53094 ACCELERATING THE EDUCATION SECTOR RESPONSE TO HIV Five Years of Experience from Sub-Saharan Africa Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV Five Years of Experience from Sub-Saharan Africa Donald Bundy Anthi Patrikios Changu Mannathoko Andy Tembon Stella Manda Bachir Sarr Lesley Drake © 2010 The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank 1818 H Street NW Washington DC 20433 Telephone: 202-473-1000 Internet: www.worldbank.org E-mail: feedback@worldbank.org All rights reserved 1 2 3 4 13 12 11 10 This volume is a product of the staff of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank. The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed in this volume do not necessarily reflect the views of the Executive Directors of The World Bank or the governments they represent. The World Bank does not guarantee the accuracy of the data included in this work. 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All other queries on rights and licenses, including subsidiary rights, should be addressed to the Office of the Publisher, The World Bank, 1818 H Street NW, Washington, DC 20433, USA; fax: 202-522- 2422; e-mail: pubrights@worldbank.org. ISBN: 978-0-8213-7932-5 eISBN: 978-0-8213-7978-3 DOI: 10.1596/978-0-8213-7932-5 Cover photo: © Getty Images/Paul Kenward Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Accelerating the education sector response to HIV : five years of experience from Sub-Saharan Africa. p. ; cm. "The report was written by: Donald Bundy ... [et al.]."--Acknowledgments. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-8213-7932-5 (alk. paper) 1. AIDS (Disease)--Prevention--Africa, Sub-Saharan. 2. Health education--Africa, Sub-Saharan. I. Bundy, Donald A. P. II. World Bank. [DNLM: 1. HIV Infections--prevention & control--Africa South of the Sahara. 2. Government Programs--Africa South of the Sahara. 3. Health Education--organization & administration--Africa South of the Sahara. 4. Health Promotion--organization & administration--Africa South of the Sahara. 5. International Cooperation--Africa South of the Sahara. WC 503.6 A169 2009] RA643.86.A357A33 2009 362.196'979200967--dc22 2009015198 Contents Preface ix Foreword xi Acknowledgments xiii Abbreviations and Acronyms xxiii Overview xxvii Introduction 1 Background to the Accelerate Initiative 3 Goals and Objectives of the Accelerate Initiative 4 Implementation of the Accelerate Initiative 5 The Evolution of the Accelerate Initiative 6 Review of the Accelerate Initiative: Five Years On 7 1. Promoting Leadership by the Education Sector and Creating Sectoral Demand for a Response to HIV/AIDS 9 Mainstreaming HIV/AIDS in the Education Sector 11 Evaluating the Accelerate Initiative Process 13 2. Harmonizing Support among Development Partners to Better Assist Countries and Reduce Transaction Costs 15 3. Promoting Coordination with the National AIDS Authorities and Enhancing Access to AIDS Funds 21 v vi | Contents 4. Sharing Information on HIV/AIDS with Specific Relevance to the Education Sector 25 Production of New Documentation Addressing Education Issues from an HIV/AIDS Perspective 26 Promoting Greater Access to a Critical Subset of Existing Information on AIDS and Education 28 5. Strengthening the Technical Content and Implementation of the Education Sector Response to HIV/AIDS 35 Sector Policy (Including Workplace Policy) 37 Planning and Mitigation 40 Prevention (Including Teacher Training and Life Skills) 43 Ensuring Access to Education for Orphans and Vulnerable Children 46 6. Conclusions and the Way Forward 49 Education Sector Responses Have Accelerated 50 More Effective Links with Development Partners Are Emerging 50 More and Better Quality Information Is Available 51 Education Sector Responses to HIV Are Now Being Implemented by a Majority of Countries 52 Not All Sectoral HIV Responses Are Mainstream Activities 52 Effective Monitoring and Evaluation Remain a Major Challenge 53 Investment in Regional Coordination and Knowledge Sharing Shows Benefits But Can Be Difficult to Sustain 54 EFA-FTI Processes Are Strengthening HIV/AIDS Responses within the Education Sector Plans 54 Countries of the Southern Cone Have Yet to Engage in the Accelerate Initiative 55 The Future of the Accelerate Initiative 55 Appendixes 57 Appendix A: Chronology of Accelerate Workshops 59 Appendix B: Development Partners Involved in Subregional and National Workshops Held since 2002 63 Appendix C:Top 20 Distributed Documents to Date 67 Contents | vii Appendix D:Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV/AIDS in Africa: A Checklist of Good Practice 69 Appendix E:2007 Survey Questionnaire 77 References 87 Index 89 Boxes 1 The UNAIDS Inter-Agency Task Team (IATT) on Education 4 2 Leadership by the Education Sector within a Federal System: The Case of Nigeria 10 3 Leadership by the Education Sector within a Small State: The Republic of Burundi 11 4 Mainstreaming: The Gender Perspective 12 5 Civil Society's Role in Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV/AIDS 16 6 HIV/AIDS as a Workplace Issue 18 7 Fostering "Greater Involvement of People Living with HIV/AIDS (GIPA)" in the Accelerate Initiative 20 8 Accessing NAC Funding in the West Africa Network 22 9 A Checklist of Good Practice 26 10 The "Window of Hope" Documentary 27 11 A Sourcebook of HIV/AIDS Prevention Activities in the Education Sector, Volume II 30 12 Countries Emerging from Conflict and Fragile States 36 13 Taking Activities to Scale: Teacher Training in Ghana 36 14 The Senegalese Experience: School Health, Nutrition, and HIV/AIDS Programming 37 15 Providing Teachers with Access to Free VCT and ART: A Success Story from Zambia 38 16 Agreeing on Indicators and Effective M&E Strategies 41 17 The Ministry of Education HIV/AIDS Focal Point Survey: A Tool for Monitoring Process 43 18 Developing HIV/AIDS Prevention Curricula in Central Africa 44 viii | Contents 19 Direct Support to Schools (DSS) in Mozambique 45 20 The Group for the Study and Teaching of Population Issues (GEEP): An Experiment to Prevent the Spread of HIV/AIDS among Schoolchildren 47 21 Key Findings of the 2007 Focal Point Survey 48 Figures 1 Country Participation in the Accelerate Initiative Since 2002 10 2 Evaluation of the Accelerate Initiative Workshops 13 3 Development Partners Involved in Each of the Subregional and National Workshops Held since 2002 17 4 Level of Representation of UN Agencies, Bilateral Donors, and Civil Society Organizations at the Subregional and National Workshops and Network Meetings Held since 2002 19 5 Chronology of Ministries of Education First Accessing Funds from Their National AIDS Councils (NACs) 23 6 Monthly Web Site Hits, January 2003­December 2006 29 7 Mean Number of Monthly Download File Requests 30 8 Progress in Implementing Policy Activities before and after the Accelerate Initiative 39 9 Progress in Implementing Prevention Activities before and after the Accelerate Initiative 46 Preface The work described in this review shows the commitment of education teams throughout Africa to contribute to the multisectoral response to HIV/AIDS. It is also a testament to the leadership shown by Ministries of Education, in helping the new generation of children and youth grow up better able to challenge HIV, and in providing care and support for the edu- cators who often represent more than half the public sector workforce. Across the continent, HIV/AIDS has the ability to affect not only the supply of education, by its impact on teachers and education staff, but also the demand, by impoverishing households and creating orphans, currently estimated at some 11.4 million from AIDS alone. When added to the other major issues facing the continent, such as conflicts, political instability, food and energy shortages, and environmental shocks, the epidemic is yet a fur- ther challenge to the capacity of education sectors to attain Education for All and meet the Millennium Development Goals. But this review shows that the education sectors are rising to the challenge in ways that are increasingly effective. The work described in this review does not suggest any single solution. Instead, the approach is based on the recognition that Africa is a diverse continent, and countries need to find their own local approaches to the epi- demic. The Regional Economic Communities (RECs) of the African Union have been instrumental in encouraging locally specific responses and, rec- ognizing that HIV knows no frontiers, in coordinating responses among neighbors. The countries of East, Central, and West Africa, working through the RECs, have created subregional networks of Ministry of Education ix x | Preface HIV/AIDS Focal Points; these networks have been key to sharing informa- tion and developing capacity, and so to accelerating and strengthening responses at the national level. The review shows how, over the last five years, the leadership in Minis- tries of Education has been crucial in mobilizing these activities, and also emphasizes that effective implementation depends on the full participation of all stakeholders. Education staff, educators, and learners all have a role to play, as do parent-teacher associations, teachers' unions and the many civil society organizations, including faith-based organizations, that are so important in the nonformal sector. The review also demonstrates the com- mitment of the development partners, and their efforts to harmonize their contribution toward strengthening the education agenda. As the review shows, a good start has been made, and much has been achieved. But much remains to be done if the education sectors across Africa are to realize their full potential to contribute to the national responses to HIV/AIDS. To this end, I call upon the leaders of countries in Africa, development partners, nongovernmental organizations, and all edu- cation partners and actors to further commit themselves to provide our children a better future. Mr. Dzingai Mutumbuka (October 2008) Chair The Association for the Development of Education in Africa (ADEA) Foreword By the end of 2006, an estimated 39.5 million people worldwide were living with HIV infection. Globally, AIDS is the fourth leading cause of death. Within the next five years, and at the pace of access to antiretroviral therapy (ART), every seventh child in the worst affected Sub-Saharan countries will be an orphan, largely because of AIDS. HIV treatment is an essential part of the response to this epidemic, but although treatment efforts gather pace, HIV prevention is too often being left behind. Data from 2005 showed that the rate of new HIV infections greatly exceeded the expansion of HIV treatment, making it clear that uni- versal access to ART will only be achieved once HIV prevention becomes dramatically more successful. Many people still do not believe they are at risk, and stigma and discrimination still discourage many people from tak- ing an HIV test to determine their HIV status. HIV prevention and treatment are linked strategically by the formal international agreement at the United Nations General Assembly's June 2006 High Level Meeting on AIDS to "scale up towards the goal of univer- sal access to comprehensive HIV prevention programs, treatment, care and support by 2010." The universal access commitment emphasizes the need for far greater urgency, equity, affordability, and sustainability in national AIDS responses, as well as a comprehensive and, importantly, multisectoral approach. Universal access seeks to engage countries in defining for themselves what they want to achieve and the time frame for scaling up. In developing this theme, the African Union declared 2006 the xi xii | Foreword year of accelerating access to HIV prevention, and 30 countries formally recognized the need to accelerate HIV prevention. Against this background, the current review of the Africa program to accelerate the education sector response to HIV/AIDS is remarkably timely. This initiative by a Working Group of the UNAIDS Inter-Agency Task Team on Education has helped the education sectors of countries in Sub-Saharan Africa to play a stronger role in the national multisectoral response to AIDS since 2002. The education sector has a special place in this response, because it not only helps form the thinking of the next generation--especially in addressing stigma and prevention--but is also responsible for the care and support of some 60 percent of the public sector workforce. The present review shows, for a critical sector, how coordinated efforts by countries, UNAIDS cosponsors, bilateral donors, and civil society can help promote sectoral leadership; strengthen prevention efforts; increase focus on the needs of women and girls, children and orphans; and reduce stigma and discrimination. Peter Piot (May 2007) Executive Director UNAIDS Acknowledgments A program to accelerate education sector responses to HIV/AIDS in Sub- Saharan Africa was initiated with a Working Group of the UNAIDS Inter- Agency Task Team on Education in 2002. This report was prepared as a collaborative effort by the members of the networks of Ministry of Educa- tion HIV/AIDS Focal Points in Eastern, West, and Central Africa who had participated in this effort over the subsequent five years. The first draft and analyses were completed at the 2nd Annual Meeting of the African Networks of Ministry of Education HIV/AIDS Focal Points (Nairobi 2007). Then began a process of all 37 participating countries to review the content which was then finalised at the 3rd Annual Meeting of the African Networks of Ministry of Education HIV/AIDS Focal Points (Dakar, 2008). A French version is available from www.schoolsandhealth. org. Technical and editorial input to the review was provided by a team of Ministry of Education HIV/AIDS Focal Points: Gabrielle Bandre (Minis- try of Education, Burkina Faso); Balla Camara (Ministry of Education, Republic of Guinea); Aroga Désiré (Ministry of Education, Cameroon); Maybelle A. Gamanga (Ministry of Education, Sierra Leone); Aggrey Kibenge (Ministry of Education and Sports, Uganda); Amicoleh Mbeye (Ministry of Education and Sports, The Gambia); and Malick Sembene (Ministry of Education, Senegal). The report was written by Donald Bundy (World Bank); Anthi Patrikios (Partnership for Child Development); Changu Mannathoko (UNICEF); Andy Tembon (World Bank); Stella Manda (World Bank); xiii xiv | Acknowledgments Bachir Sarr (UNESCO, BREDA);1 and Lesley Drake (Partnership for Child Development). The work described here was supported by the participating govern- ments, and by contributions in time and in kind by the participating organi- zations and individuals. Principal financial support was provided by the World Bank and the Governments of Norway, the United Kingdom (via a DFID trust fund at the World Bank), and Ireland. Additional support was provided by the Partnership for Child Development (which receives some support from the World Bank Development Grant Facility), and by the Multi-Agency Education Program Development Fund (EPDF) which is managed by the Education for All Fast Track Initiative (EFA-FTI). We also gratefully acknowledge the peer reviews of the report by techni- cal reviewers within the Economic Community of Central African States (ECCAS); the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS); and the East African Community (EAC), as well as input from the following technical reviewers: Matthew Jukes (Harvard); Michael Kelly (Zambia); Lemma Merid (UNDP); Sheldon Shaeffer (UNESCO); Christopher Thomas (World Bank); and Alexandria Valerio (World Bank). We are also very grateful to the following people and their organiza- tions that contributed to the reports and actions reflected in this report, as follows. Ministry of Education HIV/AIDS Focal Points--West Africa Adama Bologo (Focal Point, CMLS/MEBA, Burkina Faso); Aicheta Muit Ely Salem (Focal Point, Mauritania); Aïssata Traore (Focal Point, Ministère de l'Enseignement Supérieur et de la Recherche Scientifique, Republic of Guinea); Amicoleh Mbaye (Focal Point, Department of State for Education, Gambia); Attamaka Karimou (Focal Point, Ministère des Enseignements Secondaire et Supérieur, de la Recherche et de la Technologie, Niger); Balla Camara (Focal Point, Ministère de l'Enseignement Pré-Universitaire et de l'Education Civique, Republic of Guinea); Charsley Kumbly (Focal Point, School Health Division/MDE, Liberia); Dady Séraphine (Focal Point, Minis- tère des Enseignements Primaire et Secondaire, Benin); Eccua Oyinloye 1 Bachir Sarr is now working with the Canadian AIDS Society. Acknowledgments | xv (Focal Point, Federal Ministry of Education, Nigeria); Gabrielle Bandre (Focal Point, CMLS/MESSRS, Burkina Faso); Hilda Eghan (Focal Point, Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports, Ghana); Koffi Yao Faustin (Focal Point, Ministère de l'Education, Côte d'Ivoire); Lidia Evora (Focal Point, Directrice de l'Enseignement Secondaire, Cape Verde); Malick Sembene (Focal Point, Ministère de l'Education, Senegal); Mamadù Danfa (Focal Point, Guinea Bissau); Maybelle Gamanga (Focal Point, Ministry of Education Science and Technology, Sierra Leone); Sassana Diane (Focal Point, Ministère de l'Enseignement Technique et de la Formation Pro- fessionnel, Republic of Guinea); Tagone Nako (Focal Point, Ministère des Enseignements Primaire et Secondaire, Togo); Wéléba Bagayoko (Focal Point, Ministère de l'Education Nationale, Mali); and Younoussa Goumey (Focal Point, Ministère de l'Education de Base et de l'Alphabé- tisation, Niger). Ministry of Education HIV/AIDS Focal Points--Eastern Africa Abraham Teckle (Focal Point, Ministry of Education, Eritrea); Aggrey Kibenge (Focal Point, Ministry of Education and Sports, Uganda); Antonio Filimao Tivane (Focal Point, Ministry of Education and Culture, Mozam- bique); Ato Kasu Abdi (Focal Point, Ministry of Education, Ethiopia); Augustine Kamlongera (Director of Planning, Ministry of Education and Human Resource, Malawi); Bernard Domingo (Focal Point, Ministry of Education, Zambia); Françoise-Romaine Ndayisenga (Focal Point, Ministry for National Education and Culture, Burundi); Isaac Thuita (Focal Point, Ministry of Education Science & Technology, Kenya); Laetitia Sayi (Ministry of Education and Vocational Training, Mainland Tanzania); Mshauri Khamis (Focal Point, Ministry of Education and Vocational Training, Zanzibar); Oscar Mponda (Focal Point, Ministry of Education and Human Resource, Malawi); and Viviane Mukanyirigira (Focal Point, Ministry of Education, Rwanda). Ministry of Education HIV/AIDS Focal Points--Central Africa Andrée Sylvie Boulhoud (Point Focal, Ministère de l'Enseignement Techni- que et Professionnel, Congo Brazzaville); Christine Nepa Nepa (Focal Point, xvi | Acknowledgments Ministère de l'Enseignement Primaire, Secondaire et Professionnelle, République Démocratique du Congo); Clotilde Mounthoud Banthoud (Focal Point, Ministère de l'Enseignement Primaire et Secondaire, the Republic of Congo); Dermbaye Djelamde Mbairo (Focal Point, Ministère de l'Education Nationale, Chad); Désiré Aroga (Focal Point, Ministère de l'Education de Base, Cameroun); Elisabeth Tenlep (Focal Point, Ministère des Enseignements Secondaire, Cameroun); Raymond Sekela (Focal Point, Ministère de l'Education Nationale, République Centrafri- caine); Roger Nzamba Mavioga (Point Focal, Ministère l'Education Nationale et de l'Instruction Civique, Gabon); and Santiago Bivini Man- gue (Focal Point, Ministère l'Education Nationale, Guinée Equitoriale). Civil Society Aida Mbacke (Arcenciel Communication, Senegal); Alfred Opubor (Asso- ciation for the Development of Education in Africa); Alice Sena Lamptey (Association of African Universities); Alice Woolnough (Partnership for Child Development); Anthi Patrikios (Partnership for Child Develop- ment); Anthony Kinghorn (U.S. Agency for International Development/ Mobile Task Team); Awusabu-Asare (University of Cape-Coast); Babacar Fall (Group for the Study and Teaching of Population Issues, GEEP, Sen- egal); Baney Media (Washington, DC); Bheki Twala (Partnership for Child Development); Celia Maier (Partnership for Child Development); Christèle Ngemo (Cameroun); Claire Risely (Partnership for Child Devel- opment); Dan Ochieng (Partnership for Child Development); David Archer (ActionAid International); David Logan (Policy Project); Ed Cooper (Partnership for Child Development); Gene Sperling (Global Campaign for Education); Hamidou Boukary (Association for the Devel- opment of Education in Africa); Janet Wildish (Centre for British Teach- ers); Jean-Baptiste Gatali (Association for the Development of Education in Africa); Joel Seeiso Pii (Partnership for Child Development); Jonathan Godden (U.S. Agency for International Development/Mobile Task Team); Kamal Desai (Partnership for Child Development); Lesley Drake (Part- nership for Child Development); Martin Yaba (SEP/CNLS, République de Congo); Michael Beasley (Partnership for Child Development); Owen Jones (Partnership for Child Development); Peter Badcock-Walters (U.S. Acknowledgments | xvii Agency for International Development/Mobile Task Team); Seung H. Lee (Save the Children, United States); Tania Boler (ActionAid International); Uwem Esiet (Action Health Incorporated, Nigeria); Wendy Heard (U.S. Agency for International Development/Mobile Task Team); Wouter Van Der Shaaf (Education International); and Yvonne Prempeh-Ferguson (British Council, CUBE). Bilaterals and Intergovernmental Organizations Cornelia Batchi (Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit); David Clarke (Department for International Development); Gabriel Malonga Mouelet (ECCAS); J. J. K Baku (Education Research Network for West and Central Africa); Halima Begum (Department for International Development); Hazel Bines (Department for International Development); Mary Makoffu (East African Community); Mizé Francisco (Canadian International Development Agency); Munirat Ogunlayi (Department for International Development, Nigeria); and Suzanne Stump (Canadian Inter- national Development Agency). UN Organizations Akaleselassie Mekuria (UNFPA, Ethiopia); Alassane Dia (World Bank); Amaya Gillespie (UNICEF); Amy Stratford (World Bank); Andy Tembon (World Bank); Angela Chukwunyem (UNESCO, Abuja); Anju Sharma (World Bank); Anna Maria Hoffman (UNICEF); Bachir Sarr (UNESCO-BREDA); Bert Voetberg (World Bank); Carl Ampah (UNESCO, Ghana); Changu Mannathoko (UNICEF); Christine Pan- chard (UNESCO/IBE); Claire Mulanga (ILO); Cynthia Mouelle Kalanga (UNESCO, Kinshasa); Cyrilla Bwakirah (UNICEF, Abuja); Don Bundy (World Bank); Don Taylor (World Bank, Nigeria); Dorothée Kalonga Bibomba (UNESCO, Kinshasa); Dulce Almeida-Borges (UNESCO); Dzingai Mutumbuka (World Bank); Emmanuel Malangalila (World Bank, Tanzania); Eric Allemano (UNESCO/IIEP); Evelyn Serima (ILO); Fahma Nur (World Bank); Fatou Ndiaye (UNESCO-BREDA); Foussenou Cissoko (UNESCO, Yaoundé); Geraldo Martins (World Bank); Hubert Charles (UNESCO, Abuja); Iyabo Fagbulu (UNESCO, Abuja); Jacqueline xviii | Acknowledgments Betouna (UNESCO, Yaoundé); Jane Miller (World Bank, Nigeria); Justine Sass (UNESCO, IATT Secretariat); Kidist Chala (ILO, Ethiopia); Lemma Merid (UNDP); Luc Rukingama (UNESCO-BREDA); Lucy Teasdale (UNESCO/IIEP); Makhily Gassana (UNESCO); Marcel Ouattara (UNICEF); Marie Yvette Saccadura (UNESCO, Brazzaville); Mayé Diouf (UNESCO- BREDA); Michael Azevor (World Bank); Noerine Kaleeba (UNAIDS); Papa Beye (ILO); Patricia Moccia (UNICEF); Philomène Matondo (UNESCO, Kinshasa); Pierre Gambembo (UNESCO, Kinshasa); Rashid Aderinoye (UNESCO, Abuja); Ruth Kagia (World Bank); Salimata Diallo (UNESCO, Bamako); Sarah Gudyanga (UNICEF); Sonia Yeo (UNICEF); Stanley Phiri UNICEF); Stella Manda (World Bank); Sunday Uzu (ILO); Susan Opper (World Bank); Tanya Zebroff (World Bank, Zambia); Tara O'Connell (World Bank); Wack Diop (UNESCO, Yaoundé); Wafaa Neguede (UNESCO); Ydo Yao (UNESCO, Kinshasa); and Yemesrach Assefa (WFP, Ethiopia). Participating Countries Angola, Benin, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Cape Verde, the Central African Republic, Chad, Côte d'Ivoire, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gabon, The Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Kenya, Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauri- tania, Mozambique, Niger, Nigeria, the Republic of Congo, Rwanda, São Tomé and Príncipe, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Tanzania (mainland and Zanzi- bar) Togo, Uganda, and Zambia. Participating Development Partners and Organizations United Nations International Labour Organization (ILO); United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF); United Nations Development Programme (UNDP); United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO); United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization/ Interna- tional Bureau of Education (UNESCO/IBE); United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization­International Institute for Capacity Building in Africa (UNESCO­IICBA); United Nations Educational, Scien- tific and Cultural Organization/International Institute for Educational Acknowledgments | xix Planning (UNESCO/IIEP); United Nations Girls' Education Initiative (UNGEI); United Nations Mission in Sierra Leone (UNAMSIL); United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA); World Bank; World Food Programme (WFP); World Health Organization (WHO). Bilateral Partners Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA); Coopération Française; Danish International Development Assistance (DANIDA); Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ); European Union (EU); Governments of Belgium, Finland, the Royal Netherlands, and Sweden; International Organization for Migration (IOM); Irish Aid; Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA); Norwegian Agency for Develop- ment