Lesson 10 Colega Youth Manual Philippines
Lesson 10 Colega Youth Manual Philippines
Lesson 10 Colega Youth Manual Philippines
I Get to
THE UNIVERSAL DECLARATION OF
Human Rights
Article 26
You have the right to go to school.
THE RIGHT TO You should be able to learn a
AN EDUCATION profession or continue your studies
as far as you can.
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WELCOME
Display the mini posters where everyone can see them.
Greet the children warmly by name, and have them sit in a semi-circle in front of you.
Warm-up Song: This Little Light of Mine (Music at the back of Lesson 5 if needed.)
Explain: I have a few questions before our lesson. Don’t worry if you don’t know the
answer. The correct answer is what you think it is.
It is helpful to have another person do this with you, to count and record the answers.
After the questionnaire, say: Thank you all for answering your questions so cheerfully. We
have learned a lot about human rights.
REVIEW (5 minutes)
Ask: What are photo detective skills? (They are a way to help us know the story the
photographer is trying to tell. Or the children might name the skills, such as “Meet the
photo,” “Study the photo,” and “Make sense of the story of the photo.”)
• When you were looking at pictures this last week, did you think about any of these
skills?
Point to the mini poster, ”The Right to Protection from CHILD LABOR.”
Ask: Who remembers why child labor is not a good thing for children as well as youth, since
a child is defined as anyone under the age of 18? (They can’t go to school and they don’t
have any free time.)
• When do children have a right NOT to work? (When it is dangerous to their health or
when it keeps them from going to school.)
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INTRODUCTION (10 minutes)
Say: That’s exactly right. It’s important for children to go to school. And today we’re going
to learn about your RIGHT to go to school and get an education.
Activity: The Story of Malala (at the end of this lesson and also from Lesson 7)
Show the picture of a Muslim girl.
Ask: Do you remember when we talked about Malala a few weeks ago, the girl from
Pakistan who was shot because she said girls should have the right to go to school?
Ask: How do you know that education was important to Malala? (She talked to people
about education for everyone, including girls.)
• How do you know that she was brave? (She went to school even though the enemy
army threatened to kill her.)
• Why do you think education is important here in our community? (Accept all answers.
Write them very briefly on the board if you wish.)
Say: Fortunately you can go to school without worrying about an enemy army. Let’s think
about some of the things that go on in our lives here in our community.
How to do it: Draw a small square or circle in the middle of the chalkboard or on a big piece
of paper. Put an X on the square, and write the word “Class” or “Club” or “School” or
whatever word describes the space where you are meeting with the youth right now.
FACILITATOR TIP: See examples of possible “maps” at the end of the lesson. Instructions
here are simply to give you an idea of what could be on the “map.” Whatever you create will
be fine as long as the participants are involved in making it.
Ask: What is next to us? (Don’t forget to use the Talking Stick.)
• Let the youth respond: for example, the church (or synagogue). Draw another square or
circle and label it “church” or “store” or whatever they’ve mentioned.
• Or, as they tell you what to put on the map, have the various participants come up and
draw a picture of it close to the center circle or square. For example, the person who
suggested the church would come and draw a simple church.
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Ask: What’s across the street from us (or across from the mosque)?
Student responds, such as a health clinic. Ask that student to draw and label it.
• Where are our homes – where should we put them on our map?
Prompt the students with other items if they run out of ideas.
When the map is complete, help the youth think about it from a human rights perspective
by asking some questions.
Ask: What human rights that we’ve learned about do you think might match with some of
the different things you have on this map?
• Have the students look at the mini-posters to decide which ones might be related to
some of the things on the map.
• Put a UDHR article number from the mini-posters next to an item on the map if it is
related to it. For example:
Say: Thank you all for helping us recognize what’s happening right here where we live.
Looking at our “map,” human rights should be a part of our community.
