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iEARN Sierra Leone Child Soldiers PROJECT

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Title: iEARN Sierra Leone Child Soldiers PROJECT


1
iEARN Sierra Leone- Child Soldiers PROJECT
Andrew Benson Greene
2
ABOUT ME
  • Born in Sierra Leone - Civil War resulted in
    separation of 12,000 children from their
    families, kidnapped and forced to become
    soldiers
  • In 1997, I was secretary General of the Fourah
    Bay College Students Union Government, and became
    a target.
  • I fled to neighboring Guinea where I taught
    English to displaced children and refugees
  • In 1999, I joined iEARN, a non-profit global
    network that enables young people to use the
    Internet and other new technologies to engage in
    collaborative educational projects
  • I decided to dedicate my life to serving and
    teaching children who were brutalized by the
    violence all around them
  • My commitment prompted me to form the national
    branch of iEARN in Sierra Leone with mostly
    Canadian support
  • Now - I am a volunteer educator for the iEARN
    Sierra Leone Project, where I work to help youth
    communicate with others throughout the world.

3
About My project
  • The project helps to bridge the digital divide in
    Sierra Leone through IT education to youth, and
    links Sierra Leone youth with others around the
    world to share in online educational projects
  • The project engages war-affected youths/students
    in a variety of art forms music, creative
    writing, enabling them use the internet to share
    these unique talents.
  • Children affected by the war are taught useful IT
    skills and work together with other young
    children from all over the world on relevant
    social issues using the Internet.
  • Youth are engaged in Peace building campaigns and
    human rights on-line
  • I also believe that child soldiers and
    children/youth affected by the war can become
    ambassadors for peace by exchanging their ideas
    with other people of the same age from all over
    the world by means of telecommunication. This
    does not just promote learning, but also social
    justice and inspires a positive exchange because
    child victims of war can play a significant role
    in creating peace in their own villages and
    towns.

4
About My project
  • The project identifies and builds the talents of
    youth in a medley of art forms, such as music,
    creative writing, dance drama, videos, and
    computer games, all geared towards psychosocial
    rehabilitation and a chance for youth to mingle,
    socialize and interact with each other in a
    friendly atmosphere.
  • In so doing, the project builds the self-esteem
    of youth emerging from wars by providing them an
    outlet to build their skills and learn ICT skills
    in a safe, secure and alternative learning
    environment ultimately displaying the potential
    that war affected youth have

5
How do ICTs help my project?
  • The use of ICT is a means by which the youth can
    share their unique talents, while at the same
    time use ICT skills to work together with peers
    from all over the world to discuss relevant
    social issues

6
Where are we now?
  • More than 850 youth who have been trained so far
    are now profitably engaged in various places and
    many are helping the community in services
    related to ICT.
  • These youth have gone ahead to replicate the
    program in their communities by engaging in civic
    participation and creating ICT clubs, modeled
    from the iEARN initiatives.
  • The youth now gain community acceptance which was
    lacking in the past.- it demonstrates that former
    child soldiers and war affected youth can play
    active and rewarding roles in their community.

7
Impacts
  • After acquiring certificates of merit from the
    successful completion of software and hardware
    application programs, the youth are recommended
    to a few offices to assist in training staff on
    computer software programs
  • In turn, they receive stipends for services
    delivered.
  • Additionally, those with proven capabilities to
    address hardware problems gain apprenticeship to
    IT staff and supplement their efforts in the
    event of the staff being unavoidably absent.
  • In turn, they offer training to other youth
    within the iEARN centre

8
Impacts
  • Trained youth are also sent to help in the
    establishment of centres in new locations around
    the country where iEARN Sierra Leone has done
    feasibility studies in the past, and identified
    potential for expansion.
  • Interestingly, the youth sent there hail from
    these regions prior to their induction as child
    soldiers, and return to their places of origin to
    kick-start the program with the aid of other
    teacher facilitators.
  • Once there, they are provided a few PC's and
    iEARN tries to attract community support so that
    the youth who have acted against their community
    during the war can be seen in a new light and
    gain acceptance.
  • In reality, they now bring hope to other youth
    through imparting skills and also getting
    self-employed when charged with some roles.

