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Office of Global Health and HIV (OGHH) Office of Overseas Programming & Training Support (OPATS) WASH in Schools Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene Training Package
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The Importance of WASH in Schools Healthy habit formation The school as a model for the community Children as agents of change WASH and school attendance
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School WASH Matters! More than half of all primary schools in developing countries have inadequate water facilities and nearly two-thirds lack single-gender bathrooms. 1 Each year, children lose 443 million school days because of water-related illnesses, 2 with 272 million lost due to diarrhea alone. 3 More than 40 percent of diarrhea cases in schoolchildren result from transmission in schools rather than homes. 4 Infections that children contract in schools will lead to infections among up to half of their household members. 5
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Elements of a WASH-Friendly School Facilities – Latrines, hand-washing stations, clean drinking water Teacher engagement – Lessons, school practices Student engagement – WASH student clubs Community engagement – School WASH committees
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Four Key School WASH Practices 1.Hand-washing in Schools 2.Water Treatment in Schools 3.Improved Latrine Use in Schools 4.Menstrual Hygiene Management in Schools
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School WASH Survey Assesses: WASH facilities at school – Water supply – Sanitation facilities – Hand-washing facilities Hygiene promotion activities – Teachers’ involvement – Maintenance of facilities – Regular cleaning of school – Community involvement for WASH efforts
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Jigsaw Activity Group A -- Handout 3: Small Doable Actions for WASH in Schools Group B -- Handout 4: Working with WASH Committees Group C -- Handout 5: Working with WASH Clubs Group D -- Handout 6: Ideas for WASH in Lesson Plans
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