Cooperation (NORAD); Swedish International Development Coop- eration Agency (SIDA); United Kingdom Department for International Development (DFID); United States Agency for International Development (USAID). Intergovernmental Organizations Commonwealth Secrétariat; Communauté Économique et Monétaire de l'Afrique Centrale (CEMAC); East African Community (EAC); Economic Community of Central African States (ECCAS); Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS); Économique des États de l'Afrique Cent- rale (CEEAC). Civil Society Organizations and Institutions Academy for Educational Development (AED); Action Health Incorpo- rated, Nigeria; ActionAid International; Addis Ababa Youth Association; Africa Consultants International (ACI); Aga Khan Foundation; Ajuda de Desenvolvimento de Povo para Povo (ADPP-Mozambique); Arcenciel Com- munication, Senegal; Association for Reproductive and Family Health; Association for the Development of Education in Africa (ADEA); Associa- tion of African Universities (AAU); Banque Africaine de Développement (BAD); British Council; CARE; Catholic Relief Services (CRS); Cause Can- ada; Centre for British Teachers (CfBT-Education Trust); Changamoto Life xx | Acknowledgments Preservation Fund (CLPF); Chemonics International; Christian Children's Fund (CCF); Classiques Africains; Clinton Foundation; Commonwealth of Love, Nigeria; CONCERN Worldwide; Democratic Union of Teachers of Senegal (UDEN); Ebenezer School and Home for the Visually Impaired; Education International (EI); Educational Research Network for West and Central Africa (ERNWACA); Ethiopian Orthodox Church Development and Inter-Church Aid Commission (EOC/DICAC); Ethiopian Teachers' Associ- ation (ETA); Family Health International (FHI); Family Health Trust (FHT); Fédération Nationale des Associations de Parents d'Elèves du Sénégal (FENAPES); Forum for African Women Educationalists (FAWE); Founda- tion for Research on Women's Health, Productivity and the Environment (BAFROW); Gabon Teacher Association; Ghana National Association of Teachers (GNAT); Global Campaign for Education; Groupe pour l'Etude et l'Enseignement de la Population (GEEP)/Group for the Study and Teach- ing of Population Issues; Harcourt Education; Health and Development Africa; Institut für Internationale Zusammenarbeit des Deutschen Volk- shochschul-Verbandes (IIZ/DVV)/Institute for International Cooperation of the German Adult Education Association; International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies; Kenya National Union of Teachers (KNUT); Kenya Television Network (KTN); Médicins Sans Frontières (MSF); Mekdim; Mobile Task Team on the Impact of HIV/AIDS on Educa- tion (MTT); MS Mozambique­Kindlimuka; National Association of Teach- ers in Nigeria (NAPTAN); Network of People Living With HIV/AIDS in Nigeria (NEPWHAN); Nova Scotia-Gambian Association (NSGA); Partner- ship for Child Development (PCD); Pathfinder International; People Living with HIV/AIDS (PLHA) Association in Nigeria; Plan; Planned Parenthood Association of Sierra Leone (PPASL); Policy Project; Population Council; Pro-link, Ghana; RASJ/BF; Rural Watch Ghana; Save the Children Nicara- gua; Save the Children, USA; School for Progress; SCOPE; Sierra Leone Teachers' Union (SLTU); Society for Women and AIDS in Africa (SWAA); Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik (SWP); Students Partnership Worldwide (SPW); Tanzania Teachers' Union (TTU); Trendsetters; Uganda Network of AIDS Service Organizations (UNASO); University of Zambia; West Africa Centre for International Parasite Control (WACIPAC); World Education; World Vision; Zambia National Union of Teachers (ZNUT); Zanzibar Teachers' Union (ZATU). Acknowledgments | xxi Press and Media Agencies 5FM; Baney Media; Concord Times; Connect Ghana; Daily Times; Daily Trust; Dawn of Hope; East African Standard; Ethiopian Press Agency; ETV; Feinstein International Center (FIC), Tufts University; Foundation for Research on Women's Health, Gambia; Gambia News and Report; Gambia Teachers' Union (GTU); GRTS TV; Health and Development Africa (HDA); Healthinfo­Ethiopia; Information Gambia; Kiss FM Radio; MISA Zambia; National Compendium Magazine; New Nigerian Newspapers; New Vision; Pan-African News Agency (PANA); Peep Newspaper; Punch; Radio Democrat; Radio Ethiopia; Radio FANA; Radio Q-FM; Radio UNAMSIL; Skyy Radio; Standard Times; Television ta Taifa (TVT); The Daily Observer; The Ethiopian Educational Media Agency; The Herald; The Point Newspaper; The Post; Vanguard; Yatsani Radio; Youth Media; Zambia Daily Mail; Zambia Information Service (ZIS); Zambia News Agency (ZANA). Abbreviations and Acronyms AAU Association of African Universities ACI Africa Consultants International ADB African Development Bank ADEA Association for the Development of Education in Africa ADPP Ajuda de Desenvolvimento de Povo para Povo AHI Action Health Incorporated AIDS acquired immune deficiency syndrome ART antiretroviral therapy CAR Central African Republic CBO Community-Based Organization CCF Christian Children's Fund CEMAC Communauté Économique et Monétaire l'Afrique Centrale CfBT Centre for British Teachers CIDA Canadian International Development Agency CRS Catholic Relief Services DFID United Kingdom Department for International Development DRC Democratic Republic of Congo DSS Direct Support to Schools EAC East African Community ECCAS Economic Community of Central African States ECOWAS Economic Community of West African States EDC Education Development Center EDUCAIDS The Global Initiative on Education and HIV/AIDS xxiii xxiv | Abbreviations and Acronyms EFA Education for All EI Education International EMIS Education Management Information System ERNWACA Educational Research Network for West and Central Africa EU European Union FAWE Forum for African Women Educationalists FBO faith-based organization FENAPES Fédération Nationale des Associations de Parents d'Elèves du Sénégal FHI Family Health International FLE Family Life Education FLHE Family Life and HIV/AIDS Education FRESH Focusing Resources on Effective School Health FTI Fast Track Initiative GEEP Group for the Study and Teaching of Population Issues GIPA Greater Involvement of People Living with HIV/AIDS GTZ Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit HDA Health and Development Africa HIV human immunodeficiency virus IATT inter-agency task team IBE International Bureau of Education ICASA International Conference on AIDS and Sexually Transmit- ted Infections in Africa IDA International Development Association IEC Information, Education, and Communication IICBA International Institute for Capacity Building in Africa IIEP International Institute for Educational Planning ILO International Labour Organization JICA Japan International Cooperation Agency KTN Kenya Television Network M&E monitoring and evaluation MAP Multi-Country HIV/AIDS Program MDGs Millennium Development Goals MoE Ministry of Education MoEST Ministry of Education Science and Technology MoH Ministry of Health Abbreviations and Acronyms | xxv MTEF Medium-Term Expenditure Framework MTT Mobile Task Team on the Impact of HIV/AIDS on Education NAC National AIDS Council NACA National Agency for the Control of AIDS NGO nongovernmental organization NIEPA National Institute of Educational Planning and Administration NORAD Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation OVC orphans and vulnerable children PALOPS Países Africanos de Língua Oficial Portuguesa PCD Partnership for Child Development PEPFAR The United States President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief PLHA People Living with HIV/AIDS PPASL Planned Parenthood Association of Sierra Leone PRSPs Poverty Reduction Strategy Programs PTA Parent Teacher Association SADC Southern African Development Community SCF Save the Children Fund SIDA Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency SHN School Health and Nutrition SPW Students Partnership Worldwide STDs sexually transmitted diseases STIs sexually transmitted infections SWP Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik TAC Technical AIDS Committee U.K. United Kingdom UN United Nations UNAIDS Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS UNASO Uganda Network of AIDS Service Organizations UNDP United Nations Development Programme UNESCO United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization UNFPA United Nations Population Fund UNGEI United Nations Girls' Education Initiative xxvi | Abbreviations and Acronyms UNICEF United Nations Children's Fund USA United States of America USAID United States Agency for International Development VCT voluntary counseling and testing WB World Bank WFP World Food Programme WHO World Health Organization Overview This review was undertaken by the Ministry of Education Focal Points for school health and HIV/AIDS from countries in Sub-Saharan Africa par- ticipating in the Accelerate Initiative, together with representatives of stakeholders and partners, using data collated during the 2007 school health and HIV/AIDS Focal Point Survey (see www.schoolsandhealth.org for more details). In recent years, the education sector has come to play an increasingly important role in preventing HIV. Children of school age have the lowest HIV infection rates of any population sector. Even in the worst affected countries, most schoolchildren are not infected. For these children, there is a window of hope, a chance to live a life free from AIDS, if they can acquire knowledge, skills, and values that will help protect them as they grow up. Providing young people, especially girls, with the "social vaccine" of education offers them a real chance for a productive life (World Bank 2002). Not only is education important for preventing HIV, but preventing HIV is also essential for education. The impact of the epidemic means some countries are beginning to experience a reversal of hard-won educational gains, which affects supply, demand, and quality of education. HIV/AIDS limits the capacity of education sectors to achieve Education for All (EFA), and of countries to achieve their targets toward the Millennium Develop- ment Goals (MDGs). xxvii xxviii | Overview Accelerating the Education Sector Response The role of the education sector in the multisectoral response to HIV/AIDS was given new impetus by some key events in Africa around the millen- nium, in particular the 1999 Lusaka International Congress on HIV/AIDS and STDs in Africa, the EFA regional meeting in Johannesburg, and the Dakar World Education Forum. The sector became increasingly recognized as playing a key "external" role in prevention and in reducing stigma, and as an important "internal" role in providing access to care, treatment, and sup- port for teachers and staff--a group that in many countries represents more than 60 percent of the public sector workforce. In 2002, the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) Inter-Agency Task Team (IATT) on Education established a working group--known as the Accelerate Initiative Working Group--to address these challenges and support countries in Sub-Saharan Africa as they accel- erate the education sector response to HIV/AIDS. The philosophy of the Accelerate Initiative has always been to promote bottom-up planning and activism, informed by regional and national proven examples of good prac- tice. This is intended to lead to the establishment of programs with strong local ownership, capable of accessing suitable funding and implementation at all levels of the education sector. Since 2002, the networks of Ministry of Education HIV/AIDS Focal Points have rapidly taken ownership of the Accelerate Initiative, so that the term "Accelerate Initiative" is now taken to refer to the activities at regional, subregional, and national levels. These are initiated by Focal Points within their networks under the auspices of the Africa Union Regional Economic Communities. Taking Action Key partners of the Initiative include governments, United Nations (UN) agencies, bilateral partners, and civil society, as well as key stakeholders, including people living with HIV/AIDS, teachers' unions, and the media. In the 5 years following 2002, education sectors of 37 countries responsible for more than 200 million, or 85.5 percent of school-age children, and 2.6 million, or 74.3 percent of primary and secondary schoolteachers, Overview | xxix participated in this demand-led initiative of subregional and national processes, resulting in extensive information sharing and significant achievements. Since 2002 Number of African countries in the Accelerate Initiative networks 37 Average number of days between training events 60 Total number of training days to date 120 Number of education sector staff members who have participated in training events 1,350 Number of person/training days conducted 162,000 Number of agencies, NGOs, and development partners that have participated in the Accelerate process 76 Percentage of participating African governments that are using both education and AIDS-specific funds to support their school health programs 75 Number of document titles that have been distributed 95 Number of document copies distributed to education practitioners 250,000 Number of monthly hits on the Web site www.schoolsandhealth.org 85,000 The purpose of this review is to assess the extent to which the Acceler- ate Initiative's planned actions achieved the five objectives identified by the working group in 2002. The review explores the achievements and progress made by different countries, and examines the extent to which they might be associated with countries' participation in the Initiative. The Key Objectives and Outcomes The five objectives identified by the Accelerate Initiative, along with key outcomes since 2002, are as follows: Objective 1: To promote leadership by the education sector and create sectoral demand for a response to HIV/AIDS. Outcome: Ministries of Education of 37 governments chose to partici- pate in subregional workshops to better understand the role of education in their national responses to HIV/AIDS. Of these, 26 Ministries of Education then went on to develop and implement actions at the national level. xxx | Overview Objective 2: To harmonize support among development partners, so as to better assist countries and reduce transaction costs. Outcome: A total of 76 organizations have worked together in the Accel- erate Initiative over the past five years. Twenty-four subregional and national workshops (one every two months) were supported by a consor- tium of representatives from 9 UNAIDS cosponsoring agencies, 15 bilateral donors, and 52 civil society organizations. All these constituencies were represented at each event, and between 5 and 21 organizations participated in each workshop. Objective 3: To promote coordination with the national AIDS authori- ties, and enhance access to HIV/AIDS funds. Outcome: All 37 participating Ministries of Education began communi- cating with their national AIDS authorities, and 26 subsequently received funds from their National AIDS Councils (NACs). Objective 4: To share information on HIV/AIDS that has specific rele- vance to the education sector. Outcome: A set of key documents on HIV/AIDS and education has been made available to educators in English, French, and Portuguese. A total of 250,000 printed copies has been distributed at educator training sessions, and 322,000 file copies have been downloaded from a dedicated Web site. Subregional networks of HIV/AIDS Focal Points within Ministries of Edu- cation have been created within these established regional entities: West Africa (ECOWAS), Central Africa (ECCAS), East Africa (EAC), and Luso- phone Africa (PALOPS). Objective 5: To strengthen the technical content and implementation of the education sector response to HIV/AIDS. Outcome: A recent survey (November 2007) of the Ministry of Educa- tion HIV/AIDS Focal Points in 34 countries showed that all countries have a National HIV/AIDS Policy and 76 percent have an education sector-spe- cific HIV/AIDS strategy and plan. Thirty-two countries now have a Minis- try of Education HIV/AIDS Focal Point at the national level, and 23 also have Focal Points at subnational levels. Thirty countries are training teach- ers to protect themselves. All countries are providing some HIV prevention education at primary or secondary levels, or both. Thirty-one countries are providing this education before the initiation of puberty. Overview | xxxi Overall, this review shows that the Accelerate Initiative brought changes in the sectoral responses of the participating countries. Of the 37 countries in the program, 26 met the goal of achieving acceleration, and several plan to follow suit. Not all responses improved, but for most countries the five objectives of the program were met. In those 26 countries, the education sector response to HIV/AIDS now benefits from (1) stronger sectoral lead- ership; (2) harmonized support from development partners; (3) more effec- tive coordination with NACs; (4) enhanced access to information on HIV/ AIDS; and (5) strengthened technical content of the sectoral response. Key Findings of the 2007 Focal Point Survey In 2007, a survey was carried out by Focal Points within the Western, Eastern, and Central Africa networks to inform the current situation within each region. The results of this survey provide an opportunity to compare how the situation has changed at the regional levels, as well as specific examples of how countries have taken their plans forward since their participation in Accelerate activities. The key findings of the survey are as follows: · Percentage of countries with an Education Sector HIV/AIDS Strategy and an HIV/AIDS Plan 76 · Percentage of countries offering HIV/AIDS counseling to teachers 62 · Percentage of countries training teachers to protect themselves 91 · Percentage of countries having an HIV/AIDS Focal Point within the Ministry of Education 94 · Percentage of countries providing HIV/AIDS prevention education in some form 100 · Percentage of countries training teachers in a life skills approach 74 · Percentage of countries where orphans and vulnerable children do not have to pay school fees 71 See www.schoolsandhealth.org for further details. The countries included in the survey are Benin, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Central African Republic (CAR), Chad, Côte d'Ivoire, Dem- ocratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gabon, Ghana, Guinea- Bissau, Kenya, Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, Mozambique, Niger, Nigeria, the Republic of Congo, Republic of Guinea, Rwanda, São Tomé & Príncipe, Senegal, Sierra Leone, The Gambia, Togo, Uganda, Tanzania (main- land and Zanzibar), and Zambia. xxxii | Overview Working in a Broader Context In interpreting these correlations it should of course be recognized that the Accelerate Initiative was one of several potential influences. Only part of the work in this area by the most influential partners--including UNAIDS, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organi- zation (UNESCO), the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), the United States Agency for International Development (USAID)/Mobile Task Team, and the World Bank Multi-Country HIV/AIDS Program (MAP) AIDS Campaign for Africa--was focused within the Initiative, and the sov- ereign governments made their own independent decisions, on their own timetable, as to whether to develop an education response. That said, there is a persuasive case that the Initiative spurred national efforts, catalyzed some elements of the response, and contributed to accelerating the proc- esses of change. Experience from the past five years shows progress toward the goal of acceleration, and toward the main process objectives. One area in which progress has been slow is the establishment of effective monitoring and evaluation (M&E) procedures and the incorporation of appropriate indica- tors in the Education Management Information System (EMIS). This in turn makes it difficult to evaluate the programs in terms of school-based, child-focused results. In moving forward, the development of effective M&E systems is an important priority, since in their absence investments are likely to be made in what is thought to be effective rather than what has been shown to be effective. In a recent move, supported by technical inputs from the Accelerate Working Group, five countries in the Eastern Africa Network of Ministry of Education HIV/AIDS Focal Points have begun to develop a common education sector M&E framework under the auspices of the East African Community (EAC). The regional value of this approach will be explored by the networks in developing the way forward for the Accelerate Initiative. Evolution and The Way Forward The landscape has also changed over the last five years. Most countries have developed or have begun to develop education sector responses. The issue has shifted from focus on advocacy at the regional and subregional Overview | xxxiii levels to emphasis on effective implementation at the country level, where Ministries of Education across Africa are now playing an increasingly active role in the national multisectoral response to HIV/AIDS. The chal- lenge in moving forward is to measure the extent to which these actions bring about beneficial results for teachers, learners, and the broader edu- cation sector. At least as important, decisions and actions by the participating coun- tries have completely changed the political economy of the sectoral response to HIV/AIDS in Sub-Saharan Africa. The networks established within the subregional communities of the African Union have become not only con- duits for sharing information, but also political structures that now deter- mine the subregional sectoral agenda. Over the past five years these locally owned networks have taken full ownership of the Accelerate Initiative and have emerged as the drivers of regional level and national level change. Dia- logue between the networks and the development partners is emerging as an important determinant of the way forward. In carrying out this review, HIV/AIDS technical experts, representing more than 30 countries, gathered during the network meeting in Nairobi in 2007, and developed a number of positive conclusions: · Education sectors have accelerated their responses to HIV/AIDS. · Education sector responses to HIV are now being implemented by most countries. · More effective links with development partners have emerged. · More and better-quality information is available to education sectors on HIV/AIDS. In addition, the countries participating in the Accelerate Initiative also identified the following challenges in moving forward into the next phase of the Initiative: · Not all sectors are implementing the kinds of HIV/AIDS responses that are mainstream activities. · Effective M&E remain a major challenge. · Investment in regional coordination and knowledge sharing show ben- efits at the country level, but are difficult to sustain without external inputs. xxxiv | Overview · Education for All-Fast Track Initiative (EFA-FTI) processes are strength- ening HIV/AIDS responses within education sectors, but development of the technical capacity to enable effective development of plans is necessary. · The hyperendemic countries of the Southern Cone of Africa have yet to engage in the Accelerate Initiative. Introduction In recent years, the education sector has come to play an increasingly important role in preventing HIV. Children of school age have the lowest HIV infection rates of any population sector. Even in the worst affected countries, most schoolchildren are not infected. For these children, there is a "window of hope," a chance to live a life free from AIDS, if they can acquire knowledge, skills, and values that will help to protect them as they grow up. Providing young people, especially girls, with the "social vaccine" of educa- tion offers them a real chance of a productive life (World Bank 2002). Young people, particularly girls, who fail to complete a basic education are more than twice as likely to become infected with HIV, and the Global Campaign for Education has estimated that some 7 million cases of HIV could be avoided by the achievement of Education for All (EFA) (GCE 2004). Studies in South Africa (Hargreaves et al. 2007; Bärnighausen et al. 2007) and Uganda (de Walque 2002; de Walque et al. 2005) have shown that one additional year of schooling can lead to a 7 percent and 6.7 percent reduction in the risk of infection respectively. In Uganda this reduction in risk was particularly evident among young women. Evidence of systematic reviews has shown that this is an evolutionary process, and that education now provides better protection against infection than it did in the earlier 1 2 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV stages of the epidemic. Enabling all children to complete a full cycle of primary education and ensuring that HIV prevention programs are highly targeted and evidence based have been shown to reduce their risk of con- tracting HIV and to lessen stigma and discrimination (Jukes et al. 2008). But adolescents and young people are still not receiving enough infor- mation; simply supplying facts about sex and HIV is not enough to alter risky behavior. Information must be supplemented with training in life skills, such as critical and creative thinking, decision making and self- awareness, and with the knowledge, attitudes, and values needed to make sound health-related decisions. Furthermore, education will not change the course of the epidemic unless it empowers young girls and promotes positive masculinity amongst young boys. Gender disparities are a significant factor placing women at increased risk of HIV infection and causing them to bear the greatest bur- den of the disease (Jukes et al. 2008). The type of education and school environment matters--education can reproduce social imbalances and inequities, or it can transform societies. At the same time, the HIV/AIDS epidemic is damaging the education systems that can provide this social vaccine by killing teachers, increasing rates of teacher absenteeism, and creating orphans and vulnerable children who may be less likely to attend school and more likely to drop out. Because of the impact of the epidemic, some countries are beginning to experience reversal of their hard-won educational gains, while others are being further set back (Kelly 2008; EDUCAIDS 2008). Affecting supply, demand, and quality of education, HIV/AIDS limit the capacity of education sectors to achieve EFA, and of countries to achieve their targets toward the Millen- nium Development Goals (MDGs) (Risley and Bundy 2007). The education sector has a central role in the multisectoral response to HIV/AIDS. But the response by stakeholders in countries has often been slow and inadequate. This does not appear to reflect a simple lack of resources, since even the available resources have been underused by the education sector. Indeed, even in 2002 few education systems were addressing HIV systematically, and many countries had yet to develop a formal strategy for an education sector response to the epidemic (Bakilana et al. 2004). Introduction | 3 Background to the Accelerate Initiative The education sector has been slow to occupy its critical position as one of the main partners in the multisectoral response to HIV/AIDS. Some key events in Africa around the millennium, and in particular the advocacy by Michael Kelly of Zambia at the 1999 Lusaka International Congress on HIV/AIDS and STDs in Africa, the EFA regional meeting in Johannesburg, and the Dakar World Education Forum in 2000, helped highlight the need for a systemic HIV/AIDS response from the education sector (Kelly 2008). As a result, it has become increasingly recognized that the education sector has a key "external" role in prevention and in reducing stigma, and an important "internal" role in providing access to care, treatment, and sup- port for teachers and staff, a group that in many countries represents more than 60 percent of the public sector workforce. But these roles were only beginning to be understood when in 2002, at the request of countries affected by HIV/AIDS in Sub-Saharan Africa, the UNAIDS Inter-Agency Task Team (IATT) on Education (a network of UNAIDS cosponsors, bilateral donors, and civil society organizations sup- porting coordinated and comprehensive education sector responses to HIV/AIDS) established the Accelerate Initiative Working Group to "accel- erate the education sector response to HIV/AIDS in Sub-Saharan Africa" (see box 1). In consultation with governments in Sub-Saharan Africa, the Working Group undertook a preliminary problem analysis. It showed that effective education sector responses occurred in countries where there was strong sectoral leadership; good sectoral coordination with national AIDS authorities; and appropriate technical support for program design and implementation (Bakilana et al. 2004). It further showed that, as in other areas of the aid field, support among development partners was often unco- ordinated, leading to increased transaction costs for the governments--a particularly significant issue in the area of HIV/AIDS activities because of the size of donor support and multiplicity of donors. The Accelerate Initia- tive, in support of the "Three Ones" principles1--of one national AIDS action framework, one national AIDS coordinating authority, and one country-level system for monitoring and evaluation (M&E)--aims to har- monize plans, funding, and M&E frameworks. 