Bantwana schools integrated program (BSIP) Swaziland child profiling tool
The Child Profiling Tool is designed to help look at critical aspects of child development in Swazi schools as part of the Bantwana Schools Integrated Program (BSIP).
The Child Profiling Tool is designed to help look at critical aspects of child development in Swazi schools as part of the Bantwana Schools Integrated Program (BSIP).
This document looks at HIV and AIDS in Commonwealth countries and in particular the impact of HIV and AIDS on teachers. Slightly more than half of those who are infected are women.
People engaging in risky behavior are at risk for contracting HIV infection. Health education programs in schools can reduce the prevalence of such behaviors among students.
More than forty percent of teacher deaths in Malawi are related to HIV/AIDS, making AIDS-related death the most common cause of teacher attrition.
This toolkit translates useful academic models, evidence, theories and other information into a practical 'cookbook', providing many tips, experiences and tools that have been used in projects in Africa and Asia.
This document provides information for acquiring and forming attitudes, beliefs and values on topics such as identity, relationships and intimacy.
This generic integration module is an output of the UNESCO/AWSE in-country Training Workshops on Mainstreaming HIV/AIDS for Physical and Engineering Sciences in Ghana, Rwanda, Botswana and Uganda.
This integrated teaching module is an output of the in-country training workshop for lecturers on "Higher Education Science and Curricular Reforms: African Universities responding to HIV and AIDS" held in Kumasi (Ghana), Kigali (Rwanda), Gaborone (Botswana) and Nairobi (Kenya).
This integrated teaching module is an output of the in-country training workshop for lecturers on "Higher Education Science and Curricular Reforms: African Universities responding to HIV and AIDS" held in Kumasi (Ghana), Kigali (Rwanda), Gaborone (Botswana) and Nairobi (Kenya).
The purpose of this paper is to use data from the Kagera region of northwestern Tanzania to investigate the long run impact of the timing of parental death on the education outcomes.