Wednesday, 20 April 2011

http://www.vinyl-banners.co.uk/billboard_poster_sizes.htm

Standard Billboard Poster Sizes
      4 Sheet
      6 Sheet
      
(Bus Stop Poster)
      12 Sheet
      16 Sheet
      32 Sheet
      48 Sheet
      64 Sheet
      96 Sheet

http://www.ehow.com/how_16618_advertise-billboard.html


How to Advertise on a Billboard

Billboard advertising is a high-impact way of getting your advertising message across. It's also one of the most cost-effective ways to make sure everyone knows you mean business.

Difficulty:
 
Moderate

Instructions

    • 1
      Consider carefully whether this will be money well spent. The initial cash outlay for outdoor advertising varies according to the market, but is more expensive than many other advertising methods. However, given the fact that thousands of people per day may be exposed to your message, billboards are very cost-effective.
    • 2
      Decide who you want to reach with your advertising message and select the appropriate size billboard. Take into consideration the cost of various sizes of billboards. If your company has a physical location, use a smaller sign to direct traffic to your place of business.
    • 3
      Check out billboard sizes: Typical billboards are 14 by 48 feet, 12 by 24 feet (30-sheet) and 5 by 11 feet (8-sheet). The largest sign is the one you most often notice along the freeway. With this sign you get the maximum exposure. Because of the different placement requirements for smaller signs, as the sign decreases in size, the market exposed to the message becomes smaller and more centralized.
    • 4
      Find someone to design your billboard. Most advertising agencies have a department that handles outdoor advertising, and the billboard companies themselves have in-house designers to assist you with your ad.
    • 5
      Stay involved during the entire process. Don't let yourself get pushed aside in the design phase, and speak up if you feel that the placement of your billboards is not adequate.
    • 6
      Physically monitor the rotation and placement of your signs. Notify the company immediately if you discover your ads are not being placed as agreed.
Ads by Google

Tips & Warnings

  • You can have any ad agency design your billboard, but it's more cost-effective to let the billboard company design your advertising.
  • Remember your billboard is not supposed to go into great detail. The function of billboard advertising is primarily to reinforce advertising messages that you've been putting out using other media. Your audience is on the move, so make your message brief and eye-catching.


Read more: How to Advertise on a Billboard | eHow.com http://www.ehow.com/how_16618_advertise-billboard.html#ixzz1K5Pz7RHY

http://ideas.repec.org/p/aer/rpaper/rp_167.html

Despite the prevalence and the many dangers associated with child labour, the phenomenon has received the attention of researchers, academicians and policy makers only recently, and not until International Labour Organization (ILO) estimates showed a large and increasing number of working children worldwide. It is now recognized that in order to combat child labour effectively, policies should be grounded in an informed understanding of its causes, roles and implications. This study uses data from the 1992, 1999 and 2002 Uganda National Household Surveys to explore the extent, determinants and forms of child labour in a poor but growing economy. Of note here is that over this period Uganda introduced universal and compulsory primary education. The study highlights the extent, characteristics and determinants of child labour in Uganda and their evolution over the decade. The theoretical framework is a standard household production model that analyses the allocation of time within the household. Using probit and tobit models, we estimate the determinants of child labour for the individual child worker. The results indicate that child labour is still common, widespread and starts at an early age in Uganda, although it has reduced significantly over the years. Education and formal employment of the household head significantly decrease the probability that a child will work. Household welfare is another indicator of child labour, as poor households are more likely to have working children. A comparison of the three data sets reveals an increase in the percentage of children combining work and study over time. Nevertheless, the likelihood of child labour increases with the age of the child. The findings provide important results for informing policies to reduce, and possibly eliminate, child labour in the country.



uganda child labour stats based on, based on demographic and health surveyhttp://www.google.co.uk/url?sa=t&source=web&cd=1&sqi=2&ved=0CC0QFjAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.ilo.org%2Fipecinfo%2Fproduct%2Fdownload.do%3Ftype%3Ddocument%26id%3D739&rct=j&q=child%20labour%20uganda&ei=4NiuTbygIcmi8QOpuLzhBA&usg=AFQjCNHSs-Yz7lQquW1FQAPM523Ju1F3Mw y 200-01 (

it is estimated that there are about 2.7 million working children in uganda, giving an overall participation rate of 34.2% . more than half of the working children are aged 10-14 . notable is also the fact that 1 third of these children are less than 10 years old, the number of working children aged 5-17 years attending primary school were estimated to be about 1.9 million.  more than 300.000 children in this age group had recieved no formal education. the eastern region of uganda is reported to have the highest population of children workers. page 10 of report.

