Prof. Harry Barkema, Prof. Jacqueline-Coyle Shapiro, Dr Eva Le Grand
Abstract
This mixed-method research combines in-depth interviews and longitudinal surveys regarding teachers and learners from an NGO educating 25,000 children in informal settlements across Ahmedabad, Bihar, and Uttar Pradesh. Using nine data waves, we found that teachers, often from the local community, meaningfully shape their work, enhancing social impact for learners. We identify key challenges and enablers that allow teachers to craft their work meaningfully and effectively for social impact. Additionally, we extend the Sen/Nussbaum theoretical lens to develop a framework that can be used to identify and measure what specific target groups have reason to value to be and to do in context (i.e., their socio-cultural, economic, industry-context), and apply it to measuring the teachers’ social impact on learners in these informal settlements.
How we change the conversation
Our research challenges mainstream beliefs that top-down policies foster human flourishing for employees and learners in poverty contexts. Instead, we unravel how schools can innovate by unleashing the agency, local knowledge, and inclination of (female) teachers to craft their roles meaningfully, ultimately improving learners’ human flourishing. Our new framework enables funders, policymakers, and organisations to identify and measure what target groups have reason to value in a diversity of contexts, which is key for designing social interventions, and for monitoring, evaluating, learning, and innovating these further towards human flourishing.