Life Skills Education Toolkit

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LIFE SKILLS EDUCATION TOOLKIT FOR ORPHANS AND VULNERABLE CHILDREN IN INDIA 7•

Who will Find the


Life Skills Education Toolkit Useful?


The Life Skills Education Toolkit is designed for
health workers, facilitators, animators, social
workers, teachers and many others who work with
young people and daily face the challenges of
helping them make healthy and safe choices. The
Toolkit can be used with children in diverse settings
in both HIV prevention and care programs.


The toolkit will be especially useful to development
workers who have found that most programs for
young people only educate and inform but do not
integrate a life skills approach to change behavior.
Examples include:



  • A health worker has led sessions on how
    substance abuse can be harmful, but the
    children in the slums continue to sniff glue
    and take gutka (tobacco extract);

  • An animator tells street children that HIV is
    transmitted through sexual intercourse,
    but the street boys continue to have
    unprotected sex with female sex workers in
    the nearby area;

  • A social worker working with boys in a
    non-formal setting has discussed how they
    can get into trouble if they follow the gang
    leader, but the boys are not able to say “no”;

  • A community worker working with girls in a
    reproductive program has discussed with the
    girls how they are more vulnerable to HIV, but


the girls are not able to communicate their
feelings and talk about sexuality;


  • A teacher talked to her students about the
    importance of studying and working hard,
    but her students are irregular in their
    attendance and do not know what they will
    do when they grow up;

  • An outreach worker taught boys welding
    skills and placed them in jobs, but they are
    always getting into arguments with their
    boss and co-workers; and

  • A housemother has many orphans and
    adolescents under her charge. Some do not
    talk about their loss while others are rebellious
    all the time. She gives them food, love and
    sympathy, but it does not seem to help.
    Others who will find the toolkit particularly useful
    include young people who want to help their
    friends. Peer influences are very powerful. When
    young people participate in the program, they learn
    to be responsible for their actions and show
    concern for others. Many become role models and
    are able to help their peers. Managers and policy
    makers who want to see changes in behavior that
    impact programs can also benefit from the toolkit.
    These changes could involve delay in sexual debut
    until marriage, accessing services for voluntary
    HIV counseling and testing, reduced substance use
    and other behavior change indicators.

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