Wednesday, 13 April 2011

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/7120484.stm

Ugandan justice 'fails on rape'
A woman walking with a baby on her back in northern Uganda
Women in the north often do not report sexual abuse
The Ugandan justice system is tacitly condoning sexual violence against women and girls in the north of the country, Amnesty International says in a report.The vast majority of sexual abuse cases were not reported because most victims had lost hope that perpetrators would be jailed, the human rights group said.
"Violence against women is endemic throughout Uganda," a spokesman said.
The 21-year conflict in the north with Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) rebels had exacerbated the problem, he said.

 The situation remains grim, despite the recent cessation of hostilities 
Amnesty's Godfrey Odongo

The LRA built a reputation for mutilating their victims and kidnapping thousands of children to serve as fighters, porters and sex slaves.
Despite last year's truce between the army and LRA, the region remains insecure and an estimated 1.5m people still remain in displacement camps.
A spokesman for Uganda's judiciary dismissed the allegations.
'Insult to injury'
Forms of violence that Amnesty reports include rape, child sexual abuse and physical assault - perpetrated especially in camps.

Children living in a displacement camp in northern Uganda
Some 1.5m people still live in camps because of the conflict

The victims told Amnesty researchers that the abusers included government forces, law enforcement officers, official authorities, local council leaders, spouses and relatives.
"The situation remains grim, despite the recent cessation of hostilities," said Godfrey Odongo, Amnesty's researcher in Kampala.
"The horrific violence committed during the many years of conflict in northern Uganda continues to aggravate discrimination against women and girls in the area today," he said.
The report says police are often reluctant to investigate cases involving soldiers and Ugandan law does not recognise marital rape as a criminal offence.
"Adding insult to injury, the justice system operating in northern Uganda is grossly inadequate in ensuring the protection of these women and girls - almost always allowing the perpetrators to walk free," Mr Odongo said.
Police sometimes demand money to investigate cases and victims are can be asked to pay costs such as providing lunch for investigating officers or to feed the suspect in detention, the report says.
Amnesty called for immediate government action to ensure that justice was served in cases of sexual violence.
A judiciary spokesman said the criticisms were not fair.
"It's not true that the judiciary has let down the victims of sexual abuse," Elias Kisawuzi told the BBC's Network Africa programme.
"Until recently we were adversely affected by the war situation in terms of capacity," he said.
But more magistrates and judges had been dispatched to the area since the security situation had improved, he said.

http://www.har.interconnection.org/

Monday, 4 April 2011

http://www.charlenesproject.org/index.php/latest-news

http://www.education-africa.com/wiki/index_en.php?title=Uganda_(EN)

http://www.education-africa.com/wiki/index_en.php?title=Uganda_(EN)

http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/katineblog/2008/may/23/ugandawillachieveitsmillen

http://www.salveinternational.org/id5.html

Ugandan Schools: an overview
Education is the key element for anyone wanting to improve on their situation and to move towards a better future. In Uganda there are many, many people competing for a limited number of good jobs, and without a decent education there is very little chance of ever landing one. However, getting that education in the first place is a huge challenge. During his time in office, Museveni, the Ugandan President, has been keen to promote free primary education for all. Whilst this may be a noble goal in theory, the reality is somewhat different. Despite these ideologies, Uganda has very few free government schools, and those that do exist are hugely oversubscribed. It is not uncommon for classes to have well over one hundred students a-piece, with very little in the way of facilities, and unmotivated, over-worked teachers heading them. This means that for most of the population, especially those who want a good education, the only real option is private school.