FACILITATOR TIP: You won’t have a mini poster for some of the items because they
haven’t been covered in the lessons yet (such as a clinic or hospital - right to medical care)
or because they don’t really apply (pet or trees and flowers). Leave the item on the “map”
without a number.
DEVELOP (5 minutes)
Explain: One of the places we have on our map is the school where you learn new things.
You are so fortunate that you get to go to school. Just as in Malala’s country of Pakistan,
there are places in the world where some children don’t get to go to school, especially the
girls, which is not good.
• School is so important that the people who wrote the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights said you have the RIGHT to go to school and learn things. It’s called the Right to
an EDUCATION.
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Show the mini poster: You Have the Right to an Education.
Read Article 28 (Convention on the Rights of the Child), or ask a student to read:
Article 28
1. Children have a right to education.
2. Discipline in schools should be done fairly, with kindness and respect.
(This means teachers should treat you fairly with kindness and respect. They
should not hit you as a way to punish you.)
3. Primary education should be free and required.
Say: Without an education, you would not know about human rights.
* Learning new things can be fun. The things we learn in school help us prepare for the
future.
Ask: Who do you think is going to take care of you when you turn 18? (Take all answers.)
Explain: You are going to need to be able to buy food and clothes and to pay for a place to
live.
• It would be good to have a job where you could earn money and provide your family
with the things they need. And it would be really good if you liked your job.
Ask: What are some jobs you are thinking about to help you earn money? What are you
going to do to prepare for a job?
• If you want to have a job like being a teacher (point to “school” on the chart above) or a
doctor (point to the word “clinic”), do you need to go to school and get an education?
Of course you do!
Say: Henry and Suzie, would you please help me show some pictures?
FACILITATOR TIP: Hold the pictures in a fan shape, with the fronts facing you and the
backs facing the children so they can’t see the photos. Let them each choose two photos,
and then turn around and hold up all four photos for the class to see at the same time.
Choose more photos if you wish. Be careful not to run out of time for the rest of the lesson.
Say: Raise your hand if you can tell me what we call one of these people or what kind of
work they are doing, and I will write it on the chalkboard (or have a student write on the
board.)
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Job Needs Draw a line down the middle of the chalkboard. Write “Job” on one side
and “Needs” on the other.
When the first student responds, ask the following questions to the
class (just to reinforce the answer):
• What kinds of things would she or he have to learn so that he or she could do this job?
(Allow time for responses.)
• How would she learn these things – do you think she had to go to school to learn them?
(Write “School” or “Apprentice” or whatever term applies for learning this trade or job.)
Do this with each photo, one by one. After the students answer the questions about a
photo, and you write on the board, look at the back of the picture and tell them what it says
about the job that the photograph is showing.
Then go on to the next photo, ask the questions, write on the board, and read the back.
Continue with the ones you’ve chosen.
Say: Raise your hand and tell me if you think you might like to do this kind of work when
you grow up.
Explain: We need to go to school to learn how to do some of the jobs on our chart.
Sometimes we go just until we finish high school and then go to a trade school or become
an apprentice and get special training. Sometimes people stay in school and go to the
university.
Ask: Why do you think everyone should be able to go to school? (Accept all answers.)
Explain: You are all going to grow up. You need to learn new things every day so that when
you grow up, you’ll be able to work at a job and help your families and your neighbors.
Ask: Since you all have the right to go to school, what is your responsibility? (Allow all
answers.)
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Explain: When you go to school, you have a responsibility to pay attention and to work hard
to learn the things you are being taught by your teachers.
• It’s also really important to share what you have learned with other people.
Say: We’ve been talking about a lot of rights, and we’ve discussed our responsibilities that
go with those rights. Let’s play a game where we see who can match rights with
responsibilities the fastest.
How to play: Quickly have the students count off, giving each one a number: One, two, one,
two, one, two – until everyone has a number. The girls and the boys should be mixed
together. Put all the “ones” in a group (or team), and all the “twos” in another group.
FACILITATOR TIP: You can use either the marked cards or the unmarked cards, whichever
set you think will be more fun for the youth. Make sure that both teams have copies of the
same set of cards.