4 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV BOX 1: THE UNAIDS INTER-AGENCY TASK TEAM (IATT) ON EDUCATION The UNAIDS Inter-Agency Task Team (IATT) on Education was created in 2002 with the goal to accelerate and improve the education sector response to HIV/AIDS. Convened by UNESCO, it is a strategic clustering of the UNAIDS cosponsoring agencies, bilateral agencies, private donors, and civil society agencies, committed to working for congruence in policy dialogue at the international, regional, and national levels. The IATT seeks to achieve its aim by the following means: · Promoting and supporting good practices in the education sector related to HIV/AIDS · Encouraging alignment and harmonization within and across agencies to sup- port global and country level actions Specific activities undertaken by the IATT include the following: · Strengthening the evidence base and disseminating findings to inform deci- sion making and strategy development · Encouraging information and materials exchange · Working jointly to bridge education and AIDS communities · Ensuring stronger education sector responses to HIV/AIDS See www.unesco.org/aids/iatt or contact info-iatt@unesco.org for further informa- tion on the IATT and its activities. Goals and Objectives of the Accelerate Initiative The goal of the Accelerate Initiative Working Group is to help countries in Sub-Saharan Africa to accelerate their education sector responses to HIV/ AIDS. "Accelerate" means both to quicken something that is already in motion and to hasten into motion something that is initially stationary. In support of this goal, the Accelerate Initiative Working Group identified the following five objectives: 1. To promote leadership by the education sector and create sectoral de- mand for a response to HIV/AIDS 2. To harmonize support among development partners, so as to better assist countries and reduce transaction costs Introduction | 5 3. To promote coordination with the national AIDS authorities, and enhance access to AIDS funds 4. To share information on HIV/AIDS that has specific relevance to the education sector 5. To strengthen the technical content and implementation of the educa- tion sector response to HIV/AIDS Implementation of the Accelerate Initiative To address these five objectives, the Accelerate Initiative developed a plan of action that began with participation in subregional workshops of teams representative of the education sector, including key formal and nonformal subsectors, and teacher associations. These workshops were intended to lead to common understanding of the role the education sector could play in responding to HIV/AIDS, and thus to the emergence of sectoral leader- ship and action at the country level. Effective leadership at the country level, combined with appropriate technical input, is intended to result in more effective sectoral policies, strategies, and implementation plans, and better harmonized support from country-level education donor teams. The philosophy of the Accelerate Initiative has always been to promote bottom- up planning and activism, informed by regional and national proven exam- ples of good practice. This is intended to lead to the establishment of programs with strong local ownership, capable of accessing suitable fund- ing and implementation at all levels of the education sector. The Accelerate Initiative, in recognition of the fact that any external pro- gram can only hope to spur on, and contribute to, existing education sector initiatives, aims to build on and strengthen these. It does so through the provision and dissemination of information on new and effective technical solutions, combined with the stimulation of political will to further develop appropriate responses. Workshops at subregional and national levels build on past workshops and are coordinated with other, similar activities being organized by development partners. The Initiative is a "work in progress," and in addi- tion to working closely with development partners active at national and 6 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV regional levels, plans are discussed at the UNAIDS IATT at education biannual meetings with the global representatives of the UNAIDS cospon- sors, bilateral and intergovernmental organizations, and civil society. During these meetings, plans are modified and consolidated in moving the Initiative forward. The Evolution of the Accelerate Initiative The Accelerate Initiative began in November 2002; by November 2006 the education sectors of 37 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa had participated, namely: Angola, Benin, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Cape Verde, Central African Republic (CAR), Chad, Côte d'Ivoire, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gabon, Ghana, Guinea-Bissau, Kenya, Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauri- tania, Mozambique, Niger, Nigeria, Republic of Guinea, Rwanda, São Tomé & Príncipe, Senegal, Sierra Leone, The Gambia, the Republic of Congo, Togo, Uganda, Tanzania (mainland and Zanzibar), and Zambia. These countries are responsible for 200.2 million school-age children and 2.6 million teachers. If effective, the Accelerate efforts to date have the potential to benefit 85.5 percent of school-age children and 74.3 percent of primary and secondary school teachers in Sub-Saharan Africa. From the first workshop it became clear that there was strong demand from the education teams of the countries in Sub-Saharan Africa for better understanding of how to develop and implement an effective sectoral response. The Initiative rapidly evolved into a locally owned and driven activity of the countries themselves. This was most strongly reflected in the development of subregional networks created by the Ministers of Educa- tion around the African Union Regional Economic Communities. By 2004, there were networks developing within the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and the Portuguese-speaking African Countries (PALOPS), by 2005 within the East African Community (EAC), and by 2006 within the Economic Community of Central African States (ECCAS). In 2007, the networks began meeting across the region, and decided that the time had come to take stock of where the initiative had arrived. Since 2002, the networks of Ministry of Education HIV/AIDS Focal Points have increasingly taken ownership of the Accelerate Initiative so Introduction | 7 that the term "Accelerate Initiative" is now taken to refer to the activities at regional, subregional, and national levels. These are initiated by Focal Points within their networks under the auspices of the Africa Union Regional Economic Communities. Review of the Accelerate Initiative: Five Years On The purpose of the present review is to assess the extent to which the Accelerate Initiative's planned actions have led to the achievement of its five objectives, as identified in 2002. It also explores the achievements and progress made by the education sectors of different countries, and the extent to which this might be associated with their participation in the Accelerate Initiative. To achieve this purpose, the review will present each objective in turn, along with summaries of key outcomes. In-depth analysis of specific topics is still ongoing. Note 1.On 25 April 2004, UNAIDS, its cosponsors and other key donors endorsed the "Three Ones" principles, to achieve the most efficient use of resources, and to ensure rapid action and results-based management of country-led HIV/AIDS activities. These are: one agreed HIV/AIDS action framework that provides the basis for coordinating the work of all partners; one national AIDS coordinating authority, with a broad-based multisectoral mandate; and one agreed country- level monitoring and evaluation system. CHAPTER 1 Promoting Leadership by the Education Sector and Creating Sectoral Demand for a Response to HIV/AIDS The Accelerate team has held 24 workshops since November 2002, equivalent to an average of one every 2 months. Participation at the sub- regional level has increased steadily, and is now reaching a plateau as the total number of Sub-Saharan African countries is approached (see figure 1 below). The key outcome sought by the subregional workshops is the subsequent development of national-level education sector efforts, which would indi- cate sectoral leadership (see boxes 2 and 3 for an example of sectoral lead- ership). Figure 1 shows a consistent correlation, over time, between the numbers of countries participating in subregional activities and the num- bers going on to launch activities at the national level (see appendixes A and B for further details). An important aspect of this approach is that it is demand driven. The development partners contributing to the Accelerate Initiative have pro- vided technical assistance, documentation, and other technical input, but the participating government teams are responsible for identifying resources to cover most of their own participation costs. In many cases, education teams have sought these resources from national AIDS authori- ties, with positive consequences reviewed under Objective 3. 9 10 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV Figure 1 Country Participation in the Accelerate Initiative Since 2002 40 35 30 Number of countries 25 20 15 10 5 0 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 Year Subregional level activities National-level activities (including wokshops, technical support, missions, etc.) Source: Figure based on participant lists at subregional and national-level workshops within the Accelerate Initiative, 2002­07. BOX 2: LEADERSHIP BY THE EDUCATION SECTOR WITHIN A FEDERAL SYSTEM: THE CASE OF NIGERIA The Government of Nigeria, faced with the most highly populated country in Africa and the need to implement programs in its 36 semiautonomous states, established a national center of excellence for training government education teams. With support from the Multi-Country HIV/AIDS Program (MAP), the Federal Ministry of Education HIV/AIDS Unit developed the training capacity of the National Institute of Educational Planning and Administration (NIEPA). Within 3 years, 33 out of 36 states had established education responses to HIV/AIDS. (Continued) Promoting Leadership by the Education Sector | 11 BOX 2: (Continued) At the federal level, actions included the following: · Developing a national policy and strategy, including a workplace policy · Creating an agreed national curriculum · Creating a "center of excellence" (at NIEPA) for state-level training · Providing education and NACA funds at the state level At the state level, actions included implementing the education sector response to HIV/AIDS. See "Accelerating the Education Sector Response in the Federal Republic of Nigeria: A Review," and www.schoolsandhealth.org for further details. BOX 3: LEADERSHIP BY THE EDUCATION SECTOR WITHIN A SMALL STATE: THE REPUBLIC OF BURUNDI Leadership by the education sector in the Republic of Burundi is clearly demon- strated through the multitude of activities occurring at all levels of the sector. This includes the establishment of an HIV/AIDS unit in the Ministry of Education to take forward the national multisectoral response. Since 1988­89, the Ministry of Education has been delivering primary-level HIV prevention education initiated by rural education offices. Education sector-led responses are now taking place at the primary, secondary, and tertiary levels of the formal sector, as well as through the nonformal sector. Around 75 percent of sec- ondary schools also have peer education groups. Most primary schools and voca- tional training centers also have peer educators. At the tertiary level, self-initiated student organizations are particularly active. All these activities are clearly guided by a five-year sectoral plan (2002­07). See www.schoolsandhealth.org for further details. Mainstreaming HIV/AIDS in the Education Sector Mainstreaming HIV/AIDS responses has been identified as the main path toward ensuring comprehensive realization of the country plans and sub- sequent actions. There is an identified need for education sectors to undertake both "external mainstreaming"--that is, interventions geared 12 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV to preventing HIV infection and mitigating the impact of HIV/AIDS on the education sector), and "internal mainstreaming"; that is, interventions responding to the impact of HIV/AIDS on teachers and educational staff. Such interventions must be planned and implemented across all units, departments, and institutions in the education sector. The education sectors in Kenya and the United Republic of Tanzania (mainland and Zanzibar) provide examples of implementing sectorwide mainstreaming of HIV/AIDS responses. In the United Republic of Tanzania, in addition to the fully staffed AIDS coordinating units, all units, departments, and institutions in the education sector (and through their participation in the well-established Technical AIDS Committees [TACs]), plan, budget, and monitor implementation of the HIV/AIDS responses. Mainstreaming the responses has also been included in the Government's Medium Term Expenditure Framework BOX 4: MAINSTREAMING: THE GENDER PERSPECTIVE Gender inequality continues to drive "feminization" of the epidemic. The dynam- ics of such feminization are changing with increased numbers of married women, in addition to girls and young women, who are becoming infected. In many regions, more young women aged 15 years and older are now living with HIV than ever before. Globally, women now comprise 48 percent of people living with HIV. Young people aged 15 years and older are at particular risk, accounting for 40 percent of new infections in 2006. United Nations Girls' Education Initiative (UNGEI) Launched in 2000 at the World Education Forum in Dakar, the United Nations Girls' Education Initiative (UNGEI) is a partnership of organizations committed to the goals of narrowing the gender gap in primary and secondary education and ensuring that, by 2015, all children complete primary schooling, with girls and boys having equal access to free, high-quality education. As the flagship of the EFA movement that focuses on girls' education, UNGEI embraces the United Nations system, governments, donor countries, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), civil society, the private sector, communities, and families. The UNGEI framework has provided the gender context for the Accelerate Initiative. It promotes the mainstreaming of gender into the HIV/AIDS responses by the education sector and strategies that give priority to the needs of the most disadvantaged, especially girls and women, as well as orphans and other children made vulnerable to AIDS. For more information visit www.ungei.org. Promoting Leadership by the Education Sector | 13 (MTEF), a national budgetary allocation and expenditure framework within the Poverty Reduction Strategy Programs (PRSPs). At the district level, education offices have been mandated to oversee the implementation of HIV/AIDS in the education sector. In Kenya, the Ministry of Education has put HIV/AIDS Focal Points in all 75 District Education Offices (2008 data), out of which 15 already plan, budget, and monitor education responses to HIV/AIDS. These offices are demonstrating vertical mainstreaming through current decentralized reforms in the education sector. Evaluating the Accelerate Initiative Process Each Accelerate workshop was evaluated by a two-part questionnaire administered to participants at the end of the workshop. The questionnaire required participants to rate the activity of the workshop on 7 objectives on a progressive scale of 1 (low) to 5 (high). Figure 2 shows the average response, rated by participants from 24 workshops, on the 7 objectives of the questionnaire. The participant feedback shown in figure 2 suggests that the Accelerate workshops are addressing countries' specific needs (complete results of the feedback questionnaires for each workshop can be Figure 2 Evaluation of the Accelerate Initiative Workshops 5 4.42 4.28 4.43 4.23 (1 = min, 5 = max) Average response 4.68 4.18 3.88 4 3 2 1 tio nt ed : es s n ps n s ne nce en up es io tio nc rre hi ns s s at ln ct gro ta s te a fu u fu ic er ta ev en k/ : c tif se rtn ef ic /s el em or e iv en lu at try R w anc Pa id em pl l fe ra v im n ve le Th tio Re O an lu un Pl So co Source: Figure based on data collected using a standardized participant feedback questionnaire completed anonymously at the end of all subregional and national-level workshops within the Accelerate Initiative, 2002­07. 14 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV found at www.schoolsandhealth.org). The Accelerate Initiative aims to be as responsive as possible to the needs and priorities of participating coun- tries; consequently, activities are constantly modified in line with sugges- tions and recommendations made by government participants in these feedback questionnaires. While carrying out activities, relevance and responsiveness are ensured through the establishment of a semiformal feedback mechanism between participants and the facilitation team at each event. CHAPTER 2 Harmonizing Support among Development Partners to Better Assist Countries and Reduce Transaction Costs One of the key features of the Accelerate Initiative is participation, as well as financial and technical support from a variety of development partners, including UNAIDS cosponsors, bilateral donors, and national and international civil society organizations (see box 5 for the role of civil society). The Accelerate Initiative identified the need to harmonize development partner support with repeated feedback from countries that too many workshops and meetings covered the same issues, occupy- ing too much staff time. Donor-level planning for subregional-level and national-level activities began through discussions with education sector development partner the- matic groups. In this collaboration the Accelerate Initiative sought to help align the activities of different agencies engaged in HIV/AIDS responses. Wherever possible the Initiative has sought to substitute one activity for potential separate activities by different agencies. This approach was intended to reduce transaction costs, especially for government partici- pants. A key element to this approach for national-level events was for their planning and implementation to be the responsibility of the education sec- tor development partner thematic group in the participating country. This meant that the policy direction of all the workshops was aligned with 15 16 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV BOX 5: CIVIL SOCIETY'S ROLE IN ACCELERATING THE EDUCATION SECTOR RESPONSE TO HIV/AIDS Civil society can support the education sector response to HIV by the following means: · Providing a useful communication link between community and schools, as well as informing policy development through their knowledge of the situation in schools and the community · Using combined knowledge from linkages between teachers' unions and edu- cation and health groups to inform policy decisions and monitor government action, campaigning for the rights of the vulnerable · Providing program implementation and design expertise to the education sector, under the auspices of Ministries of Education. The Global Campaign for Education and the Partnership for Child Develop- ment are examples of civil society organizations coordinating actions of partners at the international level, as well as the actions of numerous country-level civil society organizations. See www.schoolsandhealth.org for further details. national priorities set out by the country and local development partners. It also contributed to ongoing national efforts to harmonize actions. Figure 3 shows the participation of some development partners in the 24 workshops held to date. For the UNAIDS cosponsors, participation reflects a variety of areas of commitment: for example, for UNESCO, UNICEF, and the World Bank--education and HIV/AIDS; for the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA)--reproductive health issues; for the International Labour Organization (ILO)--workplace policy for HIV/ AIDS; and for the World Food Programme (WFP)--school feeding. Participation by bilateral donors may reflect relationships with specific countries. Some donors concentrate resources in a few countries, whereas others spread their support more widely, so the number of countries need not reflect the scale of the contribution. The same is true for country vari- ations in civil society focus. Note that the workshop format specifically proposed the inclusion of teachers' associations and associations of people living with HIV in every case. The Partnership for Child Development (PCD) participated in all events because it supports the Network providing Figure 3 Development Partners Involved in Each of the Subregional and National Workshops Held since 2002 ILO 11 UNAIDS 12 UNDP 5 UNESCO 21 UNFPA 12 UNICEF 18 24 WB WFP 6 Canada 7 Ireland 7 Norway 23 UK 23 USA 10 Action Aid 5 Action Health 7 MTT 5 PCD 23 Save the Children 2 Teacher associations 21 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Accelerate workshops attended (%) Source: Figure based on participant lists at subregional and national-level workshops within the Accelerate Initiative, 2002­07. 