In Uganda, private schools vary enormously in fees and quality, and sadly, with so many large families in one country, there is rarely enough money to go around. This means that many children are left sitting at home, waiting for their relatives to try to scrape together enough money to send them to school. However, matters are made worse by the fact that there are many extra school requirements to pay for on top of fees. From brooms and blankets to school books and shoe polish, each child must turn up at the gates with everything asked of them, or else they will simply be sent back home. It is a seemingly impossible task for many children and their families to fund an education, and a lot of children only manage to pay part of their fees. This is a common occurrence, and however hard a child has worked at school, if they can't pay their fees in full they are not given their school reports or exam certificates. Their whole year of learning is effectively made worthless. Consequently, many children end up changing schools every term, building up debts wherever they go as they simply can't afford to pay them.
The Ugandan Education System
 
 
The Ugandan school year starts in February and finishes in December. The first term runs from February to April, the second term from May until early August, and the third term from September to December. This is why at S.A.L.V.E. International we ask for our sponsorship payments to be made three times a year, on January 1st, May 1st and September 1st in order to correspond with school fees being paid. Alternatively, you can choose to pay your sponsorship costs in one yearly lump sum on January 1st.

The Ugandan Education system follows a fairly similar pattern to that in Britain. Children are in primary school for seven years (Primary 1- Primary 7), and then continue through secondary school for the next six years (Senior 1- Senior 6). 
The three most important school years for a child in Uganda are:
- Primary 7: All students must take leaving exams which will determine which secondary school they go to.
- Senior 4: O-Level year.
- Senior 6: A-Level year.

At S.A.L.V.E. International, we want to see all of the children that we support go to school up until the end of Senior 4. After Senior 4 we will talk seriously with the child about what they think their future holds, and from there we will make the decision as to whether they should continue on to A-Levels or whether they should move on to vocational training. Once they have completed this next stage of their education, their sponsor is no longer expected to support them. However, if the child is bright enough to go on to university, and the sponsor wishes to support them, we will be extremely happy for the sponsorship to continue, and we will offer our support in any way we can.

The Ugandan school system is very competitive. There are so many children who want an education, that schools all over the country are able to pick and choose the best students in order to improve their grade average and national standing. Testing is relentless for students, as every term they have to take exams as well as having ongoing assessments of their performance; based on their results they are given a grade and a position in their class. If the child is successful, they can move in to the next class in the New Year. However, if their performance is poor they may have to repeat the school year again. 
As many of the children in our program have been out of education for a long time, it may take a while for their results to improve. This is understandable and expected as they have a lot of adjustments to make in their new life. As they enter their primary school, they will undergo an aptitude test in order to determine their school year. The results of this are not necessarily based on what they know, but rather on how quickly they can learn. Thus, the child may be placed a couple of classes higher than when they were last in school, leaving them with quite a bit of catching-up to do. This is why we pay for our children to get extra lessons when they first re-enter school, helping them to catch-up with their classmates much quicker than they would do otherwise. Classes in Uganda are not based on age because a lot of children drop out and re-enter school based on whether or not they can afford to pay the school fees. This means that the children in our program might be in classes with students who are a lot older or a lot younger than them. Whilst this may seem strange to us, it is of no consequence in Uganda, as the most important factor is that they all want to learn! 
 
If you were to ask any child in Uganda if they would prefer to go to boarding school or day school, the answer would almost always come back as boarding school. In Ugandan boarding schools, children are provided with a much better education, as students get to fully concentrate on their studies and receive extra classes in the evenings. It is hard to be a teacher in Uganda, as you are faced with such large class sizes and poor resources that it is incredibly difficult for you to give one-to-one attention to those students who need it most. When the day-school pupils go home after classes, the teachers are at last able to work on a more individual basis with the boarders. That is why at S.A.L.V.E. International we want all children in our program to attend boarding school, where they will receive the best education that they can get. They have been through so much already in their short lives that we want to give them the best chance possible to move forward and to shape their future for themselves.
 
