Site icon fundsforNGOs

RFAs: Strengthening Foundational Literacy and Numeracy in Purnia District (India)

Apply Now: Collaboration and Innovation Fund (Ireland)

Deadline: 06-Apr-2026

UNICEF-supported foundational learning initiative in Bihar targets early-grade classrooms to improve literacy and numeracy. The programme strengthens district and block-level academic systems, builds teacher capacity, provides structured classroom support, and uses data-driven monitoring to address learning gaps in Grades 1 and 2.

Overview

Supported by the United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF), this initiative addresses foundational learning gaps in Bihar’s primary schools. It uses evidence-based strategies to enhance classroom instruction, build teacher capacity, and strengthen district and block-level academic systems.

The programme operates in 115 government primary schools over 12 months, focusing on Grades 1 and 2, with the ultimate goal of improving literacy, numeracy, and overall learning outcomes.

Why Bihar Needs Intervention

Bihar faces a foundational learning crisis characterized by:

Districts like Purnia, especially blocks such as Baisi and Srinagar, are priority areas due to compounded challenges affecting both students and teachers.

Programme Objectives

The programme is designed to:

  1. Strengthen district and block academic systems
  2. Improve classroom instruction for Grades 1 and 2
  3. Build teacher capacity through structured professional development
  4. Establish data-driven review and supervision mechanisms
  5. Generate evidence products to inform policy and scale-up

Key Components

1. District-Level Academic Strengthening

2. Block-Level Support

3. Targeted Learning Interventions

4. Data-Driven Monitoring

5. Evidence Generation

Who is Eligible?

How It Works / How to Participate

  1. District Preparation: DRG formation, training, and planning
  2. Block-Level Engagement: BRG setup and school linkages
  3. Teacher Capacity Building: Structured professional development and mentoring
  4. Classroom Support: Lesson plans, Big Books, and reading materials deployed
  5. Monitoring & Feedback: Digital tools track progress; review meetings refine strategies
  6. Evidence & Policy: Baseline and ongoing assessments feed into state policy decisions

Common Mistakes & Tips

FAQs

1. Which grades are targeted in the programme?
Grades 1 and 2 in selected government primary schools.

2. How long does the programme run?
The intervention lasts 12 months with structured follow-ups.

3. What is the role of Block Resource Groups?
BRGs act as a link between district leadership and schools, providing classroom mentoring and monitoring.

4. How does the programme address learning gaps?
Through a 24-day remediation cycle for Grade 2 students, focused worksheets, workbooks, and pilot multigrade teaching methods.

5. Is the programme scalable beyond selected blocks?
Yes. Evidence generation through assessments, case studies, and training modules supports state-level policy and potential scale-up.

6. What tools are used to monitor classroom progress?
Digitised classroom observation tools track teaching practices and student learning in real-time.

7. How are teachers supported?
Teachers receive structured lesson plans, Big Books, graded reading materials, and continuous mentoring from trained coordinators.

Conclusion

This UNICEF-supported initiative provides a comprehensive, data-driven approach to tackling foundational learning gaps in Bihar. By strengthening academic systems, enhancing teacher capacity, and focusing on targeted learning interventions, the programme creates sustainable improvements in literacy and numeracy for early-grade students while generating evidence for policy and scale-up.

For more information, visit UN Partner Portal.

Exit mobile version