17 18 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV BOX 6: HIV/AIDS AS A WORKPLACE ISSUE As lead agency on issues of policy, the ILO's "Code of Practice on HIV/AIDS and the World of Work" is used to guide deliberations on policy. HIV/AIDS are work- place issues, and should be treated like any other serious illness or condition in the workplace. The development of an HIV/AIDS policy (through consultation with all stakeholders) that responds to the needs of employers and employees is sig- nificant because it provides a framework for an accelerated education sector response. Moreover, policies backed by commitment at the highest level can offer an example to other organizations, institutions, and communities in general as to how to manage HIV/AIDS. As shown in figure 3, ILO staff participated in nearly half the Initiative events. The ILO Code of Practice was used as guidance material in all the events, as have been the ILO and UNESCO joint publications "An HIV/AIDS Workplace Policy for the Education Sector in the Caribbean" and "HIV/AIDS Workplace Policy for the Education Sector in Southern Africa." See www.ilo.org for further details. In 2006, the EFAIDS Program was launched by Education International (EI), the World Health Organization (WHO), and the Education Development Center (EDC). It has three goals: 1. To prevent new HIV infections among teachers and learners 2. To mitigate the negative effect of AIDS on achieving EFA goals 3. To increase the number of learners completing basic education. To achieve its goals, EFAIDS combines the efforts of teachers' unions in advo- cating for EFA at the national level with their commitment to HIV/AIDS prevention in schools locally. By engaging teachers and their unions in discussions around policy and advocacy, EFAIDS seeks to promote leadership of the education sector in addressing HIV/AIDS. A toolkit entitled "Leadership in the HIV and AIDS Response: A Toolkit for Teachers' Unions to Promote Health and Improve Educa- tion" has been developed by EFAIDS partners to facilitate this process. See www.ei-ie.org/efaids/en/index.php for further details. technical assistance to the Accelerate Initiative. Full details of the partici- pating organizations are provided in appendix B. Figure 4 shows the participation of some of the development partners in the 24 workshops held to date by UNAIDS cosponsors, bilateral donors, and civil society organizations. The large and high-profile subregional workshops attracted the greatest number and variety of development part- ners, but in every case there were multiple development partners present. Figure 4 Level of Representation of UN Agencies, Bilateral Donors, and Civil Society Organizations at the Subregional and National Workshops and Network Meetings Held since 2002 25 20 4 7 6 8 15 8 11 8 4 4 5 9 7 2 10 3 6 5 1 3 3 2 2 5 2 4 2 5 1 5 4 4 2 2 3 2 4 1 5 3 1 2 4 7 8 7 7 7 7 2 2 8 2 2 8 5 5 2 2 2 1 5 6 4 3 4 3 3 4 3 3 2 2 2 2 0 East Africa East Africa meeting Nigeria (2) Nigeria (1) Central Africa Nigeria (3) Zambia Anglophone W.Africa Ethiopia Francophone Africa Lusophone Africa EA network launch Nigeria (5) Curriculum workshop Nigeria (6) Nigeria Burkina Faso Sierra Leone EAC Senegal Ethiopia Central Africa The Gambia Tanzania 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 Bilateral donors UN agencies Civil society Source: Figure based on participant lists at subregional and national-level workshops within the Accelerate Initiative, 2002­07. 19 20 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV BOX 7: FOSTERING "GREATER INVOLVEMENT OF PEOPLE LIVING WITH HIV/AIDS (GIPA)" IN THE ACCELERATE INITIATIVE In line with the GIPA principles, the Accelerate Initiative seeks to actively involve teachers and education staff living with HIV/AIDS. Teachers living with HIV/ AIDS have been a key part of the Accelerate Initiative. They have been active participants in Cameroon, Ghana, and the United Republic of Tanzania, and their personal experiences have been particularly valuable in helping to shape effective sectoral responses to HIV/AIDS, in terms of policy, planning, and implementation. The West and Eastern Africa networks have recently produced a book titled Courage and Hope: Stories from Teachers Living with HIV/AIDS in Sub-Saharan Africa documenting the real-life experiences of HIV-positive teachers within the education sector, with the aim to use it as an advocacy tool toward mitigating the impact of HIV/AIDS on teachers. See www.unaids.org/en/PolicyAndPractice/GIPA/default.asp and www.schools andhealth.org for further details. Through this extensive partner collaboration, activities at subregional and national levels are more harmonized, leading to a significant reduction of transaction costs and an increase in cost-effectiveness for both Minis- tries of Education and development partners. CHAPTER 3 Promoting Coordination with the National AIDS Authorities and Enhancing Access to AIDS Funds In this part of the review, the chronological relationship between Acceler- ate input and evidence of increased access to resources is examined. Where outcome follows input, the Accelerate input is assumed to have been, at least in part, responsible. One of the key objectives of the Initiative has been to help Ministries of Education to access AIDS funds. For all the countries involved in the program, the national AIDS authorities--in the form of councils, com- missions, and secretariats--were responsible for managing substantial funds, primarily from the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, and the World Bank program MAP, a component of which focuses on line ministries. The component includes education (see box 8 for examples of how education sectors have been able to access funds for HIV/AIDS activities). The outcome measure used in this review was therefore the initiation of flow of funds from the National AIDS Councils (NACs) to the education sector. The Accelerate Initiative used two approaches to encourage this out- come. The first approach catalyzed interactions between the education sector and NACs. In many cases, the first substantive interaction between the two occurred in the context of their joint participation in a subregional workshop and the subsequent request from the sector to 21 22 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV BOX 8: ACCESSING NAC FUNDING IN THE WEST AFRICA NETWORK The Gambia Since 2003, the National AIDS Secretariat (NAS) has had a memorandum of understanding with the Gambian Department of State Education (DOSE). The NAS/DOSE program uses the World Bank HIV/AIDS Rapid Response Project funds to support a comprehensive education sector response to HIV/AIDS at all levels and in all departments. The program includes both internal and external HIV/AIDS prevention, care, and support activities. The program has been further consolidated by the inclusion of fully costed HIV/AIDS-related activities in all DOSE Action Plans since 2003­04. The DOSE still faces problems and delays in the disbursement of funds due to because of staff- ing issues within the NAS. The absence of an effective M&E system has also been highlighted as an issue for program management and planning. Nonetheless, the formal agreement between the NAS and the education sector provides sustaina- bility and ensures funding for HIV/AIDS education sector-related activities. Mauritania In 2003, the Mauritanian Ministry of Education became actively involved in the national multisectoral response to HIV/AIDS. Within this national response, edu- cation has been identified as a priority sector. This was reflected in 2003 when the CNLS (the National AIDS Committee) Secretariat apportioned the largest share of the annual budget to the Ministry of Education. As a result of this funding, the Ministry was able to appoint a coordinator of HIV/AIDS-related activities. In 2004, the role of the Ministry of Education in the national multisectoral response was further strengthened by a formal agreement between the Ministry and the CNLS in which an education sector budget was agreed for 2004­08. This funding was to cover costs related to activities as well as core Ministry costs asso- ciated with running the program. Since 2004, the Ministry has been able to train and sensitize more than 41,000 ministry staff and students. These examples from The Gambia and Mauritania demonstrate that develop- ing a strong relationship with the NAC and gaining its formal support for educa- tion sector activities ensures sustainability. Furthermore, in these two cases of good practice, it shows how advocacy can result in the education sector having a priority role to play in the multisectoral response. See www.schoolsandhealth.org for more details. the NAC to support a national workshop. In most countries, these small beginnings led to substantial increases in interaction and funding. The second approach was to help the education sector to develop time- bound, realistic, and comprehensive plans that NACs considered worth Promoting Coordination with the National AIDS Authorities | 23 funding. Evidence from an earlier Accelerate evaluation (Bakilana et al. 2004) showed that the poor quality of nonhealth sector plans was a major deterrent in attracting NAC funds. The Accelerate Initiative pro- vided support to education sectors in mainstreaming HIV/AIDS in their EFA-FTI sector programs in a number of countries. Figure 5 shows the increase, over time, in the number of countries where the Ministries of Education participated in subregional and national activities. It also shows the increase in the number of Ministries of Educa- tion beginning to access funds from their NACs. (The details of which countries have implemented which actions are given in tabular form at www.schoolsandhealth.org.) The graph in figure 5 shows a clear positive trend between the number of countries beginning to access funds from their NACs and participation in subregional and national activities. Of the 37 countries that have partici- pated in the Accelerate Initiative thus far, 27 have gone on to initiate access of funds from their NACs. Figure 5 Chronology of Ministries of Education First Accessing Funds from Their National AIDS Councils (NACs) 40 35 Number of countries 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 Year Subregional level activities National-level activities Initiation of disbursement of NAC funds to MoE Source: Figure based on information presented by participants at subregional and national-level workshops within the Accelerate Initiative, 2002­07, as well as data collated during the 2007 Ministry of Education Focal Point Survey (see www.schoolsandhealth.org). 24 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV Though the Accelerate Initiative has facilitated the Ministries of Education to access funds from their NACs, most of the Education Min- istries complained of the procedures required to obtain this funding. Furthermore, unlike the Ministries of Education, which have national coverage, MAP-funded projects in some countries are not always coun- trywide, making it difficult for the Ministries of Education to obtain sufficient funding from their NACs to ensure a fully scaled response. Typically, MAP funds disbursed through the NACs have been used to catalyze efforts that can then be supported sustainably through established mainstream education sector mechanisms. In Kenya, for example, support for education sector AIDS coordinating units led to mainstreaming responses in appropriate subsectors, including in the Teacher Service Commission. In Malawi, Uganda, and the United Republic of Tanzania, MAP funds have supported the printing of AIDS teaching and learning materials and the development of strategic plans. In Ghana, Guinea, Niger, and Senegal, MAP resources have been used to revise curricula and associated teaching aids that have then been implemented through established sectoral mechanisms, such as pre- and in-service teacher training, whereas in Ethiopia and Sierra Leone, MAP supported the devel- opment of national sector policies that led to national programs. In Kenya, Uganda, the United Republic of Tanzania, and Zambia, the Ministries of Education now have a line item in their annual budgets for AIDS activi- ties (including special issues such as orphans and vulnerable children, and children with disabilities). CHAPTER 4 Sharing Information on HIV/AIDS with Specific Relevance to the Education Sector Early regional analysis revealed a demand for information about HIV/AIDS presented in an accessible format relevant to the education sector. The demand was for the following: 1. New documentation that addressed education issues from an HIV/AIDS perspective. This included information on (a) ensuring access to, and the role of, education for orphans and vulnerable children; (b) how to proj- ect the impact of HIV/AIDS on education systems; and (c) critical evalu- ations of the process and effectiveness of education sector responses to HIV/AIDS 2. Improved access to a critical subset of existing information on education and HIV/AIDS 3. Greater opportunities for sharing information among countries facing common operational challenges The following sections review how the Accelerate Initiative has sought to respond to these three demands. 25 26 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV BOX 9: A CHECKLIST OF GOOD PRACTICE The Good Practice HIV/AIDS Checklist is a tool that Ministries of Education can use to analyze their sector's response to the HIV/AIDS epidemic. The checklist was compiled in collaboration with Ministries of Education and is based on experience from Ministries of Education, especially in Africa. The checklist will be refined regularly as more experience from Ministries of Education becomes available. There are four main components: · Education sector policy for HIV/AIDS · Education sector management and planning to mitigate the impact of HIV/ AIDS · Prevention of HIV/AIDS by education systems · Ensuring access to and completion of education for orphans and vulnerable children See appendix D for the Good Practice HIV/AIDS Checklist and the Web site www.schoolsandhealth.org for further details. Production of New Documentation Addressing Education Issues from an HIV/AIDS Perspective A key component of the Accelerate Initiative has been the development of documents specific to the education sector. Over the last five years, these have included an award-winning documentary on HIV/AIDS (see box 10), as well as the following titles available in English, French, and Portuguese: · Education and HIV/AIDS: A Window of Hope. 2002. The World Bank: Washington, DC. (See box 10.) · Education and HIV/AIDS: Modeling the Impact of HIV/AIDS on Educa- tion Systems: How to Use the Ed-SIDA Model for Education HIV/AIDS Forecasting. The World Bank, first edition 2001, second edition 2006. · Education and HIV/AIDS: Ensuring Education Access for Orphans and Vulnerable Children: A Planners' Handbook. The World Bank, first edi- tion 2002, second edition 2006. Sharing Information on HIV/AIDS with Specific Relevance to the Education Sector | 27 · Education and HIV/AIDS: A Sourcebook of HIV/AIDS Prevention Pro- grams. The World Bank 2003. · Education and HIV/AIDS: A Sourcebook of HIV/AIDS Prevention Activi- ties in the Education Sector, Volume II. The World Bank 2008. · Education and HIV/AIDS: Enabling Access to Education for Orphans and Vulnerable Children: A Sourcebook. UNICEF and the World Bank 2009. BOX 10: THE "WINDOW OF HOPE" DOCUMENTARY Education and HIV/AIDS: "A Window of Hope," the World Bank 2002 (also pub- lished as an Executive Summary), was the basis of a documentary on the role of teachers in the response to HIV/AIDS, developed in collaboration with the Minis- tries of Education of Kenya and Ghana, and with support from Irish Aid. It was reviewed during the International Conference on AIDS and Sexually Transmitted Infections in Africa (ICASA) meeting in Abuja in December 2005. The film is the winner of a number of awards, including the CINE Golden Eagle, and has been distributed as follows: · African Heads of State Conference in Nigeria, June 2006: 1,000 DVD and broadcast copies distributed to the press in all three languages through the UNAIDS representative in Nigeria. The film was also broadcast on Nigerian Public Broadcasting in April 2006 · UN High-Level Meeting in New York, May 2006: 1,500 DVD and 10 broadcast copies distributed · XVI International AIDS Conference, Toronto, August 2006: More than 5,000 DVD copies distributed, with an additional 1,000 DVD copies distributed at the Global Village · Africa Regional Workshops: 500 DVD copies distributed in eight countries · More than 1,500 DVD copies distributed to interested NGOs and civil society groups, including teachers' unions · Marketed to internal broadcasting outlets See www.schoolsandhealth.org to Webstream a copy. 28 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV Promoting Greater Access to a Critical Subset of Existing Information on AIDS and Education Working with development partners, the available literature on HIV/AIDS and education was reviewed and a subset of some 30 titles identified for wider distribution. Over the past five years this list has evolved, with some titles being added as they became available, and others being dropped as they were superseded, so that some 95 titles have now been distributed. All documents are made available in English, French, and Portuguese, and in several cases the Accelerate Initiative has arranged for and supported the translation of seminal documents. To date, approximately 250,000 copies of the 95 titles have been distrib- uted in at least the three languages noted above. Appendix C contains a list of the names and quantities of the top 20 distributed documents. These documents are also made available through www.schoolsandhealth.org, a Web site that was established with the support of multiple development partners in 2002. The site serves as a source of information and updates on all school health, nutrition, and HIV education issues, and provides a transparent and easily accessible record of all the Accelerate Initiative activities. This site, among the most active for AIDS and education, currently receives approxi- mately 85,000 hits per month. Figure 6 shows how the demand for the site has grown from January 2003 to December 2006. The site also provides access to a wide range of documents, and sup- plements the dissemination of printed copies. Since 2003, some 322,000 document files have been downloaded; with a current average of 8,300 download requests each month (see figure 7). However, no estimates are available of the number of file downloads that have been used to print multiple copies of a document. One of the most downloaded documents in the field on education and HIV/AIDS is A Sourcebook of HIV/AIDS Prevention Programs (see box 11). The Accelerate Initiative also promotes access to other Web sites from participating countries hosting relevant information, such as UNESCO­ International Institute for Educational Planning (IIEP), and the HIV/AIDS Impact on Education Clearinghouse. 29 Total no. hits each month 0 20000 40000 60000 80000 100000 Jan­03 120000 Feb­03 Mar­03 Apr­03 May­03 June­03 Jul­03 Aug­03 Sep­03 Oct­03 Nov­03 Dec­03 Jan­04 Feb­04 Mar­04 Apr­04 May­04 June­04 Jul­04 Aug­04 Sep­04 Oct­04 Nov­04 Dec­04 Jan­05 Figure 6 Monthly Web Site Hits, January 2003­December 2006 Feb­05 Mar­05 Apr­05 May­05 June­05 Jul­05 Aug­05 Sep­05 Source: Figure based on data collected from the www.schoolsandhealth.org Web site and analyzed using SurfStats. Oct­05 Nov­05 Dec­05 Jan­06 Feb­06 Mar­06 Apr­06 May­06 June­06 Jul­06 Aug­06 Sep­06 Oct­06 Nov­06 Dec­06 30 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV BOX 11: A SOURCEBOOK OF HIV/AIDS PREVENTION ACTIVITIES IN THE EDUCATION SECTOR, VOLUME II The first sourcebook, documenting 13 nonformal HIV/AIDS prevention programs associated with schools (for example, after-school, anti-AIDS clubs), remains one of the most downloaded and widely disseminated documents in the field on edu- cation and HIV/AIDS. Following its success, it was argued that, since the school system reaches large numbers of young people and offers a ready-made infra- structure for the delivery of HIV/AIDS prevention education, it would be advanta- geous, in this second phase, to document school- and curriculum-based programs led by either the Ministry of Education (MoE) or the private sector. It was also argued that, since some non-African countries have different experiences in tack- ling HIV/AIDS, documenting well-established programs from these countries could be of benefit to Africa. Equally, lessons learned in Africa can benefit other non-African countries. In response to feedback by users, a second sourcebook has now been pro- duced that documents 10 programs as examples of good practice (identified through consultation with development partners and governments) from 8 coun- tries in Africa, 1 in the Middle East and North Africa, and 1 in Latin America and the Caribbean. These focus on school- and curriculum-based programs, led by either the Ministry of Education or by the private sector, which are appropriate in cost and scope for implementation by the public sector. The programs demon- strate the key roles Ministries of Education can play in successful HIV/AIDS pre- vention activities. See www.schoolsandhealth.org for further information. Figure 7 Mean Number of Monthly Download File Requests 1,200,000 Mean no. monthly 1,000,000 800,000 hits/year 600,000 400,000 200,000 0 2003 2004 2005 2006 Year Source: Figure based on data collected from the www.schoolsandhealth.org website and analyzed using surfstats Sharing Information on HIV/AIDS with Specific Relevance to the Education Sector | 31 Sharing Information Among Countries Facing Common Operational Challenges In response to an expressed demand at the national and regional levels for the establishment of concrete mechanisms for exchanging information and experiences among neighboring countries facing similar operational chal- lenges, the Accelerate Initiative has facilitated the formation of regional net- works for HIV/AIDS Focal Points. The networks are made up of members who have been officially appointed by the different Ministers of Education to serve as HIV/AIDS Focal Points. They provide a framework for consultation, exchange, and sharing of experiences and expertise among actors in the field of HIV/AIDS. Over the past five years, four networks for HIV/AIDS Focal Points have been successfully formed throughout Sub-Saharan Africa. Over this same period, the networks have successfully taken on responsibility and ownership of "Accelerate activities" at regional and national levels. The networks meet and communicate regularly to discuss how best to work together to develop more effective regional, subregional, and national education sector responses to HIV/AIDS. The ultimate aim is to enable stronger and better quality actions at the school level. Network of Ministry of Education HIV/AIDS Focal Points for the Economic Community of West African States and Mauritania The countries of the ECOWAS, together with Mauritania, have shown political leadership in responding to HIV/AIDS in the West Africa region. ECOWAS adopted a control strategy on HIV/AIDS in West Africa in December 2000 and have subsequently recognized the importance of tackling HIV through education. At the Second Conference of ECOWAS Ministers of Education held in Accra in January 2004, a strategic approach was adopted through the priority project "Support to HIV/AIDS preventive education in ECOWAS countries." To support implementation, a network of HIV/AIDS Focal Points in Ministries of Education was established and launched in December 2004. ECOWAS serves as the political umbrella for the network. The countries that make up the network include Benin, Burkina Faso, Cape Verde, Côte d'Ivoire, The Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone, and Togo. Since December 2004, the network has developed an action plan centered on the following: · Creation of a framework to share information and experiences and proposition of guidelines · Promotion of good practices · Technical guidance and progress updates to the Ministers of Education (Continued) 32 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV · Monitoring of progress · Development of Focal Points' capacity In September 2008, the ECOWAS Commission organized the first meeting of ECOWAS Ministry of Education focal points, in preparation for the third Confer- ence of ECOWAS Education Ministers, which took place in Abuja, Nigeria, on March 20, 2009. The Conference of Ministers recommended that member states should foster the establishment of a regional HIV/AIDS program and reinforce support for the ECOWAS HIV/AIDS network. Contacts: Mbaye Amiecoleh, Mbayeamie@yahoo.co.uk Camara Balla, Camarama52@yahoo.fr Z. U. Momodu, Zumsmomodu@yahoo.com Malick Sembene, msembene@refer.sn Network of Ministry of Education HIV/AIDS Focal Points for Central Africa The Network of the Central African Ministry of Education HIV/AIDS Focal Points was established and launched in October 2006. The countries that make up the network include Cameroon, CAR, Chad, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, the Republic of Congo, and São Tomé and Príncipe. The political umbrella for the network is the ECCAS. Since October 2006, the network has developed an action plan to address the following: · Promotion of good practices · Technical guidance and progress updates to their respective Ministers of Education · Monitoring of progress · Development of Focal Points' capacity In 2008, all the Ministers of Education signed a written agreement to integrate HIV/AIDS in all the curricula. However, nearly all the countries in the network have integrated HIV/AIDS in the curricula at the early child development, primary, and secondary levels as well as teacher training schools/colleges. Contacts: Désiré Aroga, desir_aroga@yahoo.fr Christine K. NepaNepa, Nepanepakabala@yahoo.fr Network of Ministry of Education HIV/AIDS Focal Points for Eastern Africa Out of the 25.5 million persons living with HIV/AIDS in Sub-Saharan Africa, 17 million are in Eastern and Southern Africa. Recognizing the need to accelerate the education sector response to HIV/AIDS in the region, through stronger and better quality