 
Improving School Facilities
 
Schools in Uganda face huge challenges due to their lack of facilities. This makes it far harder for the children to learn and for the teachers to teach to a reasonable standard. Imagine schools that are often only half built, without textbooks or any kind of teaching aids beyond a blackboard to help stimulate the children's minds. If a school does improve its facilities, it also has to raise its fees in order to cover the improvement costs. This of course means that fewer families in the community can then afford to send their children to the school to make use of the better facilities. That is why at S.A.L.V.E. International we want to fundraise for the school(s) we send our sponsored children to. Not only do we want to improve their education, but we want to improve the education of hundreds of other children in the community also. If the money for the improvements comes from an outside source, the school does not need to raise its prices to compensate for them. Thus, a better education remains more affordable for all, helping us to achieve our aim of an education for all.
Click here to return to 'Where We Work'
Enter content here

Emma/n61210314_37058283_4640.jpg
Queuing up for porridge at break-time.


 
Primary Education
 
Children in Primary school take four main subjects, English, Maths, Science and SST. SST stands for Social Studies, a subject that includes Geography, History and Religious Studies. There is also the option of taking Agriculture as a fifth subject, depending on whether the school provides this option or not. They are examined at the end of every term in each of these subjects.

Grade boundaries for primary school:

Distinction = 100 - 80 %
Credit = 79 - 50%
Pass = 49 - 30%
Fail = 29 - 0% 

Secondary Education
Children in secondary school take a wide variety of subjects with English, Maths and Science (Biology, Chemistry and Physics) as the key subjects.

For each subject, a child is given grades based on their exam performance:

Division 1 = 100-81 %
Division 2 = 81-72 %
Class 3 = 72-68 %
Class 4 = 68-61 %
Class 5 = 61-53 %
Class 6 (Fail) = 53-0 %
Emma/CopyofChristmas429.jpg.w300h225-1.jpg

    

Emma/CopyofSALVE018.jpg.w300h225.jpg

© 2009 SALVE International                                
Registered Charity No. 1126793

http://www.educateuganda.org/

Education can be the difference between life and death! Studies have shown, if a child in Uganda remains in school through the seventh grade, that child is 40% less likely to contract the AIDS virus (for more information, visit www.avert.org). This is why we started Educate Uganda, a non profit organization focused on helping improve the education of the impoverished children of Uganda by providing school fees for orphaned children and improving their learning environment.

http://www.un.org/events/tenstories/06/story.asp?storyID=100

Uganda: Child soldiers at centre of mounting humanitarian crisis

With an armed rebellion threatening to undermine Uganda’s progress to economic development, child soldiers emerge as central figures amid deadly violence and growing humanitarian emergency.
The bustling capital city of Kampala, located in the south, exemplifies Uganda’s transformation from a country plagued by economic decay to prosperity. With a revitalized GDP growth of more than 8% over the past three years, Uganda comes across as a compelling story of hope for other African nations. However, an armed insurgency in northern and eastern Uganda has created one of Africa’s largest displaced populations.
The 18-year old rebellion of the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) against the government has forced over 1.6 million Ugandans - half of them children - to flee to squalid and overcrowded camps in order to escape wanton attacks and killings. The number of internally displaced persons has almost tripled since 2002. Attacks on soft civilian targets continue, carried out by child soldiers much younger than their victims.
The most disturbing aspect of this humanitarian crisis is the fact that this is a war fought by children on children - minors make up almost 90% of the LRA’s soldiers. Some recruits are as young as eight and are inducted through raids on villages. They are brutalized and forced to commit atrocities on fellow abductees and even siblings. Those who attempt to escape are killed. For those living in a state of constant fear, violence becomes a way of life and the psychological trauma is incalculable. Fearing abduction, streams of children, often with mothers in tow, leave their homes every night and walk for hours from surrounding villages to reach the relative safety of major towns, only to trek their way home in the first light. Some 40,000 “night commuters” sleep under verandas, in schools, hospital courtyards or bus parking places to evade the snare of the LRA.
Since the rebellion began in the 1980s, some 30,000 children have been abducted to work as child soldiers and porters, or to serve as “wives” of rebels and bear their children. These numbers have soared, with 10,000 children abducted in the past 18 months alone.
Despite the gravity of the humanitarian situation, less than 10% of the $130 million requested by the humanitarian community for 2004 has been received. In some areas, malnutrition rates as high as 30% have been recorded among children. Fear of rebel attacks badly hit the planting season for 2004, threatening to aggravate the already severe food shortages in the coming months. Health facilities barely function as stocks run out and health workers flee to escape LRA attacks.
Even as a peace process makes significant progress in neighbouring Sudan, the peace in Uganda is made tenuous by these developments. The “success story” that Uganda represents in the minds of the world’s economic policy makers presents a jarring contrast with the tragedy of conflict in the north and east that shows no signs of abating.

http://iwpr.net/report-news/education-crisis-uganda%E2%80%99s-north

Education in Crisis in Uganda’s North

Region struggles to rebuild school system after two decades of war.
Although Daniel Omara, 17, comes to school early and waits patiently in his classroom each morning, he finds only other students there.
All too often, even by midday few teachers have arrived at the school, at Abella in the Otwal area northwest of the northern Ugandan town of Lira.
Most days end with Omara having learned nothing.
His fellow-pupils frequently fight one another, disrupting those are trying to prepare for their final exams.
“My [classmates] don’t know even how to read and write,” Omara told IWPR. “I feel so sorry because at the end of the term, you find that we have grasped nothing.”
But Omara does not blame his teachers; he knows that the complex problems plaguing education in northern Uganda stem from 20 years of war with the Lord’s Resistance Army, LRA.
Abella is the same school that was once attended by LRA leader Joseph Kony, who grew up in the nearby community of Odek.
After two decades of war and with warrants for his arrest hanging over his head from the International Criminal Court, ICC, in The Hague, Kony has taken his army to a remote corner of northeastern Democratic Republic of Congo, DRC.
Like Abella, schools across north Uganda were abandoned and suffered damage during the war.
School representatives are working with the Ugandan government to provide free primary education for all children as part of the country’s Universal Primary Education programme or UPE. This was introduced by the authorities in January 1997 in an attempt to deliver free primary education to four children in each family.
An estimated 7.6 million children are currently enrolled in state schools nationwide.
However, because of the war, at least 30 per cent of school-age children in the north are not in education, according to Dan Okello, a spokesman for the Uganda Peoples Congress party.
“It’s a failure of the UPE programme in itself,” said Okello. “How can it be called Universal Primary Education when one third of the population of children of school age are excluded?”
Okello says average test scores in the north are well below those of the rest of the country. The majority of children in the north leave school without basic skills in reading, writing, and arithmetic.
While those who can afford it move their children to private schools, he said, this is not an option for poorer families, he said.
According to Okello, this means that children from rural schools in the north are not given opportunities to pursue careers in engineering, medicine or science, as few are able to compete for a university place.
Teachers complain that the UPE programme aims merely boost the numbers in education without addressing the quality of teaching. It does not, for example, ensure that school curricula are in line with the requirements for examinations.
“The principles on which examinations are used to promote students in the education system are ignored in the UPE programme,” said Joel Peter Onyutha of the Abella school.
Teachers say they do not even get the state salaries they are due, and depend instead on contributions from parents, which can halt the moment there is a disagreement between them. That is one of the reasons why teachers at schools like Abella turn up for work only intermittently.
“I take my time to go to school since I [must] first take my children to the farm, so that the next time parents fail to pay us, I will have something to feed them,” said another teacher, Jasper Odyek. “We cannot depend on parents’ contribution alone. It’s too meagre.”
Onyutha said teachers in northern Uganda also lack adequate housing, which is traditionally provided by the school.
District Education Officer Quinto Okello said some teachers sleep in one-roomed thatched huts built in the 1970s.
There are fears that some schools could even lose their property, as villagers try to reclaim land they once leased out to them. Some farmers want school buildings demolished so that they can farm the land.
That may not be possible, however, according to Uganda’s federal minister of lands, Daniel Omara Atubo, who explained that land donated to build either schools or churches prior to 1945 now belongs to the government.
“People who think that they are going to [get] back the land that was donated by their ancestors – their dreams might not come true,” he said.
While some schools are being helped by the National School Facility Grant programme, which provides money for teachers’ housing, the needs are still great, said Okello.
The money provided by this fund is insufficient to provide housing for teachers at all the schools in the district.
“This financial year, we have planned to construct only three teachers’ houses,” said Okello.
Overcrowding in schools in the north is having a detrimental effect on children’s education.
As peace has settled across the north in recent years, enrolment numbers have surged, putting pressure on classrooms and teachers, according to the district inspector of schools, Liberata Omach.
“Alanyi, which is a primary school in Abako area near Lira, has enrolled 2,015 pupils [but] has only seven classrooms,” said Omach.
