Title: Creating a Literate Environment: Hidden Dimensions and Policy Implications
1Creating a Literate EnvironmentHidden
Dimensions and Policy Implications
- Peter Easton
- Florida State University
- WG/NFE
2Methodology and organization of the study
- Synthesis of
- two previous research efforts (Club du Sahel and
World Bank), - 40 years of personal experience, and
- a review of related literature
- Approach Rely on lived experience to the extent
possible, seek local frames for
conceptualization. - Jiri mèn o mèn ji la, a te se ka ke bama ye.
- But the devil too can quote scripture.
- Organization
- Anatomy of a literate environment
- Analysis of hidden dimensions
- Case examples
- Recommendations
- References See complete document
3What do we mean by a literate environment?
4A short history of post-literacy
- Lessons from the origin of literacy in the
ancient fertile crescent - Early UNESCO approaches literacy as holy water
- Discovery of the post-literacy problem, a
useful misnomer - Drawing the lessons Implement post-literacy
before literacy.
5Dimensions of a literate environmentThe well-
and the less well-recognized
- Educational aspects
- Reading material
- Continuing education
- Linkages to formal schooling
- Access to further training and lifelong learning
- Socio-economic aspects
- Assumption of new responsibility
- in existing institutions
- Creation of new businesses and associations
6Drilling down to the hidden dimensions
- Socio-economic connections often lie outside the
comfort zone of educators - First clues from history the challenges of
management responsibility. - Use current field experience to better explicate
the connections. - The key issue is the articulation between
literacy and its social, economic and political
uses. - And we need an understanding applicable to
regions where modern labor markets are very
scarce.
7Dovetailing literacy and its applications in
rural Africa The example of agricultural
marketing
- The dynamics of progressive self-management of
commercial crop markets in the Sahel. - The role of literacy and nonformal education
- The skills required of peasant managers and of
literacy educators!
8Dovetailing Literacy and Its Applications
D E S I G N R E Q U I R E M E N T S
Increasing levels of technical skill required
9A few things to note
- Consequences for the learner
- Alternation between learning and application
- Increasing power and responsibility at each level
- Consequences for the literacy agent
- Learning to see a development activity as a
lesson plan - Working out the authorizations, which all lie in
other realms of development - Literacy may not start with literacy!
- Consequences for the educational planner
- Learn to prospect new development domains where
this kind of collaboration can take place. - Discover to what degree the same type of approach
is applicable in other sectors as well.
10From the technical to the socio-politicalLiterac
y as an instrument of organizational democracy
- The problem of management power without
accountability - In ba kira, me ya ci gawai?
- But Kowa ya ba ka fawa, ya so kà yi fince
- A natural constraint development on a double
axis.
11Spreading the knowledge
Social groups or categories of persons involved
Level of responsi-bility assumed
Requisite knowledge and skill
Actual technical functions
Training needed
D
C
B
A
Axis of increasing
technical competence
I
II
III
IV
.
V
12BUILDING ON A SOLID AND DEMOCRATIC BASE
Axis of monitoring
Axis of accountability
I. CURRENT STAFF
II. POTENTIAL REPLACEMENT STAFF (AND BOARD OF
DIRECTORS)
III. THE ENTIRE BODY OF STAKEHOLDERS
13From the socio-political to the
economicManaging, accumulating and reinvesting
resources
- Remember literacy was arguably invented as a
tool for resource management. - And similar contexts are often those in which it
is most immediately useful for rural -- and
informal sector -- development
- E.g., micro-finance, marketing, new business
start-up. - The more so as, in situations of scarcity,
resources must be somehow collectivized and
managed. - And that requires good accounting, management and
communication.
14So a critical means for building civil society
- Combining technical, socio-political and
financial dimensions approximates the formula for
developing civil society at the local level - and for attaining sustainable development.
- As long as we dont forget the intellectual and
learning dimension that serves as glue and the
cultural dimension on which all is based. - Whence the notion of five-fold capitalization
used in the PADLOS-Education Study
15CULTURAL CAPITAL
INSTITUTIONAL CAPITAL
FINANCIAL CAPITAL
INTELLECTUAL CAPITAL
Sustainable Development
PHYSICAL CAPITAL (Natural and Built Environment)
16Implementation
- How likely are literacy programs to
- accomplish all of this?
- Not very. Happily they dont have to. Other
resources - The decentralization movement across development
sectors its possibilities and limitations. - The challenge of local capacity building
- But they and their counterparts do have to
transform their own attitudes and practices - Overcoming the silo mentality in socio-economic
development. - Getting out of the education box in literacy
and formal education. - Significance for EFA Education By All
17Two morality tales from the field
- The PADLOS-Education Study (1994-1997)
- A study carried out under the aegis of the CILSS
and the Club du Sahel (OECD). - Devoted to examining the issue of literacy-usage
articulations from the other end identify sites
where local actors have taken over direction of
development activities and then determine how
they acquired the necessary knowledge, skills and
aptitudes. - Evaluating and reforming adult education policy
at the World Bank - Initially undertaken under the aegis of the
Banks Human Development Network. - Resistance to envisaging the intersectoral
linkages required for effective local capacity
building leads to termination of activity.
18Concluding reflections on a literate environment
- Many important components but two critical axes
(a) continuing education and (b) local
socio-economic development - Educators feel most at home with A yet arguably
B is the most fundamental, for it is what durably
creates written material and new training
opportunities. - B is partly dependent in turn on
socio-political and economic policy, nationally
and internationally You cant manage nothing. - But not entirely Pedagogies of empowerment and
conscientization can lead people to create
collective capital where there was none before
and to establish or take over some of their
own fields of application. - However, to count on this and perhaps even to
preach it would be hypocritical for those, like
ourselves, close enough to the seats of power to
lobby for new alliances between literacy and its
fields of application and to work at hammering
out policies that capitalize on literacy.
19A central policy recommendation
- Connect literacy with its socio-economic
applications - both pedagogically and structurally
- Experiment, perfect, evaluate and then publicize
much more broadly a variety of inter-sectoral
alliances between literacy programs and other
development sectors devoted to -- - local capacity building,
- the assumption of new managerial powers by local
actors, - the transfer and accumulation of new resources at
the field level and, - as possible, the reinforcement of related and
democratically constituted -- civil society
institutions.
20A parting thought
- Sàls làgm koabgà ti kùri ké bake.
- A hundred slips will not prevent the turtle from
getting to the waters edge. - Proverb Mooré / Burkina Faso
- For further information
- Peter B. Easton
- 114H STB, College of Education
- Florida State University
- Tallahassee, FL 32306 USA
- Tel. (1) (850) 644-8165 Email peaston_at_fsu,edu