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Being Untaught: How NGO Field Workers Empower Parents of Children with Disabilities in Dadaab
Resource type
Journal Article
Author/contributor
- Krupar, Allyson (Author)
Title
Being Untaught: How NGO Field Workers Empower Parents of Children with Disabilities in Dadaab
Abstract
Roughly 350,000 refugees, over 90% of them Somali, lived in five sprawling camps in Dadaab, Kenya in 2015. In the Dadaab refugee camps, families had unique experiences of disability, education, women's roles, and involvement with International Non-Governmental Organization (INGO) programming. INGOs provided a variety of basic services including education such as the program analyzed here for parents of children with disabilities. Many children with disabilities in the refugee camps faced social stigma and lacked access to education. This research draws on practices and literature in family literacy and parental involvement programming to explore how one NGO training sought to empower women learners to send their children with disabilities to school in Kambioos, the smallest and newest refugee camp in Dadaab. Using ethnographic methods, one training program involving parents and children was video-taped. The video was used as a cue to interview field workers about how the training empowered parents, particularly mothers. The study found that empowerment of women through training for parents of children with disabilities centered on parents' interaction with formal schools and engagement in their communities.
Publication
Being Untaught: How NGO Field Workers Empower Parents of Children with Disabilities in Dadaab
Volume
3
Issue
3
Pages
105-121
Date
2016-01-01
Language
eng
ISSN
2325-663X
Extra
an: EJ1114856; source: Global Education Review; docTypes: Journal Articles ; Reports - Research ; Tests/Questionnaires; pubTypes: Academic JournalReport;
Citation
Krupar, A. (2016). Being Untaught: How NGO Field Workers Empower Parents of Children with Disabilities in Dadaab. Being Untaught: How NGO Field Workers Empower Parents of Children with Disabilities in Dadaab, 3(3), 105–121. https://research.ebsco.com/linkprocessor/plink?id=6acc05f2-32da-3ec4-a282-2a1f3c14f30d
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