actions at the national level, Ministries of Education in Eastern and Sharing Information on HIV/AIDS with Specific Relevance to the Education Sector | 33 Southern Africa have formed Network of Ministry of Education HIV/AIDS Focal Points for Eastern Africa. The network operates within subregional economic frameworks such as the East African Community (EAC) and the Southern African Development Commu- nity (SADC). The network has grown in coverage and scope and has recently added to its constitution a regional "think tank" on mainstreaming and a Resource Support Team on policy development. Since December 2005 the network has developed an action plan to achieve the following: · Enhanced management systems for promoting and disseminating reliable, accurate, and timely information · An enabling environment for HIV/AIDS strategic planning, policy develop- ment, and institutional support · Enhanced capacities of the national and subregional coordinators · A broad-based and functional partnership · Accessible, informative, and functional M&E of national and subregional systems The countries that make up the network include Burundi, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi, Madagascar, Mozambique, Rwanda, Uganda, Tanzania, and Zambia. In 2008, the Focal Points took part in a situational analysis study, the results of which will be presented during the second quarter of 2009 to a technical commit- tee convened by the EAC Secretariat. Contacts: Aloysius Chebet, chebet@eachq.org Aggrey David Kibenge, Akibenge@education.go.ug, Kibenge@hotmail.com Roy Hauya, rhauya@edmu.malawi.net Oscar Mponda, Oscarmponda@yahoo.co.uk Network of Ministry of Education HIV/AIDS Focal Points for Lusophone Africa The political umbrella of the network is the Community of Portuguese Speaking Countries Organization (CPLP). The network was created in 2003 and is made up of the Ministry of Education Focal Points from Angola, Cape Verde, Guinea- Bissau, Mozambique, and São Tomé and Príncipe. The composition of this network is based on language rather than geographi- cal location, as is the case with the Western, Eastern, and Central African networks. These countries are members of Países Africanos de Língua Oficial Portuguesa, the Portuguese-speaking African Countries (PALOPS) and also belong to other (Continued) 34 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV networks based on their geographical locations. For example, Cape Verde and Guinea-Bissau also belong to the ECOWAS and Mauritania Network, while Angola and Mozambique belong to the Eastern Africa Network, and São Tomé and Prínc- ipe to the Central Africa Network. A meeting of the CPLP Education Advisory Committee was held in Praia, Cape Verde, in March 2006. The committee agreed to bring together the Ministry of Education HIV/AIDS Focal Points of these Lusophone countries to prepare an Action Plan to accelerate the education sector response to the HIV/AIDS pan- demic. The CPLP had planned to organize a similar two-day meeting of the HIV/ AIDS Focal Points of the Lusophone countries to further develop the Action Plan in Lisbon in 2008. Unfortunately, the meeting did not take place and progress had been slow, partly because of institutional changes within the CPLP organization. Activities and Achievements of the Networks The networks are active entities. Formal intranetwork meetings occur biannually, and the Central, West, and Eastern Africa networks meet annually. Between meet- ings the Focal Points use various communication forms, including sharing informa- tion through the network pages hosted on the "school health and nutrition" Web site www.schoolsandhealth.org, mailing list postings, and study tours to neighbor- ing countries. These consultations and activities take place within each subregional network and between the networks, and have been identified by participating countries as being an extremely valuable way of sharing good practices in the field. In 2005, The Gambia, Liberia, and Sierra Leone met to examine the feasibility and useful- ness of harmonizing aspects of their HIV/AIDS curriculum. Template documents, including student readers, teachers' guides, peer education, and teacher trainer handbooks were produced by country team experts. Some documents are now being used to train teachers (supported by UNESCO's EFA Capacity Building Pro- gram). In February 2006, the Zambian Focal Point traveled to Tanzania to share experiences on the provision of voluntary counseling and testing (VCT) to teach- ers. In October 2006, the Kenya, Nigeria, and Uganda Focal Points traveled to Ethiopia to share experiences on lessons learned during their policy development process. The Kenyan and Tanzanian Ministries of Education have recently visited Malawi to share experiences. In October 2007, the Nigeria, Ghana, and Sierra Leone Focal Points traveled to Liberia to assist the Liberia Focal Point in the organization of his national HIV/AIDS and Education national workshop. CHAPTER 5 Strengthening the Technical Content and Implementation of the Education Sector Response to HIV/AIDS The most readily attributable outcomes of the Accelerate Initiative activ- ities are the changes noted between the situation analyses presented by participating countries during the beginning of the workshop planning process, and the sector plans produced during and directly after the workshops by the participating countries. The value of the workshops in contributing to strengthened sector plans was specifically acknowledged by some countries (for example, Ethiopia) in their submissions to the EFA-FTI (Clarke and Bundy 2004). Implementation of the sector plans is, of course, entirely attributable to the actions of the countries themselves. Information gathered during a 2007 survey carried out by Focal Points within the West, Eastern, and Cen- tral Africa networks has been used to inform the current situation within each region. The results of the 2007 survey provide an opportunity to com- pare how the situation has changed at the regional level, but also provide specific examples of how countries have taken their sector plans forward since their participation in the Accelerate activities. The countries included in the 2007 survey are Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte d'Ivoire, Republic of Guinea, Mali, Mauritania, Nigeria, Niger, Togo, Senegal, The Gambia, Ghana, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Cape Verde, Guinea Bissau, Central African Republic, Gabon, Cameroon, Democratic Republic of 35 36 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV BOX 12: COUNTRIES EMERGING FROM CONFLICT AND FRAGILE STATES The Accelerate Initiative is now active in several fragile states emerging from con- flict, including Eritrea, Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone. Although significant progress has been made in some of these countries, activities in Guinea have not progressed as planned because of country legislation. Sierra Leone is a country emerging from war. Notwithstanding this fact, the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology (MoEST) recognized HIV/AIDS as a problem and acknowledged the dangers that HIV/AIDS poses for the educa- tion sector. In an effort to protect its teachers and pupils, Sierra Leone elaborated and launched an "Education Sector HIV/AIDS Policy" and has developed its implementation guidelines. In the area of prevention, the Ministry has integrated HIV/AIDS, along with life skills education, into the curricula at the primary and secondary levels and in teacher training schools. Teachers' guides for implemen- tation of the curricula have also been produced. See www.schoolsandhealth.org for further details. BOX 13: TAKING ACTIVITIES TO SCALE: TEACHER TRAINING IN GHANA The Ministry of Education in Ghana, recognizing the need for the education sec- tor to respond to the HIV epidemic (both internally and externally) initiated a nationwide teacher training scheme. The project, called "Teachers--Agents of Dissemination and Change" (TAD) is aimed at informing and equipping teachers with life skills. The program was implemented in three phases to ensure national level cover- age. In total, more than 150,000 teachers (84 percent) were trained at primary and secondary levels. Training was conducted through existing government structures and staff, leading to sustainability of the program. The internal aspect and participatory approach of the program has led to the empowerment of teachers and other stakeholders, including Parent Teacher Associations (PTAs). However, attrition of teachers continues to be a problem for sustainability of the program. Regular monitoring and evaluation of the program (including a baseline from which to monitor progress) has ensured that positive outcomes can be acknowl- edged and problems can be addressed. Monitoring and evaluation is not as regu- lar as the Ministry had planned because of logistical limitations. See www.schoolsandhealth.org for further details. Strengthening the Technical Content and Implementation of the Education Sector | 37 the Congo, Equatorial Guinea, São Tomé & Príncipe, Chad, Burundi, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Uganda, Madagascar, Mozambique, Rwanda, Tanzania, Zanzibar, Kenya, Zambia, and Malawi. Sector Policy (Including Workplace Policy) Since the start of the Accelerate Initiative in 2002, most countries involved have made progress in policy and strategic plan development. This includes both national and education sector policies and strategic plans (see boxes 14 and 15 for examples of how education sector policies can encompass a broad range of HIV-related issues). More specifically, 79 percent of coun- tries surveyed in 2007 have an education sector- specific HIV/AIDS strat- egy, of which 83 percent and 80 percent of countries in the Eastern Africa and West Africa networks, respectively, have an education sector HIV/ AIDS strategy. A marginally smaller 71 percent of countries in the Central Africa Network have an HIV/AIDS strategy in place. On average, 65 percent of the countries surveyed have a national SHN policy. However, among the countries of the Central Africa Network (with the lowest participation in the Accelerate Initiative) only 43 percent have a national SHN policy. BOX 14: THE SENEGALESE EXPERIENCE: SCHOOL HEALTH, NUTRITION, AND HIV/AIDS PROGRAMMING In Senegal the Ministry of Education has successfully developed a national-level SHNP based on the framework, "Focusing Resources on Effective School Health" (FRESH), which includes HIV/AIDS prevention education as a key component and involves all levels of the formal and nonformal education sector. To ensure maxi- mum collaboration with all relevant stakeholders and ministries (including, for example, the Ministry of Youth and the Ministry of Environment and Public Sanita- tion), a clear decentralized organizational structure is being implemented. More significantly, the program is rooted in a national-level SHNP policy. An HIV/AIDS Strategic Plan (2002­06 and 2007­09) was developed in harmony with this SHNP policy, and provides clear guidance on actions for all the departments involved on the delivery of HIV/AIDS and reproductive health education through schools. See the Web site www.schoolsandhealth.org for details. 38 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV BOX 15: PROVIDING TEACHERS WITH ACCESS TO FREE VCT AND ART: A SUCCESS STORY FROM ZAMBIA The education sector offers a ready-made infrastructure for the delivery of HIV prevention efforts to large numbers of the uninfected population-- schoolchildren--as well as young people who, in many countries, are the age group most at risk. This infrastructure also extends to teachers and staff who, in many countries, represent more than 60 percent of the public sector work- force. The education sector is ideally placed to provide access to care, treat- ment, and support for those infected and affected by HIV/AIDS. The Zambian MoE VCT Program for Teachers In Zambia, where AIDS has severely affected the ranks of schoolteachers (esti- mates in 2006 were that the country was losing approximately 800 teachers each year due to AIDS-related illness), the Ministry of Education has made access to antiretroviral treatment (ART) a priority for school staff, working through teachers' unions to help reduce the fear that teachers experience when revealing their HIV- positive status. In 2001 the Ministry of Education developed a five-year strategic plan intended to mitigate the impact of HIV/AIDS on the education sector, which was later har- monized with the broader Ministry Strategic Plan. In 2005 a nationwide campaign called "Mobilization and Sensitization on Vol- untary Counseling and Testing (VCT)" was launched to promote VCT uptake, par- ticularly among teachers. The Ministry of Education engaged two partners in the campaign who used mobile units to move from school to school, thereby provid- ing access to VCT for teachers. In parallel, the Ministry launched teacher health days called "A Healthy Teacher for Quality Education," with the intention of pro- moting VCT uptake through provision of general health services to teachers. Key to the success of the program was the engagement of teachers' unions. The unions received a budget from the Ministry to conduct their mobilization and sensitization campaigns, and some union leaders were trained as peer educators and counselors. Although there are NAC funds available to the Ministry of Educa- tion, the issue of sustainability continues to be of concern. To date, 40,000 teachers have been sensitized and some 23,000 have accessed VCT services. Since the program began, the number of teachers receiving free ART through government hospitals has risen from 40 to around 3,000. See the Web site www.schoolsandhealth.org for details. Over the last two decades, countries and agencies have renewed their efforts to develop more effective and comprehensive SHN programs to address the broader health and nutrition issues that affect school-age chil- dren. A growing body of evidence has clearly demonstrated the impact of SHN programs on achievement of EFA and the MDGs (Bundy et al. 2006). Strengthening the Technical Content and Implementation of the Education Sector | 39 HIV prevention education is a "perfect fit" for integration into SHN programs. A national or education sector-specific SHN policy can provide a method of safe positioning on the sometimes controversial issues associ- ated with HIV prevention education. Figure 8 shows the progress made by countries in implementing activi- ties over time compared to the number of subregional and national activi- ties. (The details of which countries have implemented which actions are given in tabular form at www.schoolsandhealth.org.) As the internal role of the education sector in mitigating the impact of HIV/AIDS on its staff becomes ever more recognized in the countries participating in the Accelerate Initiative, advances have been made in workplace-related issues. Lack of national-level workplace policies is still Figure 8 Progress in Implementing Policy Activities before and after the Accelerate Initiative 40 35 30 Number of countries 25 20 15 10 5 0 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 Year Education sector sector policies Education sector strategic plan Subregional level activities National-level activities Source: Figure based on information presented by participants at subregional and national-level workshops within the Accelerate Initiative, 2002­07, as well as data collated during the 2007 Ministry of Education Focal Point Survey (see www.schoolsandhealth.org). 40 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV an issue, with only an average of 47 percent of countries surveyed saying they have such a policy in place. Even in these countries, it is not yet clear if the policy includes HIV/AIDS-related issues. In 31 of the countries surveyed, teachers are also taught to protect themselves from HIV infection--more commonly during in-service train- ing (30 countries) rather than pre-service (20 countries). In 62 percent of countries surveyed, teachers have access to HIV/AIDS-related counseling services, although coverage and effectiveness of these services are not yet clear. Similarly, it is not known where workplace policies exist, if the poli- cies encompass HIV/AIDS-related counseling services. Interestingly, the highest proportion of countries providing HIV/AIDS-related services was found within the Eastern Africa Network (83 percent), where only Zambia provided free ART to their HIV-positive teachers (see box 15). Specific examples of countries implementing sector plans developed during workshops follow: · In Ethiopia, the need for an education sector-specific policy was identified in the 2004 workshop. A mapping exercise was carried out as a first step (2005), the results of which fed into subsequent discussions in 2005­06 to develop an education sector strategic plan and policy. · In Nigeria, the draft education sector policy was finalized during the series of state-level workshops in 2004/2005, so that input could be secured from all states of the Federation. Planning and Mitigation Of the 34 countries surveyed, 32 have established HIV/AIDS Focal Points (although, particularly in West and Central Africa, not all are full-time), or have established HIV/AIDS units in the Ministry of Education, or both. In 25 of the countries involved in the survey, an interdepartmental committee exists in the Ministry of Education for SHN or HIV/AIDS (mostly in the Eastern and Central Africa networks). Thirteen countries collect data on health-related teacher attrition and absenteeism at various levels (that is, national, provincial, district, school, and so on). In terms of demand on education, only 12 countries collect Strengthening the Technical Content and Implementation of the Education Sector | 41 data on numbers of orphans and vulnerable children at various levels. Fourteen countries in the networks have now undertaken an impact assessment of HIV on the supply and demand of education and the attain- ment of EFA. Box 16 describes the indicators significant to accelerating the response to HIV/AIDS, as well as some countries' efforts to conduct impact assessments and implement M&E strategies. (The details of which countries have implemented which actions are given in tabular form at www.schoolsandhealth.org.) BOX 16: AGREEING ON INDICATORS AND EFFECTIVE M&E STRATEGIES None of the countries participating in the Accelerate Initiative initially had an M&E framework or process in place. Following participation in workshops, all countries now have plans to develop such a framework and have identified the following indicators as being significant in accelerating their responses to HIV/AIDS: · Teacher mortality rates · Numbers of children receiving HIV prevention education · Numbers of orphans and vulnerable children In addition, the five current members of the EAC (of which the Eastern Africa Network is an activity) have requested technical support for the development of their indicators for HIV/AIDS and the education sector, and are in discussions to harmonize them. See www.schoolsandhealth.org for further details. Although impact assessment was not part of the initial vision of the Accelerate Initiative in 2002, some countries involved in the Initiative did conduct impact assessment of national or subnational programs. An Example of an M&E and Impact Assessment from Eritrea The government of Eritrea is implementing a sectorwide national program, which includes early childhood development at primary and secondary school levels. The government has moved forward on integrating and decentralizing age- appropriate HIV/AIDS education sector responses. The education sector has taken leadership in cascading the program through the zobas (district) down to the community and school levels. (Continued) 42 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV BOX 16: (Continued) After the national level Ed-SIDA training carried out in Eritrea in early 2006, the Ministry of Education has made great strides in M&E. At the district, school or community levels, the government has made progress on effectively moni- toring and evaluating strategies through its Education Management Informa- tion System (EMIS). Education and health workers work collaboratively to monitor children's health and nutrition status, identifying cases for referral and collecting data on HIV/AIDS responses, coverage, and scope for further planning of programs. In 2007, the Ministry of Education conducted a five-year evaluation of the impact of the SHN program on the health, knowledge, and reported behavior of schoolchildren. An Example of Impact Assessment from Kenya The MoEST and the International Child Support (ICS) collaborated on the imple- mentation of four approaches aimed at reducing risky behavior among adoles- cents in Kenya's Western Province between 2003 and 2005. Schools were selected at random and offered participation in different approaches, creating a unique opportunity to rigorously evaluate the impact of each approach used. The 2005 evaluation of the program used teenage childbearing rates as the primary measure of impact. Other key outcomes included knowledge, attitudes, and self-reported behavior. Three of the interventions employed (for example, debates and essays for improved engagement of young people with HIV/AIDS issues, sugar daddy talk for improved understanding of the dangers of cross- generational sex, and reducing the cost of education through the provision of uniforms) showed clear impacts on the outcomes selected. For example, increased student knowledge; increased likelihood of boys reporting having used a condom; reduced teenage pregnancy through reduced numbers of girls involved in unprotected sexual relations with older partners; increased likeli- hood that girls who had started childbearing were married to the fathers of their children; and increased school retention rates. As a result of this, the long-term sustainability of the delivery of the interventions and the likelihood of these interventions being expanded at scale across Kenya has been significantly increased. See www.schoolsandhealth.org for further details. An important resource on the use of EMIS and the incorporation of AIDS indi- cators is the toolkit "Educational planning and management in a world with AIDS" jointly developed by UNESCO/IIEP and USAID/MTT. See www.unesco.org/iiep/eng/focus/hiv/hiv_4.htm for further details. Strengthening the Technical Content and Implementation of the Education Sector | 43 BOX 17: THE MINISTRY OF EDUCATION HIV/AIDS FOCAL POINT SURVEY: A TOOL FOR MONITORING PROCESS In preparation for the November 2007 meeting of the networks of Ministry of Education HIV/AIDS Focal Points in Nairobi, a questionnaire about school health and nutrition that included HIV/AIDS was developed in consultation with Focal Points and completed by the Focal Points of 34 countries involved in the Acceler- ate Initiative. The purpose of the survey was to present a regional overview of the current SHN and HIV/AIDS response and a comparative review of the current situation in the individual countries comprising the networks. The survey would do the following: · Allow participating countries to compare their response against objectives set forth in the Accelerate Initiative, the Checklist of Good Practice, and use of the FRESH framework · Identify priority areas in SHN, including HIV/AIDS, in each country, enabling government officials to concentrate resources and programming in these areas · Aid in future planning, both within each country and collectively across the region The questionnaire developed from the survey provides a useful tool that coun- tries can use to monitor their progress against key indicators. Moreover, the results of the survey provide a baseline from which countries and networks can measure their progress in coming years. See appendix E for a copy of the survey and www.schoolsandhealth.org for further details. Prevention (Including Teacher Training and Life Skills) Activities in prevention, including life skills, whether formal or nonformal, curriculum-based education or peer education, vary considerably from country to country (see box 11 for some examples of variations in formal and nonformal education). Since 2002, all countries involved in the Accelerate Initiative have made some progress in prevention--whether in terms of curriculum reform, the introduction of life skills, strengthened teacher training, or peer education. Box 19 gives an example of a prevention program targeting both teachers and pupils in Senegal. Figure 9 shows the progress made by countries in 44 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV BOX 18: DEVELOPING HIV/AIDS PREVENTION CURRICULA IN CENTRAL AFRICA In 2005 the Economic and Monetary Community of Central Africa (CEMAC) Council of Ministers adopted a subregional program to support the education sector in its efforts to prevent HIV and mitigate the impact of HIV/AIDS. A subre- gional project for Preventive HIV/AIDS Education in the member states of CEMAC and the Democratic Republic of Congo was initiated in 2006, with the aim of delivering knowledge and fostering improved behaviors using a life skills approach through the education sector. Since 2006, with the support of development partners, the countries of Central Africa have done the following: · Analyzed the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and challenges of their existing curricula · Identified the key themes within their curricula · Adopted a time quota per school year for the delivery of HIV prevention education · Integrated HIV/AIDS transversally into their curricula (integration into several subjects--five to six subjects, depending