LIFE SKILLS EDUCATION TOOLKIT FOR ORPHANS AND VULNERABLE CHILDREN IN INDIA• 47
- Encourage children to ask questions, not just
answer them; - Share personal experiences if required and
act comfortably around the children; - Have a sense of humor;
- If you do not know an answer, frankly admit
it. Tell the group you will find out and
inform them the next time. Follow through
with your promise! - Be aware of the general developmental
characteristics for the sex and ages of the
group, and treat every child as an individual; - Speak less and encourage the children,
especially girls, to speak more. Help children
learn to respect different ideas and viewpoints; - Be prepared for your session. Adequate
preparation and reading must be done by
the facilitator; - If a child dominates the group, politely say
that everyone must get a chance and point to
the ground rules; - Do not criticize the child, only the behavior;
- Be positive, build on the child’s strengths
(and he or she has many strengths!); - Since most of the activities are group
activities, sitting in a circle is useful.
The facilitator should be at the same “level”
as the participants. If the children are sitting
on the ground, so should the facilitator; - If you are using flip charts and have noted
things down, keep them on the walls so that
the children can see them; - Be aware and be responsive to different literacy
levels. Make sure no one is embarrassed by not
being able to read or write;- If you are using the Bridge Model, place it
where it can be seen; - Keep the group awake with energizers and
warm-ups, and sometimes a snack; - Make maximum use of visual aids and
creative media to help the learning process; - Warm ups, such as introductory remarks,
examples, a topical event or short exercise
can be used to introduce the session if
required. These must help to focus on the
main activity and should be brief; and - Do not plan two sessions per day even if
there is time. The children need to assimilate
what they have learned.
- If you are using the Bridge Model, place it
Experience from the field
When things do not work out, I try again in a
different way. My rapport with children has
increased and I am willing to listen more.
Children now talk a lot, and do not fight and
quarrel so much. In fact, mothers are asking
me what I am teaching the children in the Life
Skills Education Program! (Facilitator, CCDT)
We have to talk very little, then children talk more!
Facilitator Training
Facilitators need to undergo training before
working with children. A pre-training
questionnaire (or interview) can be administered
to assess the capacity and attitudes of the
facilitators. The training can then be tailored
according to these needs and progress can be
evaluated. The competencies and attitudes
needed by facilitators are described in the pre-
training questionnaire below: