
The provinces of Papua and West Papua rank among the lowest in Indonesia across most human development indices. They are the provinces with the highest relative poverty, at 26.56 and 21.33 percent respectively, as of March 2022. In 2015, baseline data indicated that almost half of grade 2 and 3 students (48.5 per cent) in the two provinces were non-readers compared with 5.9 per cent nationally. The lengthy closure of schools and disrupted school reopenings due to the pandemic, took a heavy toll on Papuan children’s learning, as learning time in schools was missed, resulting in widespread learning loss on top of already weak learning outcomes.
Compared to other parts of the country, access to alternative digital or blended learning modalities is limited in Papua, and children are therefore likely to fall further behind. Key factors driving children’s poor learning outcomes are poorly trained teachers, teacher and principal absenteeism, insufficiently contextualized curricula, and education being undervalued by students and parents.
The Ministry of Education, Culture, Research and Training of Indonesia (MoECRT), with the support of the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade of Australia (DFAT), launched the Early Grade Literacy (EGL) programme in Papua and West Papua provinces, aiming to improve teachers’ skills and children’s reading and comprehension skills. Key strategies of the EGL programme include teacher capacity development through training and mentoring; the provision of contextualized learning materials; community mobilization and policy advocacy for scalability, through the prioritization of local government resources to promote sustainability.
Tailored instruction is a vital component of EGL, providing individualized support to marginalized children, an approach consistent with MoECRT’s Emancipated Learning reform agenda. To achieve SDG4 for inclusive quality education for all children in Indonesia, the EGL programme focuses on poor and lowest-performing learners in the early grades of primary school. The programme is designed to address key challenges to improving the quality and effectiveness of teaching and learning practices in the early grades by:
Following the success of the initial phase of the programme in six districts, UNICEF advocated for its expansion. As a result, four additional districts allocated budgets and initiated implementation of the programme. Furthermore, at national level, the Ministry of Home Affairs encouraged all districts in Indonesia to prioritize literacy though programmes such as the EGL programme. Some results from the EGL programme include:
To scale up the EGL programme, UNICEF developed a roadmap with concrete milestones to be achieved at school, district and system levels using available resources. A series of capacity-building workshops were held among local governments in Papua and West Papua to assist with implementing the roadmap. To date, this work has yielded over $740,000 in committed local funds to replicate and scale-up the programme. Although a systematic cross-country transfer of the innovation is yet to happen, the programme has been recognized as a good model by UNICEF East Asia and Pacific Regional Office (EAPRO) and Headquarters, with the potential for further replication, through South-South and triangular cooperation in other countries facing similar challenges.
Some of the lessons learned from the initiative include:

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