on the identified sociocultural con- texts of each country) Under the auspices of an interministerial decree, Cameroon completed the integration of HIV/AIDS into the curriculum in January 2007. In May 2007, the Central African Republic developed programs and peda- gogic support strategies for the delivery of HIV/AIDS education at the primary level and in teacher training. In the Republic of Congo and Chad, HIV/AIDS teaching materials using the life skills approach were developed and harmonized with the curriculum in Septem- ber 2007. In September and October 2007, Gabon and Equatorial Guinea prepared guides for the integration of HIV/AIDS into the school syllabus at the primary and secondary levels, as well as in basic teacher training. The process of integrating HIV/AIDS into the curricula is in progress in the Democratic Republic of Congo. In addition to the curricular activities, all the Member States of CEMAC and the Democratic Republic of Congo have introduced some key HIV/AIDS modules into peer education to facilitate a synergy between school-based and extracur- ricular activities of young people. The countries of Central Africa are also committed to enabling teachers to effectively deliver HIV/AIDS education by developing culturally relevant teaching guides and information kits for teachers, as well as manuals for students. Strengthening the Technical Content and Implementation of the Education Sector | 45 BOX 19: DIRECT SUPPORT TO SCHOOLS (DSS) IN MOZAMBIQUE Mozambique made significant progress in developing a national education and HIV/AIDS policy, with an accompanying communication strategy in 2003­04. Focal Points were put in place across the central Ministry and at the provincial level. Key prevention programs were developed with bilateral project support and a "sectorwide approach to health" working group on HIV/AIDS was established. Development of a workplace policy was initiated. HIV/AIDS has been integrated into the education sector plan and into key sector indicators. The education sector plan includes an indicative allocation of the budget (that is, state budget and pooled donor funds). Important innovations were piloted in school health and in support to orphans and vulnerable children, within the national Direct Support to Schools (DSS) pro- gram that channels a small finance grant to every single primary school in Mozam- bique. Financed by an International Development Association (IDA) credit for education and fully administered by the Ministry of Education and Culture, DSS already reaches 10,000 schools serving about 3.5 million children. The annual cost of the national DSS program is around US$6 million and around US$1.5 million is earmarked for the school health program. The funds released in June 2004 were used to provide a school health manual, addressed to teachers, with information, guidance, and specific activities to discuss HIV/AIDS prevention. implementing prevention and teacher training activities over time, com- pared to the number of subregional and national activities. (The details of which countries have implemented which actions are given in tabular form at www.schoolsandhealth.org.) Twenty countries now have a national health education curriculum. Other countries teach health education that is not included in a national curriculum (notably nutrition education, hygiene education, and malaria prevention). Most countries surveyed (88 percent) have a peer education program within the education sector (56 percent at primary level and 68 percent at secondary level). In terms of HIV-related education, all countries surveyed now deliver some form of HIV prevention education. Thirty countries offer HIV prevention education in primary schools and 31 countries offer it in sec- ondary schools. Seventeen countries also offer nonformal HIV prevention education. In 32 of the countries in the survey, HIV is taught within a wider subject. In 68 percent of the countries, HIV is taught by using a life skills approach. 46 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV Figure 9 Progress in Implementing Prevention Activities before and after the Accelerate Initiative 40 35 30 Number of countries 25 20 15 10 5 0 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 Year HIV prevention initiated in schools Teacher training initiated Subregional level activities National-level activities Source: Figure based on information presented by participants at subregional and national-level workshops within the Accelerate Initiative, 2002­07, as well as data collated during the 2007 Ministry of Education Focal Point Survey (see www.schoolsandhealth.org). Twenty-five countries surveyed provide teachers with specific training in life skills- based education. In 19 countries this is delivered in preserv- ice training and in 24 countries delivered during in-service training. In 26 countries, teachers are provided with materials for delivering some form of life skills-based education in schools. Ensuring Access to Education for Orphans and Vulnerable Children Ensuring access to education for orphans and vulnerable children is one of the areas to which the education sector has paid the least attention. Efforts have tended to be nonformal and usually have had very little input from Strengthening the Technical Content and Implementation of the Education Sector | 47 BOX 20: THE GROUP FOR THE STUDY AND TEACHING OF POPULATION ISSUES (GEEP): AN EXPERIMENT TO PREVENT THE SPREAD OF HIV/AIDS AMONG SCHOOLCHILDREN "Accelerate" means both to quicken something that is already in motion and to hasten into motion something that is initially stationary. The Accelerate Initiative helped give impetus to existing organizations, such as the Group for the Study and Teaching of Population Issues (GEEP) a multidisciplinary, not-for-profit NGO created in May 1989 in Dakar (Senegal). In November 1994, GEEP launched the "Promotion of Family Life Education" (FLE) program in middle and secondary schools in Senegal. The program targets teachers and 12- to 19-year old pupils, and aims to promote responsible sexual behavior through training activities, peer education, social mobilization and the provision of support materials and equip- ment (for example, audiovisual and information technology). There are now more than 200 FLE clubs established in Senegal. See www.geep.org for further details. the formal education sector. This is largely due to orphans and vulnerable children usually being the responsibility of line ministries other than edu- cation ministries. However, after the workshops, awareness has been cre- ated within the education sector about its role in ensuring that all children, including orphans and vulnerable children, particularly girls, have access to education. Many in the education sector are now acting on strengthened plans to collaborate with other ministries to ensure access to education for orphans and vulnerable children. In recognition of the general move toward focusing on the most vulnerable children, particularly girls and out-of-school children, the Accelerate Initiative has also adopted this phraseology where relevant to the country context. (The details of which countries have implemented which actions are given in tabular form at www.schoolsandhealth.org.) In most countries in the Eastern Africa Network (83 percent), and the West Africa Network (67 percent), orphans and vulnerable children do not have to pay school fees. It is unclear whether the hidden costs of education (for example, school uniforms and textbooks) remain as barriers to access- ing education. In countries of the Central Africa Network, only three coun- tries provide free access to education for orphans and vulnerable children. The Ministries of Education in only 12 countries in total were found to have kept data on orphans and vulnerable children. 48 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV BOX 21: KEY FINDINGS OF THE 2007 FOCAL POINT SURVEY In 2007 a survey was carried out by Focal Points within the West, Eastern, and Central Africa networks to inform the current situation within each region. The results of this survey provide an opportunity to compare how the situation has changed at the regional level, and also provides specific examples of how countries have taken their plans forward since their participation in Accelerate activities. The key findings of the survey are as follows: · Percentage of countries with a national HIV/AIDS strategy 100 · Percentage of countries with an education sector HIV/AIDS strategy 79 · Percentage of countries with an education sector HIV/AIDS strategy and an HIV/AIDS plan 76 · Percentage of countries offering HIV/AIDS counseling to teachers 62 · Percentage of countries training teachers to protect themselves 91 · Percentage of countries having an HIV/AIDS Focal Point within the Ministry of Education 94 · Percentage of countries having an interdepartmental committee within the Ministry of Education 74 · Percentage of countries having a health education curriculum 59 · Percentage of countries providing HIV prevention education in some form 100 · Percentage of countries initiating HIV prevention activities before puberty 82 · Percentage of countries training teachers in a life skills approach 74 · Percentage of countries where orphans and vulnerable children do not have to pay school fees 71 The countries included in the survey are Benin, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Côte d'Ivoire, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gabon, Ghana, Guinea-Bissau, Kenya, Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, Mozambique, Niger, Nigeria, the Republic of Congo, Republic of Guinea, Rwanda, São Tomé & Príncipe, Senegal, Sierra Leone, The Gambia, Togo, Uganda, Tanzania (mainland and Zanzibar) and Zambia. See www.schoolsandhealth.org for further details. CHAPTER 6 Conclusions and the Way Forward This review was undertaken by the Ministry of Education Focal Points for school health and HIV/AIDS from countries in Sub-Saharan Africa partici- pating in the Accelerate Initiative, together with representatives of all stakeholders and partners. The results from this review suggest that the education sectors of a majority of countries in Sub-Saharan Africa have accelerated their responses to HIV/AIDS and are showing leadership in the national multisectoral response. In particular, the formalization of the networks of HIV/AIDS Education Focal Points has demonstrated how countries have taken owner- ship of this Initiative and gone on to conduct activities at regional and national levels under the auspices of the African Union Regional Economic Communities. The landscape has changed over the last five years. Most countries have developed or have begun to develop education sector responses. The issue has shifted from a focus on advocacy at the regional and subregional levels to an emphasis on effective implementation at the country level, where Ministries of Education across Africa are now playing an increasingly active role in the national multisectoral response to HIV/AIDS. In carrying out this review, HIV/AIDS technical experts representing more than 30 countries gathered during the network meeting in Nairobi 49 50 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV in 2007. As part of their review process they have since developed a number of positive conclusions, as well as identified some challenges that need addressing to move forward into the next phase of the Initiative. Education Sector Responses Have Accelerated Most definitions of "accelerate" suggest that it means both to quicken some- thing that is already in motion and to hasten into motion something that is initially stationary. Both situations were met within the countries partici- pating in this Initiative. In some countries, the education sector was already taking leadership in contributing to the national multisectoral response to HIV/AIDS, and often sought technical guidance to develop policy and move to implementation. Other countries, however, were less aware of their potential role in the national response. For them, learning what their neigh- bors were doing was often the critical catalyst leading to policy change and implementing a sectoral response. By this definition, and recognizing that at least 2 mechanisms were involved to date, the goal of "Acceleration" has been met by 26 of the 37 countries participating in the Initiative. Of the remaining countries, several plan to follow suit. In seeking to explore these correlations, it should be recognized that the Accelerate Initiative was one of a number of potential influences. At the time the Initiative was launched in 2002, and in the period since, sev- eral key development partners (notably EDUCAIDS, UNAIDS, UNESCO, UNICEF, USAID/Mobile Task Team, and the World Bank MAP AIDS Campaign for Africa) have addressed the issue of HIV with education sec- tors in Sub-Saharan Africa. Only part of their work in this area has been focused within the Initiative. Furthermore, the sovereign governments participating in this Initiative made their own independent decisions, on their own timetable, whether and how to develop an education response. That said, there is a persuasive case that the Initiative spurred national efforts, catalyzed some elements of the response, and contributed to accel- erating the processes of change. More Effective Links with Development Partners Are Emerging Development partners have worked effectively together throughout the Accelerate Initiative to better assist countries and reduce transaction costs. Some 76 organizations--UNAIDS cosponsors, bilateral and multilateral Conclusions and the Way Forward | 51 donors, intergovernmental organizations and civil society organizations-- have participated over the past five years, with no fewer than 5 organiza- tions and as many as 21 organizations at a single event. Some participating organizations brought specific areas of expertise, such as Education Inter- national on teachers; ILO on workplace policy; UNESCO on curriculum; UNICEF on orphans and vulnerable children; and the World Bank on financing, but the combination of multiple partners helped ensure that top- ics could be advanced comprehensively and holistically at each event. A key factor in the success of the approach taken by the Accelerate Initiative has been the consistent effort to maintain links between country-level coordi- nation processes of development partners. National AIDS authorities are increasingly fulfilling their role as sup- porters of a multisectoral response that includes education as a priority sector. Funding through the World Bank program MAP, the USA Presi- dent's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria contributes to a multisectoral national response to HIV/AIDS that includes the education sector. All 37 education teams participating in the Accelerate Initiative entered into dia- logue with their NACs on this topic, and 26 received funding from this non- traditional source. More and Better Quality Information Is Available Sector-specific information on the education response to HIV/AIDS is now widely available in technical documents, produced and distributed by many agencies and organizations, and countries have developed subregional mechanisms to sustain the sharing of information. In the Initiative, more than half a million printed copies and electronic copies of technical docu- ments in English, French, and Portuguese were distributed to educators. In line with the aims of the program, this information focused primarily on policy and content issues, although there remains a need for locality-specific documentation in local languages. Throughout the subregions of Africa, countries are using well-established subregional political entities to create mechanisms for sharing information and promoting effective responses-- namely the networks of Ministry of Education HIV/AIDS Focal Points that report to the councils of Ministries of Education established within the sub- regional communities of the African Union. 52 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV Education Sector Responses to HIV Are Now Being Implemented by a Majority of Countries The recent 2007 survey of the Ministry of Education HIV/AIDS Focal Points in 34 countries showed that all countries have a national HIV/AIDS policy and 76 percent have an education sector-specific HIV/AIDS strat- egy and plan. Thirty-two countries now have a Ministry of Education HIV/AIDS Focal Point at the national level and 23 also have Focal Points at subnational levels. Thirty countries are training teachers to protect themselves. All countries are providing some HIV prevention education at primary or secondary levels, or both. Thirty-one countries are providing this education before the initiation of puberty. Overall, the Initiative to "accelerate" has brought with it many changes in the sectoral responses of the participating countries. Not all responses improved, but for most countries the 5 objectives of the program were met. In 26 countries, the education sector response to HIV/AIDS now benefits from the following: · Stronger sectoral leadership · Harmonized support from development partners · More effective coordination with NACs · Enhanced access to information on HIV/AIDS · Strengthened technical content of the sectoral response Not All Sectoral HIV Responses Are Mainstream Activities Some countries have demonstrated that the response to HIV can become a fully incorporated part of the business of the Ministry of Education. But these are the exceptions, and for most, the HIV response is an additional or parallel activity to what is perceived as the primary role of the sector. Evi- dence suggests that although HIV prevalence is declining in some parts of Sub-Saharan Africa, the likely prospect is that HIV will remain a major issue for generations to come. Maintaining a cost-effective, long-term response to HIV implies the need to mainstream this activity within the education sector. The regional networks are seeking to identify good Conclusions and the Way Forward | 53 practice in mainstreaming and to develop toolkits to help direct implemen- tation. The IATT Toolkit for mainstreaming HIV/AIDS in the education sector, Guidelines for Development Cooperation Agencies (UNAIDS IATT on Education, 2008), provides valuable insight on how HIV can be main- streamed into the education sector response. See http://portal.unesco.org. Effective Monitoring and Evaluation Remain a Major Challenge One key area in which progress has been slow is the establishment of effec- tive M&E procedures. Only 13 countries are collecting health-related data on education supply (teacher attrition and absenteeism), and 12 on educa- tion demand (numbers of orphans and vulnerable children). Fourteen have completed an impact assessment of HIV/AIDS on the education sector. Few have adopted a results-based approach to evaluation. This in turn makes it impossible to evaluate the programs in terms of school-level results for children. Measuring impact was not part of the vision of the Accelerate Initiative when it began in 2002; the focus then was on strengthening plans and accelerating their implementation. Hence, while countries have enriched the content of their sector plans, few have carried out any impact assess- ments (see box 16, chapter 5) to establish to what extent this has resulted in enhanced benefits for children and teachers. The questionnaire developed by the Focal Points and used in the 2007 network survey has provided a key tool for monitoring process indicators. Moreover, the results of the survey provide a baseline from which countries and the networks are able to mon- itor progress in subsequent years. Further incorporation of effective M&E strategies into the next phase of the Accelerate Initiative is an important priority for the networks, since in their absence investments are likely to be made in what is thought to be effective, rather than what has been shown to be effective. In a recent move, supported by technical inputs from partners in the Accelerate working group, five countries in the HIV/AIDS Education Network in the East Afri- can Community (Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania, and Uganda) have begun to develop a common education sector M&E framework for HIV. The regional value of this approach is being explored by the other networks, 54 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV and the possibility of agreeing on a core set of regional indicators is being examined as a consensual way forward. Investment in Regional Coordination and Knowledge Sharing Shows Benefits But Can Be Difficult to Sustain An important finding in the present review is that regional workshops and regional networks have underpinned the success of countries in imple- menting programs at the national level. This largely reflects the sharing of experiences in addressing common but new challenges. These decisions and actions by the participating countries have completely changed the political economy of the education response to HIV/AIDS in Sub-Saharan Africa. The networks established within the RECs of the African Union have become not only conduits for sharing information, but also key agents for change. In a donor environment where the focus is on the country level, a key challenge in moving forward would be to develop sustainable ways of supporting these regional entities. EFA-FTI Processes Are Strengthening HIV/AIDS Responses within the Education Sector Plans FTI funding depends on review of the national education plan by develop- ment partners. This review and previous analyses have shown that HIV may be overlooked in sector plans: only 2 out of 12 sectors included HIV in their plans in 2004 and only 4 out of 8 sectors included HIV in their plans in 2006. However, the evidence suggests that, increasingly, such omission of HIV/AIDS is becoming less common. There is also evidence that countries have benefited from technical assistance being provided to support the EFA-FTI process, including assis- tance through the Accelerate Initiative (see box 16, chapter 5). There is, therefore, an increasing demand for technical assistance and guidance on how to include HIV and SHN responses within education sector plans. In response to this, the EFA-FTI Guidelines for Appraisal Document (EFA- FTI 2006) now provides specific guidance on how HIV can be included in education-sector plans. The EFA-FTI Partnership has also produced a set of guidelines for education-sector capacity building and assessment and Conclusions and the Way Forward | 55 priority setting, called Guidelines for Capacity Development in the Educa- tion Sector within the Education for All-Fast Track Initiative Framework (EFA-FTI 2008). The critical issue remaining is how to ensure education sectors are best able to access appropriate technical assistance to develop HIV and SHN components within their plans. The networks are specifically exploring how to build capacity within the region toward this. Although many Focal Points are full time, for one-third of countries this is not the case. It is note- worthy that all successful programs have had full-time Focal Points and several have had more than one Focal Point, scaling back as they have made progress. Identifying a good practice "terms of reference" for the Focal Points is a key part of the network strategy in moving forward. Countries of the Southern Cone have Yet to Engage in the Accelerate Initiative In 2002, the Initiative targeted the poorest countries in Africa (that is, those in Eastern, Central, and Western Africa) having identified these as being most in need of technical assistance. Since then, it has emerged that the middle-income countries of the region are in more need of technical assis- tance than originally predicted. These countries, focused within the South- ern Cone of Africa, are now witnessing a hyperendemic epidemic of HIV and are a major cause of concern. In these countries, there is now a clear need to provide technical assistance toward strengthening education sector plans and accelerating implementation of these plans. The Future of the Accelerate Initiative This review clearly shows the evolution of the Initiative from focusing on advocacy (with a large external component being driven by the UNAIDS IATT Accelerate Working Group) to focusing on national-level activities, particularly the development of national programs with the support of the regional networks within the Africa Union RECs. This change in focus has been assisted by development partner coordination processes at the country level (particularly in the area of EFA-FTI), providing an opportu- nity for more effective and increased technical support to education sec- tors for the development of HIV and SHN responses. 