Team A goes to one side of the room, and Team B goes to the other side. If you have more
than two teams, put them in different parts of the room.
Say: Let’s see who can match rights with responsibilities the fastest.
Say: 1, 2, 3, GO!
At the end of the game, congratulate everyone, and spend a few minutes matching up the
corresponding pairs again.
Say: Don’t forget that our responsibilities to each other are just as important as our human
rights.
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CONCLUSION (5 minutes)
Ask: How can you let the things you have learned about our Human Rights shine at home
and in the neighborhood? (By sharing what they have learned everywhere with everyone.)
Say: Remember Malala? (Show the picture.) She knew we all have a right to go to school,
but she didn’t just go by herself and not worry about other people.
• Today she is letting her light shine by telling everyone that they have the right to an
education, and they should go to school. And their parents should let them do that.
Show the mini poster and ask: Who would like to read this for us?
One child, one teacher, one pen and one book can change the world.
Say: This is what Malala said when she spoke to some government leaders.
Explain: You don’t need to have a big fancy school. All you need are ordinary materials,
someone who is willing and able to be the teacher, and children who are willing to learn.
Simple little things can make a huge difference.
Ask: Does this mean you can be a teacher just by setting a good example? (Yes.)
Explain: When you learn something new, you should pass it on to others like Malala did.
Then you are a teacher, too.
• And just like our song (or poem), that’s how you let your light shine, by teaching people
good things that you are learning that they might not already know.
CHALLENGE
Say: This week, let your light shine and teach this song to your friends and family.
• Invite your friends to come and join us. I can hardly wait to see you again next time!
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FACILITATOR NOTES AND REFLECTIONS
Adapted from Keating-Chetwynd, Sarah, ed., How All Teachers Can Support Citizenship and Human Rights
Education: A Framework for the Development of Competences. Council of Europe, 2008, p. 61.)
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STUDENT QUESTIONNAIRE 2 Date ______________________________
YES NO
• Raise your hand if you have NOT heard of the United Nations.
(Count the hands.)
Let any child answer who thinks she or he might know. Don’t
worry about whether the answer is right or not. Just count the
number of children who answer.
Keep this questionnaire and the questionnaire from the first lesson in a safe place. They
may be useful for future reference.
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Photo: Young Boy in a Brickyard
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Young boy working in a brickyard in Bolivia, South America. Photographed by Crozet M. 2010. © ILO
COMMUNITY MAP EXAMPLES
The community map should be very simple and very easy. Example 1 has roads and trees.
Example 2 just has names and arrows. Use whichever one fits your needs best and call it
good. What you want is something that is quick and easy to draw as the students name
and illustrate their community. It should be fun for them.
Field
House House Our CLUB
Field
playground
Sam’s house
Meena’s house School
Park Health
field Store clinic Ali’s
house
EXAMPLE 2
church
Meena’s
home
Celia’s
OUR CLUB
home
Store
Ana’s home
Bank
School
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MALALA YOUSAFZAI
Malala was born in 1997. Her parents named her after a very famous woman from the
1800’s who died leading Pakistan’s army to victory against their enemies. Her country
never forgot her, and Malala admired her a great deal.
Pakistan is a beautiful country but more than half the girls there don’t go to school even
though most of the boys do. This bothered Malala a lot and she didn’t think it was fair,
especially since she loved school.
Then the Taliban army came to her town. They are a group of people who have very rigid
ideas about society, and they announced that girls could no longer go to school, but Malala
and her friends refused to obey them. When Malala was 11 years old, she even gave a talk
called, “How dare the Taliban take away my basic right to education?”
Malala began to write a blog on the internet about what was happening. Over the next few
years, people from different newspapers interviewed her and she was becoming famous for
speaking out in favor of education for girls.
So the Taliban issued a death threat against her but nobody thought the Taliban would
actually kill a young person.
