Family Values Transform Classrooms and Communities in Nepal: Kripa’s Story

Global Peace Foundation
October 7, 2019

One young woman in Nepal saw how she could help make a difference for Nepalese students when she discovered that there was no formal system for recruiting school counselors and that less than 1% of schools even hired people for the position. Native to Nepal herself, Kripa Sigdel knows that the family plays an essential role in Nepalese social structures and that supporting students, teachers, and parents from a psychological perspective would help identify core challenges not only academically, but in all aspects of student life. Especially at a time when mental health vulnerability is sky-rocketing among teenagers, according to the WHO, 2014.

Kripa Sigdel takes a selfie with students in Nepal

Empowered by Global Peace Women Leadership Academy, Kripa is a graduate student in Psychology who organized her own project from 2017 through 2018 to address the academic, emotional, and social vulnerability of youth in schools. Research shows that absenteeism, premature withdrawal from school, and students’ ineffective learning habits can be mitigated through the simple but effective process of teacher training. That is why Kripa decided to form an innovative series of workshops not only for teachers but also for parents to support students, incorporating the familial and cultural aspect essential to transforming the future of these students. Reaching out to three pilot schools in Kathmandu, the young leader organized “Workshops for Teachers and Parents on Identifying Problems and Supporting Students of Transitional Phase.”

More than fifty teachers and ninety parents from the three schools participated in the pilot workshops, indirectly affecting more than 4,000 students. Facilitators trained adults to recognize potential psychological issues among students, address behavioral challenges, provide support with problem-solving strategies, and create a support system to identify abuse, bullying, and even larger social problems like child marriage. Parents and teachers also covered assessment procedures and a process for intervention and referral throughout the workshop.

Kripa explained that the training sessions not only helped teachers, who often spend more time with students than their own parents but also the family as a whole to inform adults of empathetic understanding and listening styles that support children and students in the classroom and at home.

Kripa’s project brings parents and teachers together to support students in Nepal schools

“Parents play the most important part in anybody’s life,” said Kripa. “If parents are able to support children in need, it will strengthen family values and the family system, consequently making the world a better place to live and the individual more able to strive for good.”

Pricilla Gurung, a teacher attending the workshop, described her experience saying, “After the program, I felt: Every child has different problems and we should not judge just by looking or observing their present condition. We can also deal with problems the child has with different effective ways, not by forcing them to do the things but listening and communicating with them properly.”

Kripa continues to monitor the schools to research the ongoing effectiveness of the program, collecting data to present to other school systems and government agencies to showcase the need for parents, teachers, and the larger community to take action in schools.

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