Mothers' Associations (Associations des Meres d'Eleves or AMEs)

  • P Project/Program

? Activity Status: Unknown

Key Information

Within the context of the McGovern-Dole Food For Education Program in Benin, World Education provides training in gender mainstreaming to its local NGO partners, who in turn introduce a gender lens within their work with parent-teacher associations (PTAs), training them in how to mainstream gender into PTA structures and activities to promote equity and combat discrimination. In Benin, World Education has been instrumental in the establishment of Mothers’ Associations (AMEs), which have become parallel structures to Fathers’ Associations (APEs) within PTAs. For almost two decades, World Education has worked with AMEs/APEs through a participatory approach, which includes and empowers all community members, especially women, to identify challenges and implement practical, local solutions. Today, there are over 630 AMEs in Benin, which have been formally integrated within PTAs and recognized as a national model for women’s empowerment and participation in school governance. The AMEs have played and continue to play a key role in promoting girls’ education by organizing community awareness campaigns on the importance of girls' education; conducting community censuses on school-aged children and supporting families in obtaining birth certificates, necessary for school registration; combating forced and early marriage; organizing a girls' mentoring program to keep girls in school; negotiating with families to ensure an equitable division of household chores among boys and girls; monitoring teacher conduct in the classroom to ensure girls' inclusion and protection from violence and abuse


Lead Implementing Organization(s)
Location(s)

Sub-Saharan Africa

Benin

Activity URL

Not applicable or unknown

Government Affiliation
Unknown
Years

1975 -

Partner(s)

Local NGOs, Alafia, Derana

Ministry Affiliation
N/A
Funder(s)

United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) within the McGovern-Dole Food For Education Program (2014-2018; 2017-2022)

COVID-19 Response
Unknown
Geographic Scope
National
Meets gender-transformative education criteria from the TES  
Unknown
Areas of Work Back to Top
Education areas
Attainment
  • Primary completion
  • Primary enrollment
Other
  • Early childhood development
  • Other
Other skills
  • Rights/empowerment education
  • Social and emotional learning
Quality
  • School quality
  • School-related gender-based violence
Skills
  • Literacy
  • Other academic performance-related

Cross-cutting areas
  • Community sensitization
  • Early/child marriage
  • Empowerment
  • Gender equality
  • Mentorship
  • Nutrition
  • Other cultural practices
  • Sexual harassment & coercion
  • Social and gender norms and beliefs
  • Violence (at home, in relationships)
  • WASH (water, sanitation and hygiene)

Program participants

Target Audience(s)

Girls (both in school and out of school), Parent-teacher associations/school management committees, Youth

Age

1 - 18

School Enrolment Status

Some in school

School Level

  • Pre-school
  • Lower primary
  • Upper primary
Other populations reached
  • Boys (both in school and out of school)
  • Community leaders
  • Fathers
  • Mothers
  • Other caregivers
  • Religious leaders
  • School administrators
  • Teachers - female
  • Teachers - male
Participants include

Not applicable or unknown

Program Approaches Back to Top
Community engagement/advocacy/sensitization
  • Community-based monitoring (e.g. school report cards)
  • Community mobilization
  • General awareness-raising/community engagement
  • Mothers' clubs
  • Parent Teacher Associations (PTA)
  • Technical assistance/capacity building to civil society organizations or governments
Curriculum/learning
  • Increased availability of learning materials
Food/nutrition
  • School feeding
Mentoring/psychosocial support
  • Peer mentors
Social/gender norms change
  • Engaging parents/caregivers of students or school-age children/adolescents
  • Media campaigns
  • Work with community leaders
  • Work with religious leaders
Teaching
  • Hiring more teachers (both men and women)
  • In-service teacher training – pedagogy general
  • Teacher incentives
  • Teaching materials (e.g. lesson plans, curricula)
Tutoring/strengthening academic skills
  • Literacy - in the classroom
  • Literacy - outside the classroom
Women's empowerment programs
  • Advocacy/action
  • Empowerment training
  • Leadership training
Program Goals Back to Top
Education goals
  • Improved academic skills (literacy and numeracy)
  • Increased enrolment in primary school
  • Reduced absenteeism
Cross-cutting goals
  • Increased agency and empowerment
  • More equitable gender attitudes and norms
Additional Information Back to Top
Primary Contact
Barbara Borgese
World Education, Inc.
Senior Program Officer
barbara_borgese@worlded.org