9
Sustainability
  • IEARN derives its financial support in the past
    and in recent times through donations from
    individuals, organizations, awards, fund- raising
    in a local and international level by individuals
    and groups, after office hours user fees paid by
    non-iEARN Sierra Leone students and youth.
  • Our major finances have come from War Child
    Canada, and some other financial support came
    from the WH Day Elementary School in Bradford,
    Ontario, iEARN Canada, iEARN USA.

10
Sustainability
  • The ICT centres are equipped with necessary
    furniture and gadgets to run at subsidized cost.

  • It is well managed and maintained regularly so
    that it can continue serving the communities
    permanently.
  • Through iEARN Sierra Leone, professional and
    development components include the training and
    recruitment of teacher facilitators, who are
    equipped with relevant ICT knowledge and skills
    that can be used for the benefit of the war
    affected youth and building capacities of the
    target beneficiaries beyond the project
    timeline.
  • The centre subsidizes - at non-youth training
    hours - internet access and desktop publishing
    services to the public and small user fees to
    non-members for on-going sustenance, such as
    fueling of generator and maintenance cost.
  • The services of volunteers and trained youth
    additionally help to give more impetus to the
    program.

11
Our Partners
  • iEARN Canada has been technically supporting the
    initiative by hosting and collaborating with the
    www.childsoldiers.org project.
  • iEARN USA is a parent body that provides moral
    and technical assistance, serving as a source of
    reference for the program.
  • War Child Canada has partnered with iEARN Sierra
    Leone on the DFAIT funded project No War Zone
    and provided some financial support to connect
    the centre.
  • Computer Aid International UK has provided
    computers for the pilot phase of the project and
    iEARN has also served as a source of reference
    proving the efficacy of the second-hand PC
    supplied.
  • The project has also partnered with schools such
    s WH elementary school, in Children Connecting
    Children for Peace which deals with online
    interaction so that Canadian youth can connect
    with youth of Sierra Leone to discuss peaceful
    solutions to conflict.
  • The Ministry of Youth and Sports in Sierra Leone
    has provided moral assistance as well as the
    current space to house the gadgets for youth
    participation.

12
Scaling Up
  • My vision for the project is to equip communities
    in the 12 districts of Sierra Leone with ICT for
    young people in the rural towns and Urban
    districts to gain valuable skills.
  • Named The iEARN Sierra Leone Youth Centre for
    Information and Technology, the centers will
    have computers, internet facilities, video and
    music editing, and production rooms.
  • The centres would become the main hubs from which
    the 12 districts can rely for technical support
    and reference.
  • It would be dedicated to youth who have endured
    war and its effect in Sierra Leone.
  • The program will seek potentials donors,
    collaborating partners to assist with financial
    and technical support to scale up the project.
  • The program plans to promote peace education in
    the local school curriculum and provide an outlet
    for young people to interact online on issues of
    promoting peace and global understanding
  • Includes the publication of a book comprising of
    the current peace situation in Sierra Leone
    through the writings provided by iEARN youth and
    their counterparts around the world.

13
Constraints
  • At first when we got started, the community
    failed to see our vision and considered the youth
    as no good, due to their involvement in the war.
  • Through dogged efforts we were able to convince
    the community that these youth can make a
    difference by using ICT and the program gradually
    gained community acceptance which was visibly
    lacking.
  • Due to the constraints of accessing the
    technology in the past, I often took my students
    and war affected youth from the outskirts of the
    capital by bus, then walked long distances and
    queued up with them in a cyber café to give them
    some time on the Internet.
  • The time was used to showcase the students work
    on www.childsoldiers.org

14
Lessons Learned, Insights
  • I knew that in order for the program to kick-off
    in earnest, it would need community acceptance,
    and so it was registered through the Ministry of
    youth and Sports, and the Sierra Leone
    association of NGO.
  • I lobbied together with partners at iEARN USA and
    iEARN Canada to convince Computer Aid
    International in UK that youth of iEARN Sierra
    Leone can be the change when they can learn
    practical ICT skills.
  • The supply of 10 computers created much
    encouragement for the expansion and recognition
    of the program. Hundreds of youth in the
    communities and schools began to flock in and
    gained skills - which drifted their minds from
    idleness and the perpetration of mayhem.

15
Wish list
  • Governments , civil society must create more
    opportunities for youth, like building centres
    for both educational and recreational purposes.
  • Creating employment opportunities for youth in
    ICT sectors through provision of the tools to
    capacitate youth for self-engagement and
    self-employment, and even real job roles.

16
Thank you
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