children

School-led Total Sanitation: Principles and Practices

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Overview of the components of SLTS and its implementation in Nepal to date by Kamal Adhikari (2010), Department of Water Supply and Sewerage, Nepal.

Children's involvement in CLTS: A case study of Oboyambo Community in Ghana

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Short note by Daniel Sarpong, Plan Ghana, describing children’s involvement in CLTS in one community in the Central Region of Ghana.

Children /School Led Total Sanitation: experiences from India and Cambodia

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This paper by Anupma Verma of Knowledge Links, India, describes her experience of triggering CLTS with children in schools and villages. She gives examples of how children have acted as change agents in Himachal Pradesh, Uttrakhand and in some other states of India. She also incorporates her recent experience of triggering CLTS with children in Cambodia.

Igniting Little Minds for Total Sanitation

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Note by Amrit Mehta of Knowledge Links, India, on his experience of CLTS triggering with children in schools as well as in villages. It shows that children can act as a powerful agents of change within communities.

Community Approaches to Total Sanitation: Case studies from India, Nepal, Sierra Leone, Zambia

This Field Note discusses the evolution of sanitation programming in UNICEF and the origins of CATS (Community Approaches to Sanitation). It examines each of the CATS essential elements and explores their implementation through country case studies. The case studies illustrate a range of methods under the CATS umbrella: Community-Led Total Sanitation (CLTS) in Sierra Leone and Zambia; School-Led Total Sanitation (SLTS) in Nepal; and the Total Sanitation Campaign (TSC) in India.

Child-to-Child Hygiene Behavior Change (Bangladesh)

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Good hygiene is part of total sanitation but deeply embedded cultural beliefs can make behaviour change difficult. Therefore, to plant the seeds of change early, Plan Bangladesh supports a programme of school sanitation and household hygiene education through a child-to-child approach in 83 schools of Sreepur upazila.

School-led Total Sanitation seems unstoppable (Nepal)

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SLTS has been implemented in Nepal since 2005. The approach incorporates the basic elements of the School Sanitation and Hygiene Education (SSHE) programme, the reward and revolving fund aspects of the Basic Sanitation Package (BSP), and the participatory tools and techniques of Community-Led Total Sanitation (CLTS). In the 15 districts of Nepal where UNICEF is active, SLTS is reaching out to 60,000 households with 300,000 people, with leadership coming from 200 schools.

Guidelines on School-led Total Sanitation (SLTS)

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This comprehensive manual describes the concept of School-led Total Sanitation, its key components, key strategies and step by step activities, based on the implementation experience in Nepal.

The Child to Child Approach in Community Led Total Sanitation

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The Child-to-Child Approach is an educational process that links children’s learning with taking action to promote the health, wellbeing and development of themselves, their families and their communities. This case study by Afrianto Kurniawan describes the application of the child to child approach in CLTS in Indonesia.

School-led Total Sanitation: A successful model to promote school and community sanitation and hygiene in Nepal

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This paper shows the promising developments with school-led total sanitation in Nepal. In this approach, which combines CLTS with School Sanitation and Hygiene Education (SSHE), children act as the key agents of change.

Shova Adhikari and Namaste Lal Shreshtra, UNICEF Nepal (2008) IN IRC Beyond construction: use by all

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