WinS for Girls – Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene In Schools for Girls


Reporting Organization:UNICEF
Total Budget ($CAD):$ 7,500,000
Timeframe: March 24, 2014 - September 30, 2017
Status: Completion
Contact Information: Unspecified

Partner & Funder Profiles


Reporting Organization


UNICEF

Participating Organizations


Funders (Total Budget Contribution)


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Location


Region - Total Budget Allocation


Sub-Saharan Africa - $ 3,305,250.00 (44.07%)

South America - $ 1,304,250.00 (17.39%)

Southeast Asia - $ 624,750.00 (8.33%)

Central America - $ 570,750.00 (7.61%)

South Asia - $ 511,500.00 (6.82%)

East Asia - $ 454,500.00 (6.06%)

North Africa - $ 444,750.00 (5.93%)

Central Asia - $ 284,250.00 (3.79%)

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Areas of Focus


Health - Total Budget Allocation


Health Promotion & Education (15 %)

Reproductive Health & Rights incl. Maternal Health (10 %)

Other - Total Budget Allocation


WASH (20 %)

Human Rights, Advocacy & Public Engagement (6 %)

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Description


This project aims to enhance educational opportunities for girls by supporting the Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene In Schools for Girls (WinS for Girls) program. WinS for Girls is a multi-country program and partnership led by UNICEF and the UN Girls’ Education Initiative (UNGEI) that seeks to increase the number of girls completing primary school and entering secondary schools. Menstrual health management is a key factor in ensuring girls stay in school. Working in over 100 schools per participating country, with activities at local, national, and international levels, WinS for Girls is addressing the menstrual hygiene management needs and cultural norms that are barriers for adolescent girls to attending and performing well at school. Some project activities include: (i) conducting qualitative field research on menstrual hygiene management knowledge and practices among school girls; (ii) developing a basic menstrual hygiene management package for water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) in schools based on country-specific research and current practices; and (iii) establishment of menstrual hygiene management working groups led by the Ministry of Education in each country.

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Target Population


Gender and age: Unspecified
Total Direct Population: Unspecified
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Outputs


Unspecified

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Results & Indicators


Expected Results


The expected intermediate outcomes for this project include: (i) reduced social and physical barriers to safe and stigma-free menstrual health management in schools and in education sectors in 12 countries; and (ii) strengthened global advocacy for effective menstrual hygiene management through water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) in schools programming.

Achieved Results


The WinS for Girls project is being implemented in 14 countries: 10 countries funded by the Government of Canada (Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia, Afghanistan, Zambia, Ghana, Niger, Nigeria, Burkina Faso, Eritrea, and Bolivia). Additional funds have been leveraged to enable programming in 3 more countries (India, Pakistan, and Indonesia). Nepal is receiving technical support through this project and is implementing WinS for Girls programming with other resources.

Results achieved by UNICEF with the support of the Government of Canada include the following:

Menstrual Hygiene Management Working Groups have been established under the leadership of the Ministry of Education in 14 countries and these Working Groups have held forums on menstrual hygiene issues (6 forums on average). This demonstrates good progress towards increased leadership of Ministries of Education, with a view to reducing barriers to safe and stigma-free menstrual hygiene management in schools and in the education sector, more broadly, by the end of the project.

Good progress has been demonstrated toward achieving the expected result of increased capacity of global WinS for Girls Network members on menstrual hygiene management (MHM) research and programming. A web-based learning program has been developed for local menstrual hygiene management research partners in the 14 countries and over 80 people have participated in this e-course. While the completion of the web-based learning program took longer than expected, it was modified in response to the needs of the participants: additional modules were added and the pace of the course was adjusted. This tool will contribute to the expected result on strengthened global advocacy for effective menstrual hygiene management (MHM) through WASH in Schools programming by the end of the project.

The 3rd annual Menstrual Hygiene Management Virtual Conference was held in October 2014, with 753 participants, and was successful in sharing school-based menstrual hygiene management programs, findings on scale and impact, as well as recommendations about how new menstrual hygiene management programs can be developed by practitioners. A 1 day face-to-face meeting on “Menstrual Hygiene Management (MHM) in 10: Advancing the Menstrual Hygiene Management Agenda in WASH in Schools” was held with stakeholders from international organizations, civil society, and the private sector, and mapped priorities for advancing this agenda over the next decade. Other learning products have been developed, such as a special issue on menstrual hygiene management in the academic journal Waterlines in January 2015 to highlight the evidence for WASH in school for girls.

Indicators


  • None Selected
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Associated Projects (If applicable)


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