56 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV There remain, however, important challenges in those countries that have remained behind, or even been overlooked in these processes (includ- ing those countries in the Southern Cone), and there is a strong need to focus greater efforts on these countries. There are also new challenges in (1) responding systematically to the needs of regional institutions, and (2) ensuring the generation of new technical capacity, as well as strengthening that which already exists within the region, in response to the growing demand. Appendixes* *These appendixes contain information reported by participants at the Accelerate Initiative workshops and meetings. APPENDIX A Chronology of Accelerate Workshops Year Workshop Participating countries 2002 Accelerating the education sector Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Uganda, response to HIV/AIDS in Africa in the Tanzania, and Zambia (Nigeria as context of EFA. Mombasa, Kenya observer) 2003 Effective responses to the HIV/AIDS Burundi, Cameroon, Congo, Rep. of, pandemic in the education sector: and Gabon (Chad, Congo, Dem. from analysis to action. Libreville, Rep. of, Nigeria, Rwanda and São Gabon Tomé and Príncipe as observers) 2003 Accelerating the education sector Nigeria Federal Ministry of Education response to HIV/AIDS in Nigeria: Federal Government workshop. Abuja, Nigeria 2003 Accelerating the education sector Participating States: Enugu, Kaduna, response to HIV/AIDS in Nigeria: Oyo, Taraba State Government Workshop. Ondo, Nigeria 2003 High-level meeting on education Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Uganda, and HIV/AIDS in Eastern Africa: Tanzania, and Zambia Progress since Mombasa. Nairobi, Kenya 2004 Accelerating the education Mozambique (Angola, Cape Verde, sector response to HIV/AIDS in and Guinea-Bissau as observers) Mozambique. Maputo, Mozambique 2004 Accelerating the education sector Ethiopia response to HIV/AIDS in Ethiopia. Addis Ababa, Ethiopia (Continued ) 59 60 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV Year Workshop Participating countries 2004 Accelerating the education sector Participating states: Akwa Ibom, response to HIV/AIDS in Nigeria: Bayelsa, Cross River, Ebonyi, Ekiti, State Government Workshop. Ondo, the Federal Capital Territory, Kaduna, Nigeria Kano, Katsina, Nasarawa, and Ondo 2004 Accelerating the education sector Ghana, Liberia, Sierra Leone, and response to HIV/AIDS in Anglophone The Gambia (Nigeria and Senegal as West Africa. Accra, Ghana observers) 2004 Accelerating the education Zambia sector response by mainstreaming HIV/AIDS; equity and gender; special education needs; and school health and nutrition in decentralized planning in Zambia. Lusaka, Zambia 2004 Accelerating the response of the Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte d'Ivoire, Education sector to the fight against Guinea, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, HIV/AIDS in Francophone Senegal, and Togo (Madagascar as West Africa. Mbour, Sénégal, observer) 2005 Accelerating the education sector Participating states: Adamawa, response to HIV/AIDS in Nigeria: Anambra, Benue, Edo, Lagos, and State Government Workshop. Ondo, Plateau Nigeria 2005 Technical assistance to accelerate Burkina Faso the response of the education sector to the HIV/AIDS epidemic in Burkina Faso. Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso 2005 National workshop to accelerate the Sierra Leone (The Gambia, Guinea, education sector response to HIV/ and Liberia as observers) AIDS in Sierra Leone. Freetown, Sierra Leone 2005 Accelerating the education sector Participating states: Abia, Bayelsa, response to HIV/AIDS in Nigeria: Benue, Gombe, Imo, Kogi, Kwara, State Government Workshop. Ondo, Ogun, Niger, Sokoto, and Zamfara Nigeria 2005 Accelerating the education sector Participating states: Bauchi, Delata, response to HIV/AIDS in Nigeria: Enugu, Jigawa, Kogi, Ogun, Osun, State Government Workshop. Ondo, Plateau, Rivers, and Sokoto Nigeria 2005 Regional curriculum harmonization The Gambia, Liberia, and Sierra workshop for HIV/AIDS preventive Leone education. Banjul, The Gambia 2005 The Eastern African Ministries of Ethiopia, Kenya, Mozambique, Education HIV/AIDS Focal Points Uganda, Tanzania, and Zambia meeting. Abuja, Nigeria Appendix A | 61 Year Workshop Participating countries 2006 Accelerating the education sector Tanzania response to HIV/AIDS in the United Republic of Tanzania (mainland and Zanzibar). Arusha, Tanzania 2006 National workshop to accelerate the Senegal education sector response to HIV/ AIDS in Senegal. Senegal 2006 Meeting of the East African Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania Community technical working group on accelerating the HIV/AIDS response in the education sector, to consolidate the Eastern Africa Network within the EAC. Arusha, Tanzania 2006 National workshop to accelerate the The Gambia education sector response to HIV/ AIDS in The Gambia. Banjul, The Gambia 2006 Accelerating the education sector Cameroon, Central African Republic, response to HIV/AIDS: Subregional Chad, Congo, Rep. of, Congo, Dem. workshop for Central Africa. Douala, Rep. of, and Gabon Cameroon 2006 Toward a national education sector Ethiopia strategy for responding to HIV/AIDS challenges in Ethiopia. Nazareth, Ethiopia APPENDIX B Development Partners Involved in Subregional and National Workshops Held since 2002 63 64 Bilateral donors and intergovernmental Year Workshops UN agencies organizations Civil society 2002 Eastern Africa UNAIDS, UNESCO, UNICEF, CIDA, DFID, Irish Aid, ADEA, Aga Khan Foundation, (Kenya) World Bank NORAD CfBT, KTN, MTT, PCD, teacher unions, UNASO 2003 Central Africa (Gabon) ILO, UNAIDS, UNDP, UNESCO Coopération Francaise, AAU, ADEA, PCD, MTT, (inc IBE and IIEP), UNFPA, DFID, NORAD, USAID, teachers' associations, FAWE, UNICEF, WFP, World Bank CEMAC COMED 2003 Nigeria (1) ILO, UNAIDS, UNESCO, UNFPA, DFID, NORAD, USAID AHI, PCD, PLHA associations, UNICEF, WFP, World Bank teachers' associations 2003 Nigeria (2) ILO, UNESCO (inc IIEP), UNFPA, DFID, NORAD AHI, Commonwealth of Love, UNICEF, World Bank PCD 2003 East Africa Meeting (Kenya) UNAIDS, UNFPA, World Bank DFID, NORAD, USAID PCD 2004 Lusophone Africa (Mozam- ILO, UNAIDS,UNESCO (inc IBE), CIDA, DANIDA, DFID, GTZ, ActionAid International, ADPP- bique) UNFPA, UNICEF, WFP, NORAD SIDA, USAID Mozambique, Concern World- World Bank wide, MTT, PCD, Pathfinder International, SCF 2004 Ethiopia ILO, UNDP, UNESCO (inc IICBA & DFID, Embassy of: Belgium, HDA, MTT, PCD, SCF-USA IIEP), UNFPA, UNICEF, WFP, Finland, Netherlands, and World Bank Sweden, IOM*, Irish Aid NORAD, USAID 2004 Nigeria (3) ILO, UNESCO (incl. IIEP), UNFPA, DFID, NORAD AHI, PCD UNICEF, World Bank 2004 Anglophone West Africa ILO, UNAIDS, UNESCO, UNFPA, DFID, EU, GTZ, JICA, AAU, ERNWACA, Harcourt (Ghana) UNICEF, World Bank NORAD, USAID Education, PCD, Pro-link, teacher unions 2004 Zambia ILO, UNFPA, UNICEF, World Bank DFID, Embassies of Nether- FAWE, FHI, PCD, SPW, lands and Sweden, Irish Trendsetters Aid, NORAD, USAID 2004 Francophone Africa ILO, UNAIDS, PAM, UNESCO, CIDA, DFID, JICA, NORAD, ACI, CRS, EI, GEEP, MTT, PCD, (Senegal) UNICEF, WHO, World Bank USAID Population Council, teacher unions 2005 Nigeria (4) UNESCO, UNICEF, World Bank DFID, NORAD ActionAid International, AHI, British Council, PCD 2005 Burkina Faso UNAIDS, UNFPA, UNICEF, World DFID, NORAD PCD, Plan, RASJ/BF, SCF Bank 2005 Sierra Leone ILO, UNAIDS, UNDP,UNESCO, DFID, NORAD AAU, ActionAid International; UNFPA, UNICEF, WFP, World Bank CARE, CCF, Concern World- wide, FAWE, PCD, Plan, PPASL, SWP, World Vision 2005 Nigeria (5) UNESCO, World Bank DFID, NORAD ActionAid International, AHI, PCD 2005 Nigeria (6) UNESCO, World Bank DFID, NORAD ActionAid International, AHI, PCD, British Council 2005 Curriculum Workshop for UNESCO (incl. IBE), UNICEF, DFID, NORAD PCD, Classiques Africains The Gambia, Liberia, and World Bank Sierra Leone (The Gambia) 2005 Eastern Africa Network UNESCO, World Bank DFID, NORAD PCD Launch (ICASA) 2006 United Republic of Tanzania ILO, UNAIDS, UNESCO, UNICEF, CIDA, DFID, GTZ, NORAD, PCD, SPW, teachers' unions WHO, World Bank SIDA (Continued ) 65 66 Bilateral donors and intergovernmental Year Workshops UN agencies organizations Civil society 2006 Senegal UNESCO, UNICEF, WHO, ADB CNLS, ERNWACA, FENAPES, World Bank teachers' unions, line Ministries, malaria program, women's associations 2006 EAC (United Republic of UNESCO, UNICEF, World Bank DFID, NORAD PCD Tanzania) 2006 The Gambia UNAIDS, UNDP, UNESCO, UNFPA, DFID, NORAD ActionAid International, PCD UNICEF, WFP, WHO, World Bank 2006 Central Africa (Cameroon) UNAIDS, UNESCO (incl. IBE), DFID, GTZ, NORAD, PCD UNICEF, WHO, World Bank ECCAS 2006 Ethiopia UNDP, UNESCO, World Bank DFID, Irish Aid, NORAD, AHI, PCD USAID Note: Organizations in bold = key organizations that supported the Accelerate Initiative activities. APPENDIX C Top 20 Distributed Documents to Date Rank Title Total 1 Focusing Resources on Effective School Health: A FRESH approach to achieving EFA. 2001. 12,4070 2 Education and HIV/AIDS: A window of hope--Executive Summary. The World Bank, 2002. 4,879 3 Education and HIV/AIDS: Modeling the impact of HIV/AIDS on edu- cation systems: A training manual. The World Bank, and UNAIDS, 2002. 4,565 4 Focusing Resources on Effective School Health: A FRESH start to enhancing HIV/AIDS prevention. Gillespie et al., 2002. 4,369 5 Focusing Resources on Effective School Health: A FRESH start to enhancing the quality and equity of education. The FRESH Partnership, 2000. 4,351 6 Education and HIV/AIDS: A Sourcebook of HIV/AIDS prevention programs. 4,194 7 Education and HIV/AIDS: Ensuring education access for orphans and vulnerable children: A training module. The World Bank, and UNICEF, 2002. 4,041 8 HIV/AIDS and education: A strategic approach. UNAIDS Inter-Agency Task Team (IATT) on Education, 2002 3,947 9 An ILO Code of Practice on HIV/AIDS and the world of work. ILO, 2001. 3,941 10 School health at a glance. World Bank, 2000. 3,864 11 Implementing the ILO Code of Practice on HIV/AIDS and the world of work: an education and training manual. ILO, 2002. 3,370 12 UNAIDS benchmarks, for effective HIV/AIDS prevention programs in schools. 3,220 13 Deworming at a glance. World Bank, 2000. 3,040 (Continued ) 67 68 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV Rank Title Total 14 UNESCO advocacy poster. 2,970 15 Clearinghouse brochure. IIEP/UNESCO. 2,815 16 HIV/AIDS and youth at a glance. World Bank, 2000. 2,800 17 Learning to survive: How Education for All would save millions of young people from HIV/AIDS. Global Campaign for Education, 2004. 2,720 18 Country impact projection profiles. PCD (various). 2,682 19 Nutrition at a glance. World Bank, 2001. 2,295 20 Children on the brink. UNICEF, 2002. 2,170 (see for information on other publications) APPENDIX D Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV/AIDS in Africa: A Checklist of Good Practice This checklist is based on experiences with education sector teams from 37 countries in Africa from November 2002 to June 2006. It reflects dia- logue during workshops and country missions that formed part of the mul- tiagency effort to "Accelerate the education sector response to HIV/AIDS in Africa," led by a working group of the UNAIDS Inter-Agency Task Team (IATT) on Education. The checklist is not intended as a guide to a minimum or ideal package, but rather to provide an Aide Memoire of the four issues that have consis- tently emerged as central to an effective education sector response and that might be considered in preparing an effective education sector response to HIV/AIDS. Each country response will be different, and the relevance of the items listed here will vary depending on local needs and circumstances. The checklist addresses four issues that have consistently emerged as central to an effective education sector response: · Education sector policy for HIV/AIDS · Education sector management and planning to mitigate the impact of HIV/AIDS 69 70 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV · Prevention of HIV/AIDS by education systems · Ensuring access to and completion of education for orphans and vulner- able children The checklist is a work in progress and was developed by a team from the World Bank (Don Bundy, Seung-hee Francis Lee, Alexandria Valerio, Stella Manda, and Andy Tembon); UNICEF (Amaya Gillespie, and Marcel Ouatara); UNESCO (Bachir Sarr and Christine Panchaud); DFID (David Clarke), and the Partnership for Child Development (Lesley Drake, Anthi Patrikios, and Matthew Jukes). Appendix D | 71 Sector Policy Checklist Check item Comments National HIV/AIDS strategy Demonstrates the government's · Adopted by the government commitment to responding to HIV/AIDS. The inclusion of the education sector · Includes education in a multisectoral shows the recognition of the role of the approach sector in the response. National education sector HIV/AIDS Shows how the sector plans contribute strategy to the response to HIV/AIDS nationally. · Sectorwide (addresses all subsectors) Costing its plan of action and inclusion in the education plan (and EFA) indicates · Adopted by the Ministry of Education how this strategy will be implemented. · Incorporated in the national sector plan Gender is a crucial element of the · Budgeted plans of action strategy, because girls are more vulnerable to infection and are more · Addresses gender specifically likely to be excluded from education. Education sector policy for HIV/AIDS Addresses sector-specific HIV/AIDS · Sectorwide (addresses all subsectors) issues. Establishing policy is the essential first step in an effective sectoral · Adopted by the Ministry of Education response. The policy will only be effective · Shared with all stakeholders and if it is owned by the relevant stakeholders, disseminated especially the teachers' unions, and if it is · Addresses gender, curriculum content, widely known and understood. Address- planning issues, and education needs ing curriculum at this stage can facilitate of orphans and vulnerable children dialogue and agreement with the com- munity on sensitive issues that can oth- · Includes workplace policy erwise slow progress in implementation. HIV/AIDS present major new issues in the workplace (that is, the school, the office). Workplace policy Recruitment, career progression are · Addresses stigma and discrimination in constrained by stigma and discrimination; recruitment and career advancement sick leave policies rarely cope with long- term disease, and encourage undisclosed · Addresses sick leave and absenteeism absenteeism; codes of practice that forbid · Includes enforcement of codes of sexual abuse of pupils are rarely enforced. practice, especially with respect to the Teachers need to receive appropriate role of teachers in protecting children psychosocial support and ready access · Addresses care, support and treatment to VCT. The public sector can often learn of staff, and access to VCT from the private sector in developing a workplace response. Autonomous tertiary- level institutions should be encouraged to develop individual HIV/AIDS polices. 72 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV Management and Planning Checklist Check item Comments Management of the sector response Mainstreaming the HIV/AIDS response requires: requires, at least initially, mechanisms for · An interdepartmental or subsectoral involving all subsectors (the committee) committee and for implementation (the unit). Keys to success are ensuring that Focal Points · Department Focal Points who have have space in their work program to HIV/AIDS activities as a specific com- allocate time to HIV/AIDS; that the unit ponent of their job description reports to the highest level; that the unit · A secretariat or unit that supports the is led at the department director level. mainstreaming of the response, and Through national AIDS authorities the has clear political support sector now has access to new financial · Understanding of new sources of finan- resources (for example, MAP, and the cial support and effective dialogue with Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis the national AIDS authority and Malaria). · Monitoring and evaluation of the response built into the EMIS For short- to medium-term planning, Even where an effective EMIS is unavail- the EMIS or school survey data should able, school and institutional survey be used to assess the following at both data can be used to assess the impact national and district levels: of HIV/AIDS on the education system. · HIV/AIDS specific indicators This should relate district-level education data to the geographical pattern of the · Teacher mortality and attrition data epidemic, using epidemiological data · Teacher attendance data from the health service. · Children's attendance by orphans and vulnerable children or nonorphans and vulnerable children status · Proportion of children receiving pre- vention education For long-term planning: The effects of the epidemic have a time · Computer model projection of the scale of decades, and impacts only impact of HIV/AIDS on education slowly become apparent. Long-term supply and demand planning similarly requires projection of impact over decades. This can be · Assessment of the implications of achieved using computer projection changes in supply for teacher recruit- models that combine epidemiological ment and training and education data. Projection allows · Assessment of the implications for for the planning of future teacher supply demand of changes in the size of the needs, and where necessary, the reform school-age population and the propor- of teacher training schedules, and for tion of orphans and vulnerable children future demand. · Completion rates by orphans and vulnerable children or nonorphans and vulnerable children Appendix D | 73 Prevention Checklist Check item Comments Achieve education for All (EFA) Completing a quality basic education is a "social vaccine" against HIV/AIDS. The national curriculum uses a life skills Key issues: Teaching needs to start approach, including: before risky behaviors have become · Formal and nonformal components established, and the content needs to be matched to the development stage · Grade- and age-specific content, of the child. Teaching methods that beginning before the onset of sexual establish knowledge, values, and skills activity that support positive behaviors should · Participatory teaching methods be used. A single carrier subject (for · Based in a carrier subject example, social studies) is simpler and avoids spreading messages thinly across · Teach in the context of school health subjects (for example, integration/ infu- (for example, FRESH) sion). Failure to involve the community · Ownership by and support of the in this sensitive area is one of the major community causes of delay in implementation. HIV/AIDS prevention requires that Preventive education is more frequently teachers develop skills in participatory taught as part of in-service training than methods through: preservice. Whereas both are neces- · Preservice training and materials sary, new teachers may be more readily trained in the participatory methods · In-service training and materials that are required to teach the subject. · Messages and approaches that help Teacher training institutions frequently teachers to protect themselves overlook the benefits of helping teachers to protect themselves. Complementary approaches: A holistic approach is essential for · Peer education effective prevention. Peer education can reinforce active learning by youths. IEC · MoE has input to community Informa- strategies ensure consistent messages tion, Education and Communication in the school, home, and community. (IEC) strategies Building on existing programs speeds · MoE coordinates with NGO, FBO, up the response. Early and effective and CBO prevention and mitigation treatment of STIs is effective in reducing programs HIV transmission, youths need access to · MoE assists MoH in promoting youth- VCT and condoms to translate learned friendly clinics for VCT, the treatment behaviors into practice. of Sexually Transmitted Infections (STIs) and condom distribution 74 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV Orphans and Vulnerable Children Checklist Check item Comments Financial barriers to education are Achieving EFA enhances access for all eliminated: children, including orphans and vulner- · Achieve EFA able children. School fees in particular may prevent orphans and vulnerable · Abolish school fees children from accessing education. Aboli- · Develop a mitigation strategy to avoid tion provides partial relief, but fees are informal and illegal levies often substituted by levies (for example, · Subsidize payment of informal levies for textbooks, PTAs, uniforms) which must be addressed in financing plans for fee abolition. Social funds offering subsidies through schools, PTAs or the community can help overcome these barriers. The education system helps maintain Ensuring that orphans and vulnerable attendance: children are able to attend school is only · Offer conditional cash (or food) the beginning: they also require sup- transfers port to remain in school. One effective method is to offer caregivers cash (or · Provide school health programs to food) transfers that are conditional upon support children (for example, FRESH), attendance. Orphans and vulnerable including psychosocial counseling children may require special care because of their experiences, and benefit from school health programs based on the FRESH framework, including psycho- social counseling. The education sector works with other In practice, civil society and FBOs are agencies providing care, support, and often most directly involved in these protection: programs, and offer an immediate point · MoE coordinates with NGOs, FBOs, of entry. The MoE can ensure that educa- and CBOs tion system programs are complemen- tary with these activities. Long-term care, · MoE coordinates with Ministries of support, and protection of orphans and Welfare or Social Affairs vulnerable children are typically the man- date of social programs under Ministries of Welfare or Social Affairs. Appendix D | 75 Materials available from or for supporting the development of the key components of the education sector response to HIV/AIDS. Sector policy · An ILO Code of Practice on HIV/AIDS and the world of work (ILO, 2001) · Implementing the ILO Code of Practice on HIV/AIDS and the world of work: An education and training manual (ILO, 2002) · The Namibia Ministry of Education National Policy on HIV/AIDS and education · HIV/AIDS and Education: A strategic approach (UNAIDS Inter-Agency Task Team (IATT) on Education, 2002). · Education and HIV/AIDS: A window of hope (World Bank, 2002) Management and planning · Education and HIV/AIDS: Modeling the impact of HIV/AIDS on educa- tion systems: A training manual (The World Bank and UNAIDS, 2002) · Using school survey data to project the impact of HIV/AIDS on the edu- cation sector in Mozambique, as a component of the planning for the FTI response (Valerio and Desai, 2002) Prevention · Education and HIV/AIDS: A sourcebook of HIV/AIDS prevention program (World Bank and Irish Aid, 2003) · UNAIDS benchmarks for effective HIV/AIDS prevention programs in schools (UNAIDS IATT Working Group, 2002) · Focusing Resources on Effective School Health: A FRESH start to enhancing the quality and equity of education (The FRESH Partnership, 2000) 76 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV · Focusing Resources on Effective School Health: A FRESH approach to achieving EFA (The FRESH Partnership, 2001) · Focusing Resources on Effective School Health: A FRESH start to enhancing HIV/AIDS prevention (The FRESH Partnership, 2002) Orphans and vulnerable children · Education and HIV/AIDS: Ensuring education access for orphans and vulnerable children--A training module (The World Bank and UNICEF, 2002) · Children on the brink (UNICEF, 2002) · The role of education in supporting and caring for orphans and other children made vulnerable by HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS Inter-Agency Task Team (IATT) on Education, 2003) APPENDIX E 2007 Survey Questionnaire School Health and Nutrition and HIV/AIDS in Africa Questionnaire Please respond to all the questions and return this form electronically to Fahman Nur at Fnur@worldbank.org, specifying "Questionnaire Response" in the subject line of the email, not later than 4 October 2007. You may also fax your response to Fahma at +001 (202) 522-3233. Please continue ques- tions on the last page or a new sheet if necessary. Thank you. A. IDENTIFICATION: 1. Your Name: __________________________________________________________ 2. Title/Affiliation: _______________________________________________________ 3. Name of Country:___________________________________________________ 4. Highest administrative divisions of country: No. of Regions: _______ (specify the number) These are known as: Provinces / Zones / Districts / other (please circle or specify) 5. Next highest administrative divisions of country: No. of Regions: _______ (specify the number) These are known as: Provinces / Zones / Districts / other (please circle or specify) 77 78 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV B. POLICY PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT Please indicate `Yes' or `No' for each of the follow- ing. In some cases you will be asked to fill in a blank with additional information. Yes No 1. Has your country been endorsed for funding through the FTI? (If yes, please provide policy document.) 2. Does the Ministry of Education (MoE) implement a Sector-Wide Approach (SWAP)? (If yes, please provide policy document.) 3. Does the MoE have an education sector policy? (If yes, please provide a copy.) 4. Does the MoE have an education sector strategy? (If yes, please provide a copy.) 5. Is there a national School Health & Nutrition (SHN) policy? (If yes, please provide a copy) If yes, is it implemented by the Ministry of Health (MoH)? If yes, is it implemented by the MoE? If yes, which schools are involved? (primary, secondary, and private, public) ............................................................... If yes, when was it implemented/accepted? ............................................................... 6. Is there a SHN unit in the MoE? If yes, is there a full time coordinator/manager of the unit? Is the unit free-standing? If not freestanding, is the unit a part of a directorate? If yes, which directorate? ...................................................... 