Training and Educational Materials
For any programme to be successful there is need for a good training and IEC (information, education and communication) resources. This appendix gives you a brief idea of the videos, posters, and other AV materials that are available. Wherever possible we have given you the contact details. However in case you cannot access them directly, CED has kept a copy of these at its archives in Bangalore, and will be only too happy to send them to you on request. From time to time we will make additions and amendments. Another important aspect of a successful programme is to be able to access the experts, and NGOs who are specialised to handle these programmes. We are therefore also providing you a list of such resources. The updated version is available at our website. Needless to say that, we may have missed out important resources and persons. Kindly write to us at cedban@doccentre.net. You may also fill up these details directly on our website, and these will be displayed. 1. Training and IEC materials Films 1. Changing Currents: Not A Dirty Word, Centre for Science And Environment, The Television Trust For The Environment, 26Mins/ English, 12 November 2005, [L.D70d.V932] The film looks at the issue of access to safe water and basic sanitation, and its centrality to any kind of development process. Includes India's Sulabh International's acclaimed low-cost, self-financed sanitation facilities that have led to rehabilitation of scavengers and Orangi project in Pakistan's Karachi, which has used a grassroots movement to create a self-financed sanitation grid. ![]() A film on a striking example of community awareness efforts by Shanthi, which led to the construction of 250 Ecosan toilets in a tsunami affected village in South India. The film showcases how the construction of Ecosan toilets has changed the lives of many villagers and how it has also strengthened the process of Shanti's empowerment. Available at CED 3. ECOSAN, SCOPE [L.D70d.VB09] This 13 minutes segment on an ecosan project in one household in a village near Trichy can be used as an awareness-raising tool. The film is available as part of a larger film (Title: "The human excreta index", 2005) 4. DEWATS-Aravind Eye Hospital, Centre for Science and Research, Auroville and Catholic Relief Service and BORDA. [L.D70d.VB76] 5. Innovation in Sanitation, Centre for Science and Research, Auroville.October 2004 [L.D70d.VB76] Innovative use of Ferrocement for sanitation for Tsunami Affected Communities. 6. What Song Shall I Sing Today? , CED, English/Tamil 31 Min.32 sec. 2007 [L.D70d.VA95 a,b] It's nigh onto 3 years after the Tsunami. Yet some people continue to live in temporary settlements, in deplor ![]() Available at CED 7. Lets Clean up this mess !, CED, Tamil (32mins12sec) & English (31min 6sec). [L.D70d.VB54 a, b/V115] ![]() This is what the women at the East Devadhanam in Trichy decided. And they succeeded. Simple methods, collective awareness, commitment and action brought about good sanitation. The women’s self-helpgroups in this slum are operating the first ever community-based DEWATS system in Tamil Nadu. A "pay and use" toilet complex, the income is being used for maintenance and the treated water is being used for growing vegetables. 8. Small Steps... Big Leaps!!!, (Marathi with English Subtitled)- Swayam Shikshan Prayog,India,[L.D70d.VB04]. www.sspingia.org When
communities and local governments share a vision and work towards
creating selfreliant villages small steps can result in Big Leaps. The
film is a step-by-step guide for development for the grassroots,
practitioners' donors and organizations.9. No more Roving 1. Deenabandhu (Hin) 2. Low Cost Sanitation (Hin) 3. Vidhyan Ashram (Hin) 4. Vikas Bharati(Hin) 5. Centre of Science for Villagers (Hin) 6. The Awakening -(Eng) 7. An Alternative -(Hin) 8.Capart Film ,Tribals, The Awakening -(Hin) [V.zzz.755/LV.755 a+b+c] 10. Community Led Total Sanitation (CLTS) : Information & resources Institute of Development Studies The total elimination of open defecation holds promise of major gains in enhancing the wellbeing of women, children and men and in achieving the MDGs. Community-Led Total Sanitation (CLTS) is a participatory approach that started in Bangladesh and has been spread to varying degrees in India, Cambodia, Indonesia, China, Nepal. To a limited degree, it has also been trialled in some African countries. In a CLTS process, facilitators encourage communities to carry out their own appraisal and analysis of community sanitation. This generally leads them to recognise the volume of human waste they generate and how the practice of open defecation means they are likely to be ingesting one another’s faeces. The resulting disgust and desire for self-respect can induce them to take immediate and comprehensive action by digging and building latrines and stopping open defecation without waiting for external support in the form of hardware subsidy. Project Dates: 1 April 2006 – 31 October 2008 [L.D70d.S700] 11. Four Documentary film on Sanitation : Chikhalwadi Setting Precedents:Duration:11.58 Inauguration at Shivaji Nagar: Duration :05:43 Pune toilets, Partnerships : Duration 9 :44 Sandas Mela New Rituals : Duration 13:14 by SPARC, Society For Promotion of Area resurce Centres [L.D70d.VB83] 12. Igniting Change :Towards total Sanitation in Maharashtra (English) Kabir Khan, Water and Sanitation Program-South Asia (24min,30sec ) [L.D70d.VB84] 13. WASH : Water Sanitation Hygiene : For Development It's the big issue by Peter Adamson, [ 28 mins]. [L.D70d.S701] The consequences – for human health and dignity, for the quality of life and for the environment – make this the most devastating of all the many problems associated with poverty. Yet whether it is because the issue is seen as unglamorous, or whether because it affects mainly the poorest of the poor, the ‘WASH’ issue (water, sanitation, hygiene) is the great neglected cause of our times. This publication can be read cover to cover in less than 5 minutes. It sets out some of the most important facts, issues, opinions, and lessons learned about water, sanitation, and hygiene in recent years. 14. Sulabh Sanitation Movement, (With PDF file and Flash Player 6). Sulabh International Social Service Organisation. [L.D70d.S702] In India, two noteworhy examples of public-private collaboratiion in the area of public services are the public call offices (PCOs), which revolutionalized the availability of telephone services all over the country in the 1990s, and the Sulabh Sauchalayas, which are estimated to have provided sanitation facilities to ten million people at very low cost. 15. The Sulabh Sanitation Movement, Sulabh, 15min.38sec [L.D70d.VB85] click here for INTERVIEWS (Available at CED)
|