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  1. #1
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    I scratch my head about schools.

    In the early 19th Century, a fellow named Rosenwald decided to improve minority schools in the US by establishing a Sears Roebuck approach---a standardized school house.

    The Rosenwald Schools were a real breakthough---standard design of two classrooms---and all the necessaries to go forward with basic education.

    I watched one after another school house get custom designed and built in Iraq, often without any equipment, and with no standardization of materials, supplies, etc...

    In the US, for example, most school systems use standardized facilities and equipment---solely to minimize maintenance/operations from school to school.

    I assume an Afghan school is primarily going to be built with local materials, but some standardization should exist, from a facility standpoint---a kit of parts for a standard school. How big is a classroom? How many desks does it need? is there one chalk board per classroom? Etc...

    What are all those millions of dollars of NGO funds doing in Kabul without starting, for example, a simple bookbinding operation (even with binders) that could print an Afghan equivalent of a MacGuffey Reader in any language, on demand, and with fairly short runs. Each new school starts with a shipment of school books.

    Once you nailed a process for short runs of locally-produced educational materials in the appropriate language, how hard would it be to improve the content and build an on-demand library to support basic 1-12 level education in Afghanistan?

    How hard does this have to be?

    Steve

  2. #2
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    Quote Originally Posted by Steve the Planner View Post
    I assume an Afghan school is primarily going to be built with local materials, but some standardization should exist, from a facility standpoint---a kit of parts for a standard school. How big is a classroom? How many desks does it need? is there one chalk board per classroom? Etc...

    What are all those millions of dollars of NGO funds doing in Kabul without starting, for example, a simple bookbinding operation (even with binders) that could print an Afghan equivalent of a MacGuffey Reader in any language, on demand, and with fairly short runs. Each new school starts with a shipment of school books.

    Once you nailed a process for short runs of locally-produced educational materials in the appropriate language, how hard would it be to improve the content and build an on-demand library to support basic 1-12 level education in Afghanistan?

    How hard does this have to be?

    Steve
    It's hard to build any schools when it takes months of PRT visits of 18-20 dudes a whack, 4 or 5 vehicles, ANP escort, photographers, KLEs every time, then the paperwork gets lost... well, then there's the matter of contracting the work, acquiring the materials, deciding on a reasonable timeline to have it completed... hiring a (that's right, one) teacher, arranging security... forcing some governmental agency or NGO to front the funds for continued operation...

    It's all very hard, Steve!

    Or, you could just have a couple guys drive down in a HiLux and set everything up, but that would be dangerous! Way more dangerous than having huge swaths of ungovernable terrain with thousands of disenfranchised, unemployable, easily manipulated youth for the foreseeable future!
    "The status quo is not sustainable. All of DoD needs to be placed in a large bag and thoroughly shaken. Bureaucracy and micromanagement kill."
    -- Ken White


    "With a plan this complex, nothing can go wrong." -- Schmedlap

    "We are unlikely to usefully replicate the insights those unencumbered by a military staff college education might actually have." -- William F. Owen

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