7. Does your SHN program involve a number of donors? If yes, which ones? (Please attach a list) 8. Are there SHN and/or HIV/AIDS coordinators/focal SHN HIV/ SHN HIV/ points at the sub-national level of the education AIDS AIDS delivery system? (Nomenclatures may vary from country to country) Zonal? Provincial/Regional? Appendix E | 79 Please indicate `Yes' or `No' for each of the follow- ing. In some cases you will be asked to fill in a blank with additional information. Yes No District? Sub-District? Learning Facility? 9. Is HIV/AIDS a part of the School Health and Nutrition unit in the MoE? If no, is there an HIV/AIDS unit in the MoE? 10. Is there an officially appointed HIV/AIDS coordinator/focal point in the MoE? If yes, are the coordinators/focal points full time or part time? Does the coordinator /focal point have an official job description? (If yes please provide a copy.) 11. Within the MoE, is there an SHN and/or HIV/AIDS interdepartmental committee? If no, how is information shared between MoE staff involved in HIV? .................................................................. If yes, does the committee have clear Terms of Reference? (If yes, please provide a copy of TOR.) 12. Do you have a National HIV/AIDS strategy? (If yes, please provide a copy.) 13. Do you have an Education Sector HIV/AIDS strategy? (If yes, please provide a copy.) 14. Do you have an Education sector HIV/AIDS action plan? (If yes, please provide a copy.) 15. Is the MoE contracting NGOs to assist in the implementation of its HIV/AIDS educational program? 16. Is there a national work place policy? (If yes, please provide a copy.) If yes, are HIV/AIDS issues addressed? (Continued ) 80 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV Please indicate `Yes' or `No' for each of the follow- ing. In some cases you will be asked to fill in a blank with additional information. Yes No If no, do you have an Education Sector HIV/AIDS policy that includes workplace regulations? (If yes, please provide a copy.) 17. Is there a national policy of free primary school Education For All (EFA)? 18. Has the MoE or any other authorized agency undertaken any impact projections/assessment of school health and nutrition initiatives on supply and demand in terms of attaining their EFA goals? (If yes, please provide a copy of the report.) 19. Does the MoE collect data at least annually on health-related attrition and absences of teachers? If yes, at which levels are data collected? Zonal? Provincial/Regional? District? Sub-District? School? 20. Does the MoE keep data on orphans and vulnerable children? If yes, at which levels are data collected? Zonal? Provincial/Regional? District? Sub-District? School? 21. Do orphans and vulnerable children have to pay school tuition/fees? What other fees do orphans and vulnerable children have to pay? .............................................................. Appendix E | 81 Please indicate `Yes' or `No' for each of the follow- ing. In some cases you will be asked to fill in a blank with additional information. Yes No 22. Is there any program of conditional transfer of funds? If yes, is it to: Relatives or Caregivers? Schools? 23. Are there any affirmative action programs to boost the enrolment or attendance of school-age/school girls? C. SCHOOL ENVIRONMENT Please indicate `Yes' or `No' for each of the following. In some cases you will be asked to fill in a blank with additional information. Yes No 1. Is there a national policy that promotes a safe, child-friendly school environment? 2. Is there a national policy requiring that schools provide psychosocial support for students? 3. Is there a national policy requiring that schools provide safe, potable drinking water? 4. Is there a national policy requiring that schools provide hand washing facilities? If yes, does this include provision of soap? 5. Is there a national policy requiring that schools provide separate latrines for boys and girls? 6. Is there a national policy requiring that schools provide separate latrines for students and teachers? 7. Is there an annual sanitation survey conducted in all schools? 8. Is there an established school hygiene and cleaning regimen that includes: Scheduled rubbish removal? Maintenance of school buildings and facilities in all schools? 82 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV D. HEALTH EDUCATION AND CURRICULUM Please indicate `Yes' or `No' for each of the follow- ing. In some cases you will be asked to fill in a blank with additional information. Yes No 1. Is there a national health education curriculum? If yes, can it be adapted to individual districts/ regions/provinces? 2. Is health education taught as a separate subject (i.e. not embedded in another subject)? If yes, what is the name of the subject (i.e. health, life-skills..etc)? ................................................................... If no, what is the carrier subject? ........................ 3. Is nutrition education taught in schools in any form? If yes, is it taught in primary schools? If yes, is it taught in secondary schools? If yes, at what age is nutrition education introduced into schools? ................................................................... Is nutrition education offered in non-formal education? 4. Is hygiene education taught in schools in any form? If yes, is it taught in primary schools? If yes, is it taught in secondary schools? If yes, at what age is it introduced into schools? ................................................................... Is hygiene education offered in non-formal education? 5. Is malaria prevention education taught in schools in any form (i.e. knowledge based, life skills, peer education, etc.)? If yes, is it taught in primary schools? If yes, is it taught in secondary schools? If yes, at what age is malaria prevention education introduced into schools? ....................... If yes, is malaria education taught in non-formal education and in out-of-school settings? Appendix E | 83 Please indicate `Yes' or `No' for each of the follow- ing. In some cases you will be asked to fill in a blank with additional information. Yes No 6. Is there a program of peer education within the education sector? (If yes, provide some manuals, guidelines, etc. that are used for this.) If yes, is it operational in primary schools? If yes, is it operational in secondary schools? 7. How many tertiary institutions (universities) exist in the country? ................................ (Number) Of this number, how many have institutional HIV/ AIDS policies? ................................ (Number) (Please provide copies) 8. Are there training materials for tertiary (university) level HIV/AIDS education? If yes, has there been an impact assessment? 9. Is HIV/AIDS prevention education offered in schools in any form (i.e. knowledge based, life-skills, peer education, etc.)? IF NO, LEAVE QUESTIONS 9-12 BLANK AND SKIP TO QUESTION 13. If yes, is it offered in primary schools? If yes, is it offered in secondary schools? If yes, at what age is HIV/AIDS prevention educa- tion introduced into schools? ....................... If yes, is HIV/AIDS prevention education taught in non-formal education and in out-of-school settings? 10. If HIV/AIDS prevention education is taught in schools, is it embedded in another subject (a "car- rier" subject)? If yes, which subject/s? ....................... 11. If HIV/AIDS prevention education is taught in schools, have you adopted a life skills approach at the: Primary level? Secondary level? Within non-formal education? (Continued ) 84 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV Please indicate `Yes' or `No' for each of the follow- ing. In some cases you will be asked to fill in a blank with additional information. Yes No 12. If HIV/AIDS prevention education is taught in schools, is the HIV/AIDS educational program linked to other related topics such as reproductive health, substance abuse, domestic violence, etc? (If it is not taught in schools, leave blank.) If yes, which topics? The following questions refer to teachers and teacher training. Please indicate `Yes' or `No' for each question. Yes No 13. Does the teacher training curriculum include school health and nutrition? 14. Are teachers given health education training? If yes, is this done during preservice training? If yes, is this done during in-service training? 15. Are teachers trained in the approach of delivering effective life skills education to children? If yes, is this done during preservice training? If yes, is this done during in-service training? 16. Are teachers given HIV/AIDS training? If yes, is this done during preservice training? If yes, is this done during in-service training? 17. Are teachers taught to protect themselves from HIV? If yes, is this done during preservice training? If yes, is this done during in-service training? 18. Do teachers have access to counseling concerning HIV/AIDS? 19. Are there training materials about HIV/AIDS for the: Primary level? Secondary level? 20. Are data collected on the number of teachers trained and the quantity of training material re- ceived by learning institutions? If yes, at which levels are data kept: Zonal? Provincial/Regional? District? Sub-District? School? E. HEALTH AND NUTRITION SERVICES Administered by*: Are data No. of Regions Are these services provided for school-aged children? (Tick collected an- `Yes' or `No' and, if Yes, indicate the number of regions within nually indicat- MoH Staff which the service is offered.) Also indicate if the services are ing numbers Teachers administered by teachers or MoH staff* and whether indicators of students Where are data of service provision are collected and, if yes, where these are receiving held? (Zone/ Prov- retained. service? ince /District etc.) Yes No Yes No 1. Vaccinations 2. School feeding 3. Hearing and sight examinations 4. General medical examinations 5. Deworming program (i.e. providing deworming tablets) 6. Reproductive health (i.e. pregnancy, STIs) 7. Malaria control (i.e. promoting/providing bednets, providing treatment) 8. Iron supplementation program (i.e. providing iron tablets) 9. Micronutrient (providing Vitamin A capsules) * Note that if teachers conduct the examinations (with or without supervision by MoH staff) then tick the `Administered by Teachers' column. The aim is to identify which programs are teacher-led, even though it is often normal practice for MoH staff to be nominally responsible for the activity and of course for 85 the referrals to MoH facilities. 86 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV F. FINANCES Give amounts in local currency only: $1 = __________ (date_______) This year Last year 1. What is the MoE budget? (local currency) 2. What is the budget of the MoE allocated to School Health and Nutrition? 3. What is the budget of the MoE allocated to HIV/AIDS? 4. What is the proportion of national versus external financing of SHN and HIV/AIDS activities? (in percent) G). Does your ministry participate in regional or subregional activities regarding SHN and/or HIV/AIDS? Please attach a list naming the insti- tutions and the activities. H). Below, please elaborate further about anything that is not covered in the questions above. Add additional pages if needed. References Bakilana, A., D. A. P. Bundy, J. Brown, and B. Fredriksen. 2004. Accelerating the HIV/AIDS Response in Africa: A Review of World Bank Assistance. Washington, DC: World Bank. Bärnighausen, T., V. Hosegood, I. M. Timaeus, and M. Newell. 2007. The Socioeco- nomic Determinants of HIV Incidence: Evidence from a Longitudinal, Population-Based Study in Rural South Africa. AIDS 21 (suppl 7): S29­S38. Bundy D. A. P., S. Shaeffer, M. C. H. Jukes, K. Beegle, et al. 2006. "School-Based Health and Nutrition Programs." In Disease Control Priorities in Developing Countries. 2nd ed., ch. 58, 1091­1108. New York: Oxford University Press. Clarke, D., and D. A. P. Bundy. 2004. The EFA-Fast Track Initiative: Responding to the Challenge of HIV/AIDS to the Education Sector. Washington, DC: World Bank. de Walque, D. 2002. How Does the Impact of an HIV/AIDS Information Campaign Vary with Educational Attainment? Evidence from Rural Uganda. Washington, DC: World Bank Development Research Group. de Walque, D., J. S. Nakiyingi-Miiro, J. Busingye, and J. A. Whitworth. 2005. "Changing Association between Schooling Levels and HIV-1 Infection over 11 Years in a Rural Population Cohort in South-west Uganda." Tropical Medicine and International Health 10 (10): 993­1001. EDUCAIDS, 2008. EDUCAIDS Framework for Action. Paris: UNESCO. EFA-FTI. 2006. "Guidelines for Appraisal of the Primary Education Component of an Education Sector Plan." Washington, DC: EFA-FTI. EFA-FTI. 2008. "Guidelines for Capacity Development in the Education Sector within the Education for All Fast Track Initiative Framework." Washington, DC: EFA-FTI. 87 88 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV EFAIDS. 2009. Leadership in the HIV and AIDS Response: A Toolkit for Teachers' Unions to Promote Health and Improve Education. Massachusetts: Creative Commons. GCE. 2004. Learning to Survive: How Education For All Would Save Millions of Young People from HIV/AIDS. Belgium: GCE. Hargreaves, J. R., L. A. Morison, J. C. Kim, C. P. Bonell, et al. 2007. The Association between School Attendance, HIV Infection and Sexual Behaviour among Young People in rural South Africa. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health (000): 1­8. Jukes, J., S. Simmons, and D.A.P. Bundy. 2008. "Education and vulnerability: The role of schools in protecting young women and girls from HIV in Southern Africa." AIDS 22(suppl 4): S41-S56. Kelly, M.J. 2008. Education: For an Africa without AIDS. Paulines Publications Africa, Nairobi. PCD. 2008. Courage and Hope: African Teachers Living Positively with HIV (a documentary). Washington, DC: Baney Media. Risley, C. L., and D. A. P. Bundy. 2007. "Estimating the Impact of HIV/AIDS on the Supply of Basic Education." Paper presented at the second meeting of the World Bank/UNAIDS Economics Reference Group, November 2007. London: PCD. Valerio, A., and D. A. P. Bundy. 2004. Education and HIV/AIDS: A Sourcebook of HIV Prevention Programmes. Washington, DC: World Bank. World Bank. 2009. Courage and Hope: Stories from Teachers Living with HIV in Sub-Saharan Africa. Washington, DC: World Bank. World Bank. 2007. Education and HIV/AIDS: A Sourcebook of HIV/AIDS Prevention Activities in the Education Sector, Vol. II. Washington, DC: World Bank. World Bank. 2007. Education and HIV/AIDS: Enabling Access to Education for Orphans and Vulnerable Children: A Sourcebook. Washington, DC: World Bank. World Bank. 2006. Education and HIV/AIDS: Ensuring Education Access for Orphans and Vulnerable Children: A Planners' Handbook. 2nd ed. Washington, DC: World Bank. (Also 1st ed., 2002.) World Bank. 2006. Education and HIV/AIDS: Modeling the Impact of HIV/AIDS on Education Systems: How to Use the Ed-SIDA Model for Education HIV/AIDS Forecasting. 2nd ed. Washington, DC: World Bank. (Also 1st ed., 2001.) World Bank. 2002. Education and HIV/AIDS: A Window of Hope. Washington, DC: World Bank. (Also published as an Executive Summary.) Index A Central African Republic, 44b Chad, 44b Accelerate Initiative, 3, xxxi, xxxii children, HIV prevention, 42b, 47b accessing NAC funding, 24 civil society, 16, 16b, 76t countries taking ownership of, 51 workshop participation, 19f, 66t­68t evaluating process, 13­14 CNLS. See National AIDS Committee evolution of, 6­7 Community of Portuguese Speaking goals and objectives, 4­5 Countries Organization implementation, 5­6, 39, 39f, 46f (CPLP) Education Advisory key partners, xxviii­xxix Committee, 34b objectives, xxix­xxxi conflict, countries emerging from, 36b outcomes of, 35 Congo, Democratic Republic of, 44b participation in, 15, 23, 23f, 57 Congo, Republic of, 44b regional- and national-level, 10f coordination, sustaining, 56 promoting Web access to Courage and Hope: Stories from Teachers documentation, 28 Living with HIV/AIDS in sector and workplace policy, 37 Sub-Saharan Africa, 20b shifting to national level, 57­58 curricula development, 44b, 45 workshop evaluation, 13f curriculum survey questions, 84t­86t Accelerate Initiative Working Group, 3 action plans, 31b­33b AIDS. See HIV/AIDS D AIDS councils, accessing funds of, 21­24, 22b, 23f data collection, 40­41 antiretroviral treatment (ART), 38b Department of State Education (DOSE), The Gambia, 22b development partners, 15­16, 52­53, xxx B workshop participation, 18­19, 66t­68t Burundi, Republic of, 11b subregional and national levels, 17f Direct Support to Schools (DSS), Mozambique, 45b C documentation, 25, 34b, xxx Cameroon, 44b, 47 downloadable from the Internet, 28, Central Africa, Focal Points, 32b 29f, 30f 89 90 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV increasing quantity and quality of, 53 Eritrea, 41b­42b production of new, 26­27 Ethiopia, 40 sourcebook on HIV/AIDS prevention, 30b top 20 documents distributed, F 69t­70t Family Life Education program, 47b donors, 15­16, 19f, xxx Fast Track Initiative (FTI), 56­57 financial survey questions, 88t E Focal Points. See Ministry of Education HIV/AIDS Focal Points Eastern Africa, Focal Points, 32b­33b funding, 21­23, 56 Economic and Monetary Community of Central Africa (CEMAC), 44b Economic Community of West African G States (ECOWAS), 31b Gabon, 44b Education, 46­48, 75t­76t Gambia, The, 22b costs as barrier to, 48, 75t gender issues, 2, 12b survey questions, 84t­86t Ghana, 36b, 47 Education for All (EFA), 56­57, 75t Global Campaign for Education, 16b Education Management Information Good Practice HIV/AIDS Checklist, 26b, System (EMIS), 42b, xxxii 71­77 education sector. See also sector policy; Greater Involvement of People Living with teachers AIDS (GIPA), 20b accelerating response impetus, xxviii Group for the Study and Teaching of acceleration of response, 52 Population Issues (GEEP), 47b coordination with other agencies, 76t Guidelines for Capacity Development in demand for response development and the Education Sector, 57 implementation assistance, 6 focus shifting to national level, 51, xxxii­xxxiii H HIV prevention, 1, xxvii HIV response slow, 2, 3 health education and curriculum, survey HIV/AIDS broad impact on, ix questions, 84t­87t HIV/AIDS response checklist, 26b health education curriculum, 45 key components of response, 71­72 HIV infection, 12b, xi literature availability, 53 HIV interventions, 54­55 mainstreaming HIV/AIDS into, 11­13 HIV prevention, 1, 2, 77, xi, xxvii national HIV/AIDS strategy, 72t activities' implementation progress, 46f need for relevant HIV/AIDS among schoolchildren, 47b literature, 25 checklist, 74t­75t policy, 72t, 76 curricula development, 44b response implementation, 54, xxx education availability, 45 education sector plans, 40, 41, 47, 48 holistic approaches, 75t Direct Support to Schools program, 45b Sierra Leone, 36b guidance for HIV/AIDS inclusion, 56­57 teacher training, 40 EFAIDS Program, 18b and life skills, 43, 45­46 EMIS. See Education Management HIV/AIDS Information System education response impacts on, 54 Equatorial Guinea, 44b education sector impact broad, ix Index | 91 EFA-FTI strengthening response to, K 56­57 efforts to mitigate impacts on Kenya, 13, 24, 48 teachers, 38b impact assessment, 42b good practice checklist, 26b indicators demonstrating need L for accelerated response to, 41b­42b leadership, 9, 10b­11b mainstreaming response into education, country level, 5 11­13, 73t in HIV/AIDS response, 31b gender perspective, 12b progress in, 51 multisectoral response to, 53 toolkit for, 18b national strategy, 72t life skills, 2, 43, 45­46 need for more literature, 25­27 approach, 74t programming, 37b literature. See documentation questionnaire, 43b, 79­88 Lusophone Africa, Focal Points, 33b­34b workplace issue, 18b HIV/AIDS Rapid Response Project, 22b M mainstreaming HIV/AIDS response, 13, I 54­55, 73t IATT. See Joint United Nations Programme Malawi, 48 on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) management, 77, 80t­83t Inter-Agency Task Team on checklist, 73t­74t Education Mauritania, 22b, 31b­32b impact assessment, 55, 73t ministries of education, 23­24, 23f, 40 Eritrea, 41b­42b Ministry of Education HIV/AIDS Focal Kenya, 42b Points, 6, 31b­34b, 40, ix­x, xxxiii impact projection, 74t mainstreaming HIV/AIDS into indicators, demonstrating need for education, 13 accelerated HIV/AIDS response, ownership of Accelerate Initiative, 6­7, 41b­42b xxviii information. See also documentation survey, 43b increasing quantity and quality of, 53 survey findings, 48b­49b, 54, xxxi information sharing, 31b, 56, xxx monitoring and evaluation (M&E), International Labour Organization (ILO) 41b­42b, 43b, 55, xxxii "Code of Practice on HIV/AIDS and the Mozambique, 45b World of Work," 18b Multi-Country HIV/AIDS Program (MAP), interventions, for reducing risky 10b behavior, 42b N J national AIDS authorities, 53, xxx Joint United Nations Programme on National AIDS Committee (CNLS), HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) The Gambia, 22n Inter-Agency Task Team (IATT) National AIDS Councils (NACs), 21­24, on Education, 3, 4b, xxviii 22b, 23f toolkit for mainstreaming of National AIDS Secretariat (NAS), activities, 55 The Gambia, 22b 92 | Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV National Institute of Educational Sierra Leone, 36b, 41 Planning and Administration social vaccine, 1, 2, xxvii (NIEPA), 10b Sourcebook of HIV/AIDS Prevention national level focus, 51, 57­58 Activities in the Education networks. See Ministry of Education Sector, 30b HIV/AIDS Focal Points survey, 43b, 55 Nigeria, 10b­11b, 40 findings, 35, 48b­49b, 54 nutrition services survey questions, 87t participants, 35­36 questionnaire, 79­88 O T orphans and vulnerable children (OVC), 46­48, 77 Tanzania, United Republic of, 12, 48 checklist, 75t­76t teacher training, 40, 75t Ghana, 36b HIV prevention, 43, 45­46 P progress, 46f teachers, 2, 20b, 27b partners. See development partners support for, 73t Partnership for Child Development (PCD), VCT and ART access, 38b 16, 16b Teachers--Agents of Dissemination and planning, 15, 77 Change (TAD), 36b and mitigation, 40­41 teaching methods, and beginning checklist, 73t­74t age, 74t survey questions, 80t­83t technical assistance, increasing demand Portuguese-speaking African Countries for, 56­57 (PALOPS), 34b Three Ones principles, 3, 7n toolkits leadership, 18b Q mainstreaming HIV/AIDS prevention questionnaire, 79­88 into education, 55 training. See life skills; teacher training tuition, 48, 75t R Regional Economic Communities U (RECs), ix review findings, 51, xxxiii­xxxiv UNAIDS. See Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS United Nations agencies, workshops S participated in, 66t­68t school environment, survey questions, 83t United Nations Girls' Education Initiative school fees, 48, 75t (UNGEI), 12b school health and nutrition (SHN), 37­39 universal access to HIV/AIDS prevention school health questionnaire, 43b, and treatment, xi 79t­88t school health web site, 28 V school support program, 45b sector policy, 37­40, 72t­73t Voluntary Counseling and Testing (VCT), Senegal, 37b, 47b 38b Index | 93 W evaluation of, 13­14, 13f participation in and outcomes, 9 Web site access, 28, 29f, 30f recognition of needs of OVC, 47 "Window of Hope," 27b regional and national success workplace issues, 18b of, 56 workplace policy, 39­40, 73t sector plans, 35, 40b workshops subregional and regional level, 5­6 chronology of, 61t­63t World Bank HIV/AIDS Rapid Response development partner participation, 16, Project, 22b 17f, 18­19, 19f, 66t­68t ECO-AUDIT Environmental Benefits Statement The World Bank is committed to preserving Saved: endangered forests and natural resources. · 3 trees The Office of the Publisher has chosen to · 1 million BTUs less print Accelerating the Education Sector · 318 CO2 less Response to HIV on recycled paper with · 1,503 gals less water 30 percent postconsumer fiber in accordance · 93 lbs less waste with the recommended standards for paper usage set by the Green Press Initiative, a nonprofit program supporting publishers in using fiber that is not sourced from endan- gered forests. For more information, visit www.greenpressinitiative.org. ACCELERATING THE EDUCATION SECTOR RESPONSE TO HIV Five Years of Experience from Sub-Saharan Africa The education sector plays a key "external" role in preventing and reducing the stigma surrounding HIV/AIDS. It also plays an important "internal" role in providing access to care, treatment, and support for teachers and education staff, a group that in many countries represents more than 60 percent of the public sector workforce. The education sector can also have a critically important positive effect on the future: Even in the worst-affected countries, most schoolchildren are not infected. For these children, there is a chance to live lives free from AIDS if they can be educated on the knowledge and values that can protect them as they grow up. The authors of Accelerating the Education Sector Response to HIV explore the experiences of education sectors across Sub-Saharan Africa as they scale up their responses to HIV/AIDS within the Accelerate Initiative Working Group, established in 2002 by the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) Inter-Agency Task Team on Education. This book demonstrates that leadership by the ministries of education and commitment from key development partners are crucial for mobilizing activities and that full participation of all stakeholders is required for effective implementation. This book summarizes the experiences of technical Focal Points from the 37 ministries of education in Sub-Saharan Africa, which are represented on the sub-regional networks for HIV and Education. These experiences prove that the education sector response can play a crucially important role in the multisectoral national responses to this epidemic. ISBN 978-0-8213-7932-5 SKU 17932