESE project and competition. ISESE Competition - Winners Announced!
Results for Development is excited to announce the winners of the Innovative Secondary Education for Skills Enhancement (ISESE) Competition!
After careful evaluation and deliberation based on our criteria of innovation, impact, sustainability and potential for scale-up or replication, our expert jury panel has awarded one winner from each region a prize of $1000.
In addition, the field of finalists was so impressive – in particular those from the Asia region – the jury panel has decided to award two additional runners-up an award of $500 each. The runner up from the Africa region will also receive an award of $500.
We are excited by the level of innovation we have seen for increasing youth employability, and we know that these entries from our 12 countries only scratch the surface of what exists around the world. We hope to continue to explore these innovations with a wider geographic lens in the near future.
Thank you again to all of our entrants for their time and consideration in entering the competition!
WINNERS:Asia Region
Yuwa: Kicking It New School (India). This program provides girls with the opportunity to develop self-confidence and leadership skills by joining a soccer team, and to receive a better education by participating in Yuwa's building bridges programs. The jury found this model to be a particularly innovative and responsive program for a marginalized girl-child population in Jharkhand.
Africa Region
Improving the Quality and Relevance of Middle School in Senegal (Senegal). Through this program, FHI 360 worked with the Minister of Education, civil society, and the business sector to reform middle-school curriculum in Senegal to create a cohesive curriculum capable of teaching 21st century skills. The jury found this model transformative in its potential to create institutional change in Senegal’s public education system.
RUNNERS UP:Asia Region
IT Training for Youth with Disabilities (Vietnam). This IT training program would seek to address the lack of employment opportunities for people with disabilities in Vietnam, by providing them with advanced technical training, soft-skills training, and business linkage. The ISESE jury panel found this model innovative not only in its provision of employable skills to a vulnerable population, but also for its potential to encourage social mobility in a particularly marginalized minority.
Multi-Skill Vocational Training and Entrepreneurship Development as Part of Secondary Education (India). Lend-A-Hand India implements a program in government-aided schools that is a blend of traditional academic work and hands-on projects that emphasize relevant skills students need in rural areas. This model struck the jury as particularly responsive to the real needs of the population it serves. The potential for scale-up is also significant, and it has buy-in from both local institutions and the community.
Africa Region
Emusoi Centre (Tanzania). Emusoi Center seeks to provide opportunities for education, both academic and vocational, for secondary school age Maasai girls. The Center provides a transitional space for young women coming from traditional life styles, providing academic, social and psychological mentorship to join the multi-cultural/multi-tribal environment of secondary schools in the area. The jury found the holistic element of Emusoi’s services to young women in this rural population to be an important element of success in this programs delivery of relevant skills.
SPECIAL MENTION TO THE REMAINDER OF THE TOP 10 FINALISTS
In addition to our winners and runners up, special mention should also go to the following 5 models. The jury panel commended their potential, and all are taking significant steps to support youth employability in their countries.
Joyful Learning in Non-Government Secondary Schools in Bangladesh: Public Private Partnership, Bangladesh: BRAC through this program seeks to support mainstream Secondary Schools by creating an environment conducive to learning. BRAC works to improve the capacity of School Management Committees, provides teacher training, and promotes computer-aided learning. BRAC also initiated a student mentorship program to promote leadership, self-esteem and creativity among secondary school students.
Rural Youth Empowerment Programme, India: The Rural Youth Empowerment Programme works to improve rural youth's job skills in the manufacturing, construction, service, and infrastructure sectors by using the Model-Train-Place Model.
UCEP: A Beacon of Hope, Bangladesh: UCEP educates children from the slums by providing them with a relevant education that includes skills training and job placement.
Welcome
High quality, relevant secondary education is vital for youth to obtain the skills, knowledge and competencies needed for employment. In turn, this will increase income generation and economic development. Results for Development (R4D), with support from the Rockefeller Foundation, has begun work on an exploratory project to identify and explore innovative secondary education for skills enhancement (ISESE) in Africa and Asia.