She said that while the ideal pupil-to-classroom ratio in Uganda was set at 55 to one, the Alanyi school has 285 students per classroom.
Finding enough space for the pupils is also a problem at Abella. With more than 1,000 enrolled, only 300 children can attend the school at any one time, and even then it is crowded.
“If you want to sit comfortably, you have to reach school at 7 am,” said Polly Adong, an 11-year-old in grade four.
According to Omach, the school system in the north is in crisis, and current solutions are often “desperate measures” that do not address the root cause of the problems.
“The real solutions to the problem are the construction of more physical infrastructure, while the issue of human resources should also be given the attention it deserves,” said Omach.
Omach said her office has turned to aid groups for help such as Light Force International and Save the Children in Uganda.
Julius Peter Odongkara, a top civil servant in the district, said his department was unable to help.
“Our hands are tied because we have limited resources,” he said.
He suggested that the Northern Uganda Rehabilitation Programme, NUREP, could expand its education programme to help address some of the problems.
NUREP is a programme initiated by the Uganda government and funded by the European Union.
Beatrice Arach, a NUREP operation manager based in Gulu, said the organisation was already looking into the problem.
“There are many schools in the north where children are conducting lessons under trees, but we are trying to identify them and look how to assist them with resources,” said Arach.
In the meantime, Okello is concerned that the current problems with the education system in the north will have long-term effects.
He points out that less than 40 per cent of those who take the primary-school final examination here go on to secondary school.
“This also puts the integrity and the standard of universal secondary education, and eventually the universities in Uganda, in complete jeopardy,” said Okello.
In 2007, the Ugandan government started to offer free secondary education to 250,000 students, in an attempt to double the number of children staying on at school.
Okello criticised part of the scheme which envisages that teachers in the larger schools should work double shifts for the same money, warning that this would put even greater stress on already over-stretched staff.
“While government has proposed double shifts for the USE [universal secondary education]programme, it’s the same teachers [who are] expected to teach the double shifts for the same remuneration, albeit with increased responsibilities for evening classes,” said Okello.
“Teachers are already disgruntled over low pay even without the introduction of double shifts.”
Omach said that to boost the standard of education in the region, the government should give more incentives to teachers, increase their salaries, and recruit more staff.
Others say that disciplinary action should be taken against teachers who fail to turn up to school.
At the Walela primary school near Abella, seven teachers had their pay withheld because they did not show up to teach, and action is now being taken against them, said officials.
On one recent visit, Ayena said he found only four teachers out of 11 at work at the school. In addition, a total of 43 teachers in the region were found to have forged letters of appointment.
“To discipline teachers who never want to be on duty and to improve the performance, the salary department at the district is forfeiting their payment to compensate time wasted,” said Patrick Ayena, a community leader.
“For all of this term, they have not been on duty,” he said. “That is why we are taking serious steps against them.”
Ayena said that this problem was exacerbated by a lack of inspectors to enforce rules.
“There are only two inspectors to monitor teachers in 218 schools,” he said.
Despite the ongoing struggle to improve education, many say it will be hard to overcome the residual effects of the region’s long-running conflict.
According to Ruth Atala Adupa, the resident district commissioner of Dokolo, the problems in education come down to poverty and other problems associated with the prolonged LRA conflict.
Adupa said that rape is a major problem in the district, and that this is mentally and physically debilitating for young girls who lose their motivation to attend school.
“The biggest problem… is defilement,” said Adupa, noting that adults in the same community are generally the culprits.
Many young girls drop out of school and get married, she said.
Denis Moro, 29, said that living in refugee camps had “spoiled” his children.
“One morning I sent my girl to school, but I was shocked when I heard her crying for help in the neighbourhood,” he said. Instead of being in school, the girl had been hurt while playing with other village children, he said.
Moro is afraid that his girls will soon drop out of school.
“Girls are just like boys. [Refugee] camp life has brought [up] children in a silly way,” he said. “They think that life is all about violence.”
Patrick Okino and Bill Oketch are IWPR-trained reporters in Uganda.