Then one day when Malala was 15 years old, she was riding a bus with friends on their way
home from school, when a masked gunman stopped the bus and got on board, and
shouted, “Who is Malala?” Her friends looked in her direction, accidentally giving her away.
The gunman immediately fired at her, before jumping off the bus and running away.
Malala almost died but survived after many surgeries. People around the world were
outraged that someone would try to kill a girl just because she wanted to go to school. The
National Assembly of Pakistan swiftly approved the first Right to Free and Compulsory
Education bill in that country’s history. That was really amazing.
Today Malala continues to speak out in favor of education, especially for girls. In 2014,
when she was only 17 years old, Malala received the Nobel Peace Prize. This prize is given
to someone who has done the best work in the whole world to promote peace. She was the
youngest person ever to be given that award.
The U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon described her as "a brave and gentle advocate of
peace who through the simple act of going to school became a global teacher.”
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THE RIGHT TO
EDUCATION
UDHR 26 & CRC 28 & 29
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1. Children have a right to an education.
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OCCUPATION PHOTOS
These cooks can earn more money because they have special skills.
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A FARMER plants crops and raises animals. When a farmer harvests his crops, he sells
them to other people. If he has animals like sheep, he will sell their wool or sell the animals
for meat. If he has cows, he will sell their milk.
There are no special education requirements to be a farmer. There are some classes that
students may be able to take in high school or university that will help them to know better
how to manage a good farm, how to grow more and better crops and how to best care for
animals.
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AN AIRLINE PILOT flies airplanes that carry people or shipments of things that people
want to sell or move from one place to another.
A pilot must learn to fly at a special school that teaches people how to fly. He or she must
fly many hours with a teacher, then take a test which will give him or her a license or
permission to fly a plane. A person can also learn to fly if he or she is accepted into military
flight school.
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A MECHANIC repairs machines. Sometimes these machines are big, like machines in
factories or sometimes they are smaller like motors in cars and trucks.
Aspiring mechanics must find someone who will allow them to work as an apprentice until
they learn the skills they need to work on their own.
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A TEACHER works in a classroom with children. He or she teaches them to read and write.
He or she may teach mathematics, history or other topics. In many countries a teacher
must finish high school and complete a course of study at a teacher training school or
university.
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A NURSE takes care of sick people, sometimes in a hospital or clinic helping a doctor. He
or she must complete a course of study at a nursing school or university. This can take one
year or more, depending on what kind of nurse you want to become. She or he must pass a
test and work as a helper in a clinic or hospital before being allowed to practice.
A DOCTOR helps people who are sick or hurt. He can decide what is making them sick. He
can give them medicine. He can set broken bones and help others who are hurt.
If you want to be a doctor, you must complete a course of study at a university. After that
you would go to medical school where they train doctors for four more years. Then you
would take another test and be able to practice medicine.
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A DENTIST helps you take care of your teeth, filling cavities and checking your gums. He or
she helps with toothaches and gives you advice and instruction on taking good care of the
teeth and gums.
A dentist has to finish at a university before applying for a school in dentistry. When the
course is finished, he or she takes an exam to practice being a dentist.
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One child,
one teacher,
one
pen,
and
one
book
can
change
the world.
Malala Yousafzai on her 16th birthday
United Nations Youth Assembly
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CHILDREN’S RIGHTS AND RESPONSIBILITIES MATCH-UP SET 1
Freedom of Expression
Child Labor
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SET 1
Discrimination
Family
Right to a family and someone who cares Responsibility to show love and caring to
for you others
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SET 1
Education
Source: Adapted from an illustrated guide issued by the National Children's Rights Committee, South
Africa (http://www.cyc-net.org/cycnet-usage.html).
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CHILDREN’S RIGHTS AND RESPONSIBILITIES MATCH-UP SET 2
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SET 2
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SET 2
Source: Adapted from an illustrated guide issued by the National Children's Rights Committee, South
Africa (http://www.cyc-net.org/cycnet-usage.html).
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