Ms. Theary C. Seng, Chair of the ANSA-EAP Board of Trustees (Bali, 5 May 2014) |
Cambodia Adopts Checkmyschool
The Khmer Institute for National Development (KIND), in
partnership with the Affiliated Network for Social Accountability in
East Asia and the Pacific (ANSA-EAP) Foundation, conducted multi -
stakeholder consultations from February 17, 2014 to March 10, 2014 in
Cambodia as part of the Cross Country Learning Exchange Program of the
monitoring project, Checkmyschool (CMS).
Originally piloted as a
joint undertaking between the Philippine Government’s Department of
Education and ANSA-EAP, CMS now focused on knowledge sharing and scaling
up in the EAP region. Thanks to KIND’s and its partners’ work, Cambodia
presented a good opportunity for expansion as social accountability
(SAc) tools and projects have started gaining traction in the country.
“Constructive
engagement with the government could certainly help in education reform
initiatives in Cambodia”, quipped Mr. San Chey and Mr. Rithy Seng of
KIND, when asked about the project in radio interviews last March 12.
This and citizen’s monitoring of public services are the key components
of SAc.
KIND gathered students, teachers, parents, school
representatives, non-government organizations (NGOs), and members of the
local governments to listen to learnings from the Philippines and to
explore how such an initiative could be replicated in their country.
Representatives
from CMS Philippines, Paul Villanueva and Jecel Censoro, joined some of
the dialogues to impart their experience in conducting the monitoring
project. They talked about the education sector’s situation in the
Philippines and some success stories that could serve as inspiration to
their Cambodian counterparts.
Participants noted that the CMS
approach was applicable in Cambodia and they looked forward to an
intervention such as this one to bridge the gap between information,
technology, and people participation in education governance.
In
particular, the consultations revealed that CMS could help improve
public education services delivery in the Cambodia in three ways: first,
by monitoring issues on corruption, shortage/lack of textbooks, and
lack of provisions for electricity and toilets in schools; second, by
assisting stakeholders access education data from the government that
could help in monitoring activities; and third and most important of
all, by providing an effective feedback system that could enable quick
and programmatic response from the government to resolve issues on the
ground.
This way, communities could really partake in efforts
aiming to improve the quality of education in Cambodia. They could share
their observations and report the same to the Ministry of Education for
immediate action.
At present, KIND is preparing to implement CMS
in Phnom Penh, Takeo, Svay Rieng and Kampong Chama with technical
assistance from ANSA-EAP. Open Society Foundation supports the CMS Pilot
in Cambodia.
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