As part of this project, we are holding a competition to identify innovative models of skills delivery at the secondary school level. We are looking for promising innovations, new ideas, and entrepreneurial models that enhance the learning of secondary school students in both the public and the non-state sectors. We do not have a preconception of what the winning initiatives will look like, and encourage the entry of a wide variety of models that might include (but are not limited to):
Innovative use of technology in formal schools, as well as online learning and certification
Non formal schooling, including work place schemes, new apprenticeships, part-time study, community education, peer-to-peer education, youth clubs and other non-formal models
Open schooling and distance learning models
Scholarships or vouchers
Public-private partnerships
Cost per student reduction models
Any entrepreneurial, new ideas that do not fit into the categories above!
We are looking for models that have moved past the “idea” stage to the “operational” stage, and that are currently being implemented – even if only at a small scale – in one of our 12 focus countries. We will give particular attention to in-school innovations that have the potential to be scaled up and applied across different countries and contexts.
Winners will be selected by a jury panel comprised of experts in international education, and the two best entries will each receive a prize of $1,000. The runner-up will receive a prize of $500. In addition, the top 10 entries will be featured on the Results for Development website and their work will be profiled as case studies. For more information on entry guidelines and selection criteria, please see the Guidelines, Criteria & Prizes page.
We hope the competition will help us uncover new, exciting innovations that are transforming learning for our youth. We encourage you to enter the competition today to showcase how you are working to enhance the skills of secondary school students!
Nicholas Burnett
Managing Director, Results for Development
Guidelines, Criteria & Prizes
Competition Guidelines:
We are looking for innovative models for skills delivery run by educational groups, private organizations, non-profits, individual entrepreneurs, and others. The models or innovations submitted must target learning and skills development in secondary education and must be currently operational (even on a small scale) in one of the following 12 ISESE focus countries:
Francophone Africa: Benin, Burkina Faso, Senegal
Anglophone Africa: Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda
South Asia: Bangladesh, India, Pakistan
Southeast Asia: Cambodia, Thailand, Vietnam
All entries must be submitted via the competition website. Submissions may be in English or French. Please click here for the application forms.
The competition will consist of two rounds:
In the first round, applicants will submit an entry form and a two paragraph statement that briefly describes their innovation or model and how it supports learning and skills development. First round entries will be shortlisted based on criteria listed below.
In the second round, shortlisted entries will be required to submit more detailed materials, including information on cost, the business model, and how the cash prize will be used to create an impact. Second round entries will be evaluated by the jury.
Timeline:
Competition Launch: April 9, 2012
Deadline for Round One Entries: June 8, 2012
Shortlisted Candidates Announced: June 15, 2012
Deadline for Submission of Round Two Materials: June 29, 2012
Winners Announced: July 18, 2012
Assessment Criteria:
In the first round, we will shortlist candidates based on: (i) level of innovation, and (ii) impact, with the results posted on the competition website. Both shortlisted entries and unsuccessful applicants will be notified.
In the second round, the jury will select candidates based on:
Cost effectiveness of the model: Does the model deliver value for money? The jury will be looking for low-cost innovations that make the most efficient use of money and reach a wide audience.
Level of innovation and impact: Does the model increase access to learning via a low cost, easy to use method? Does your intervention target disadvantaged or marginalized populations in your country? The most successful models will be a unique, new intervention to increase learning at the secondary school level. We are also particularly looking for innovations that create a positive impact in the lives of poor, low-income populations.
Potential for scale-up or replication: Can the model be replicated in other countries and regions? The jury will be looking for models that have the potential to be expanded and replicated in other areas, and that can be adjusted to suit different contexts.
Prizes:
Winners will be selected by a jury panel comprised of experts in international education. Two winners will be announced – one in the Africa region and one in the Asia region – and each will receive a cash prize of $1,000. One runner-up entry will receive a prize of $500.
In addition, the top 10 entries will be featured on the Results for Development website and their work will be profiled as case studies.