Resources
How to Support School-Aged Children Living in Crisis Contexts? Evidence-based Recommendations for Stakeholders
Science is the most useful when it catalyzes change. In this tool, we provide actionable recommendations and guidance on how to best support education in emergencies, to get the evidence into the capable hands of the education stakeholders.
Meet the HEA Phase II Grantee: Madrasati
We hear from HEA Phase II Grantees, Madrasati, as they share about their innovation, journey to scale and experience within the HEA programme. With thanks to HEA mentors NYU-TIES for their work on this video.
Fortalecer los sistemas de monitoreo y evaluación de aprendizaje holístico en contextos de emergencia y crisis prolongada: Colombia y Perú
En esta nota conceptual se describen los marcos, conceptos y métodos del proyecto en el que NYU Global TIES for Children (NYU-TIES) y la Universidad de los Andes están trabajando para fortalecer los sistemas de monitoreo y evaluación de aprendizaje holístico en Colombia y Perú (mayores receptores de familias de refugiados y migrantes venezolanos).
Strengthening holistic learning outcome measurement systems in emergencies and protracted crises: Colombia and Peru
This concept note describes the frameworks, concepts and methods of the project in which NYU Global TIES for Children (NYU-TIES) and the Universidad de los Andes are working to strengthen holistic learning monitoring and evaluation systems in Colombia and Peru (main recipients of Venezuelan refugee and migrant families).
Now More Than Ever: Strengthening systems for social and emotional skills and well-being assessment during the COVID-19 pandemic in Lebanon and Peru
This document outlines the work done by NYU Global TIES to strengthen social and emotional skills and well-being assessment in Lebanon and Peru during the COVID-19 pandemic. It explains the frameworks and concepts, and outlines next steps in those countries.
Meet the HEA Phase II Grantees - iACT
We hear from HEA Phase II Grantees, iACT about their innovation, scaling journey to date and their experience during their time with the HEA programme.
Introducing the PLAY toolkit [teaser]
The toolkit measures how caregivers and teachers support children’s engagement in their learning. The toolkit consists of observation and survey tools for children from birth to 12-years-old and can be applied across diverse learning settings and contexts
Meet the HEA Phase II Grantees - Cohere
We hear from HEA Phase II Grantees, Cohere about their innovation, scaling journey and time with the HEA programme.
The Road Paved With Good Intentions: is Social and Emotional Learning (SEL) Safe and Effective for All Children Affected by Crises?
The recent earthquakes in Turkey and Syria hit an already war-torn region and populations in the Middle East. They have left lasting psychological and physical trauma for 8.8 million affected people in Northern Syria alone–a region where 4.1 million people already depend on humanitarian assistance. While immediate emergency responses are essential, once the initial crises pass, children impacted by conflict and crises still need to grow up and learn, coping with painful memories and unpredictable and often hostile environments. They deserve and need support that can help them to navigate the adversities on their own. Unfortunately, the disruptions in the aftermath of crises can exacerbate the emotional and psychological toll on children, affecting their physical and emotional well-being, learning and development over the long term.
RDAP Summit 2023: Building on Experience: Centering Communities in Data Creation and Access
NYU-TIES' Senior Data Associate Daniel Woulfin was one of the panelists on the #DataCuration panel at the Research Data and Assess Preservation Virtual Summit 2023, alongside other data curation experts from Penn State University, ICPSR at University of Michigan Institute for Social Research, and the University of Michigan. Dan gave a lightning talk on his open source web application, DIYDDI, which allows researchers to curate their own dataset metadata and generate codebooks and documentation.
Humanitarian Education Accelerator Learning Synthesis
Over the past 7 years, the Humanitarian Education Accelerator (HEA) has supported 21 innovative and impactful education in emergency and protracted crises (EiEPC) solutions to transition to scale. Support has included financing and capacity building, and has focused on producing actionable evidence.
Many lessons have been learnt throughout the 7 years and 3 cohorts, including lessons for innovators, EiEPC practitioners, donors, and accelerators. We have compiled these lessons into a Learning Synthesis so that global audiences can share in the lessons learnt.
Measuring the Dosage of Brief Social-emotional Learning (Sel) Activities in Humanitarian Settings
Key messages for researchers and practitioners:Key messages for researchers and practitioners:
When studying brief and skill-targeted social-emotional learning activities, consider calculating measures of dosage: how much (quantity), how often (repetition pattern), and for how long (duration) the activities are implemented. Examine these measures as potential predictors of program outcomes or moderators of the program impact; and use the information to determine the “optimal dosage” when scaling up.
Link these measures with teachers’ and enumerators’ reports on implementation to provide better guidance on overall implementation quality. Examine these measures as potential predictors of program outcomes or moderators of the program impact; and use the information to determine the “optimal dosage” when scaling up.
Link these measures with teachers’ and enumerators’ reports on implementation to provide better guidance on overall implementation quality."
Understanding Settings for Early Childhood Socialization: Evidence from the Rohingya Camps
In this brief, Global TIES researchers demonstrate the utility of rapid ethnography to understand the socialization context of Rohingya children living in Cox’s Bazar Camps, where factors such as economic instability, natural disasters, and the Covid-19 pandemic have continued to change the individual- and family-level environment for Rohingya communities. Results from rapid ethnographic data in conjunction with in-depth parent interviews highlight several key elements contributing to the socialization of young Rohingya refugee children, including: 1) supervision and care of children often extending beyond biological parents and immediate family; 2) agents of socialization and learning extending beyond biological parents and immediate family; 3) parents considering spaces near or around their homes to be unsafe, while children’s behavior indicate otherwise; 4) learning “pockets” or humanitarian play labs (HPLs) within household clusters providing unique opportunities for children to learn and play; and 5) HPL children having access to artifacts for socialization beyond improvised objects from the immediate surroundings.
Image credit:
Margaret Weir
@margotd1 via Unsplash.
Thinking outside the classroom: Theories of change and measures to support the design, monitoring, and evaluation of distance learning programs
This report is intended to be a living framework for thinking and talking about distance education interventions, beginning in low- and middle-income (LMIC) and humanitarian contexts and expanding over time to include distance education interventions designed for high-income contexts.
Measuring the dosage of brief and skill-targeted social-emotional learning (SEL) activities in humanitarian settings
In humanitarian settings, social-emotional learning (SEL) programs for children are often delivered using a field-feasible approach where the programs are more easily deployable and adaptable in the field, require minimal training, and depend less on the strict sequence and structure of the program components to elicit the intended treatment effect. However, evidence is lacking on what aspects of this implementation approach enable the SEL programming to be more beneficial to children’s SEL development.
Remedial Education to Support Learning Loss Threatened by Cuts to Development Aid
This blog is written by Dr Lindsay Brown, Senior Research Scientist at NYU-Global TIES in Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development. Lindsay primarily investigates how to support teachers in areas of conflict and crisis with a focus on flexible and scalable teacher professional development strategies. She works mainly in the Middle East and Africa.
Image credit:
Pawel Czerwinski
@pawel_czerwinski via Unsplash.
Testing the impact of a skill-targeted social and emotional learning curriculum and its variation by pre- and postmigration conflict experiences…
Refugee children face significant adversities that can threaten critical developmental processes and hamper learning outcomes. This study examines how post-migration risk factors at the community, household, and individual level experienced by primary school-aged Syrian refugee children in Lebanon (N = 448, Age M = 9.08, SD = 1.90) are associated with cognitive, emotional, and behavioral developmental processes as well as literacy and numeracy performance. We identified several risk factors, including attending a lower grade than their age-expected grade level, that uniquely predict Syrian refugee children's developmental processes and academic outcomes.