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| Country: | Bangladesh |
| Region: | Asia |
| Field Of Work: | Learning/Education |
| Subsectors: | Access to Learning/Education, Income Generation |
| Target Populations: | Educational Institutions, Students |
| Year Elected: | 1988 |
These problems, coupled with cultural norms, mean that many grown women in Bangladesh are extremely uneducated. Given the traditional conservative culture, women in most families are captive in domestic or household jobs, unable to get even basic schooling. Sobhan deals with the obstacles to both women and poor children.
In addition to reforming the academic system in the schools, Sobhan has launched several complementary school-based programs to motivate and educate the students, and aid them financially. A school co-op store buys school materials wholesale, sells them at bargain prices, and distributes dividends at the end of the year among those children still enrolled in school. A tree nursery and planting program serves similar ends while helping to slow deforestation.
Sobhan has initiated several other community-outreach programs as well. During the flooding in early Fall 1988, Sobhan formed what became the first local non-governmental voluntary relief assistance to distribute food and medicine to the victims. He researched the malnutrition crisis in Bangladesh, and has created school-based poultry farms whose purpose is to teach children poultry farming. In addition, he has organized the attendance of about 3000 Imams (Muslim priests) to participate in a series of training sessions which focus on the reduction of illiteracy among adults and those children who attend Islamic schools.
Educators' responses to the ASBE methods have been overwhelmingly favorable. Sobhan began work in 1978 with three teachers and 75 students. In 1984, the government of Bangladesh gave him all 110 schools in Tangile District. A year later they gave him an additional 1,180 schools. That year, 960 teachers were trained, funded partly by UNESCO. In 1985, another 1,780 primary schools adopted Sobhan's methods. By July 1986, the Bangladeshi New Nation newspaper estimated that 14,500 students were benefiting from the new system. Sobhan claims to have organized training for 1,380 additional teachers in 1987. By the mid 1990s, in the face of a notoriously stiff bureaucracy, he managed to persuade over 7,000 schools to adopt his approach, and the government recommended national application of his innovations.
Additionally, at the beginning of 1995 the new governor of the state of Brasilia in central Brazil announced in his inauguration that he would bring this "Bangladesh Model" to his state.