Helen Holyoake spoke to us last week on Books for Christmas and much much more. From the response it was obviously a much enjoyed talk. She also donated a copy of "Mandela, the Authorised Portrait" for our Christmas Dinner Auction.
Thanks Helen, we hope you will be able to come.
Christmas Dinner
Don't forget to book with Mike Vink for the Dinner on Wednesday 5th December. It's only a week away! For the golf day we made R60 000. Excellent for a first attempt. Congratulations Greg Smith & Steve du Plessis...and a special thank you for Linda Vink who sold R11 000's worth of raffle tickets. Let's hope that we can be as successful with the Christmas Dinner.
We also need items for the auction. Please let Mike Vink know and bring items to Rotary for him to collect.
This Week
Our speaker is Daniel Forsthofer of Tutto Food Co. Tutto was only launched a matter of weeks ago and has a very interesting concept for creating self-help cooking projects.
"Keep clean, refrain from microbes" is the title of this drawing by an eighth-grader as part of the art contest setup by Rotarians to promote good hygiene. Illustration courtesy of the Rotary Club of Adana-Cukurova, Turkey
Turkish Rotarians have provided 2,500 students in four schools in Adana, Turkey, with new toilets and clean water facilities through a water and sanitation project supported by a Rotary Foundation global grant.
The project, sponsored by the Rotary clubs of Adana-Cukurova, Turkey, and Frutal, Minas Gerais, Brazil, demonstrates how Rotary’s new grant model can enable Rotarians to reach more people in need and make a larger and more lasting impact by involving the community, having a measurable outcome, and building in sustainability.
Assessing local needs
The Turkish Rotarians began conducting a needs assessment in January 2011 to come up with a project that improved health and hygiene at local schools. The club is in District 2430, part of the Future Vision pilot, which is testing the Rotary Foundation’s new grant model in advance of it being applied to all districts in July 2013.
After determining the shape of their project, the Rotarians sought an international sponsor, and discovered through RI’s LinkedIn group that District 4770, also in the pilot, was looking for a partner for a global grant project with a focus on health.
The two districts stayed in contact through the Future Vision LinkedIn group, and later submitted a global grant application, with the Frutal club serving as international partner. The project addressed two of Rotary’s areas of focus: water and sanitation and disease prevention and treatment.
Implementing the project
In July 2011, after the grant’s approval, members of the Turkish club renovated bathrooms in the four schools, providing new toilets, wash basins, floor and wall tiles, electrical wiring, and other improvements. Project funding included US$12,500 from the District Designated Funds of the two districts, $7,100 in cash donations, and a $16,050 global grant from the Foundation.
Four months later, club members, including two doctors, joined Rotarians from another club in training teams of teachers, administrators, and parents at each school how to instruct the students in good hygiene practice to prevent diseases like diarrhea, Guinea worm, and hepatitis. The teams were charged with monitoring the students’ progress.
Ensuring sustainability
To make sure the project continues to have an impact after its May 2012 conclusion, Rotarians posted colorfully illustrated signs on bathroom walls to remind the students about good practices, such as washing their hands, flushing toilets, and turning off the faucets to save water. Rotarians also organized an art and essay contest, with prizes, to keep the students focused on good hygiene and disease prevention. The contest is now part of an annual school event called Hygiene Day.
“We decided that sustainability can be achieved by putting hygiene into [the students’ daily lives] and not just by teacher trainers’ warnings,” said Adana-Cukurova club member Tugrul Yegenaga in the final report for the global grant. The report also notes that when the students eventually become parents, they will pass on what they’ve learned to their children.
Measuring outcome
To measure the project’s impact, the Rotarians who trained the parent/teacher/administrator teams visited the schools every month to observe how the teams were performing. They visited each school six times to assess student hygiene habits. Rotarians also determined that soap use had increased 300 percent in 2011 compared to the previous year.
The Turkish Rotarians sponsored concerts in Istanbul and Adana to raise funds for their efforts, and arranged newspaper and television coverage. As an added benefit of the project, the media coverage helped increase the public’s awareness of Rotary.
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