Hands-on Science With Village Women Presented by Bhagya Rangachar.

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Transcript of Hands-on Science With Village Women Presented by Bhagya Rangachar.

Hands-on Science

With

Village Women

Presented by

Bhagya Rangachar

Thirst

The Fortunate

Spreading Deserts

The Inevitable

So?

Children’s Lovecastles Trust (CLT)

Web: www. cltindia. org Mail: info@cltindia.org

About CLT

•Founded in December 1997

•Offers non-formal education programs through formal networks

•Mission: To build conducive, interactive and creative learning environment through community awareness, nutrition aids and alternative educative means to support education

•Vision: Combine the power of technology and the convenience of the school system to make education more effective and efficient

CLT Way

•Integrating disciplines - ‘Chain of Learning’

•Experiential learning

•Project - based learning

•Technology – aided learning

•Hands-on- Science: Lab 2 School 2 Community

•Peer 2 Peer and Mentoring

•Direct community involvement in development of schools

CLT’s Approach – Hands-on Science

Science Club in action - Learn the ways of nature

Woman - 2 - Woman Workshop on Mushroom Cultivation,

Nutrition Management, Vermicompost etc.,

CLT’s Approach – Hands-on Science

‘Computer 2 Career’ programmes for the

Community Youth

CLT’s Approach – Hands-on Science

‘Flora and Fauna’ in association with

University of Agricultural Sciences-Popularising Life Sciences

CLT’s Approach – Hands-on Science

Women and IT in India

Current Indicators

•34% Female Adult literacy

•38% Female secondary school enrolment

•44% Female youth illiteracy

•36% of tertiary students in Natural Sciences are female

•19% female teaching staff at tertiary

•23% India’s Internet users are women

Natural Sciences include fields of computer sciences, Engineering, Math, Architecture, Town planning, Transportation and communication

- UNESCO 1999 Statistical Year book

Village Women use Science and Technology Lab - 2 - Land Concept

Why women?

-Agents of change, they influence decisions at home and at the Panchayat

-Water at home is managed by the women

-Girl child is often pulled out of school to ferry water from distant sources

•An ‘All Girls’ team

•Brainstorming Session

•Identify water related issues

•Joins hands with

The Rainwater Club

CLT’s Approach – Hands-on Science

Rooftop Rainwater Harvesting

3 E’s

Team partners with

The Rainwater Club

(www. rainwaterclub. org)

They drive the project

from Education to

Extension and Execution - 3E’s

The Team in action

Process

•Baseline survey

•Analysis

•Action plan

•Implementation

•Documentation

•Follow up

Technology as an ‘Enabler’

•Team uses Computers

to record data

and information

•Computer aided

microscopes to test

water

•Mapping software to

design promotional tools

Where’s the water?

Water Cycle

Location : 12’ 58” N Latitude and 77’ 35” E Longitude

Altitude : 921 Mts. Above Sea

Population : 6 Million

Planning area : 1279 Sq.km

Rainfall : Avg 970 mm over the last 10 years

About Bangalore

Location : 12’ 58” N Latitude and 77’ 35” E

Longitude

Altitude : 921 Mts. Above Sea

Population : 6 Million

Planning area : 1279 Sq.km

Rainfall : Avg 970 mm over the last 10 years

The Facts

• Bangalore gets its water from the river Cauvery 95 kms away and 500 meters below the city

• Production cost water is very high at Rs 18 a kilo-liter. Will become Rs 26 a kilo-liter.

• Ceiling on the availability of water-1500 Million Liters per Day - good enough for 7 million people only, i.e., by the year 2011.

• Surface and ground water on the decline.

Disappearing sources in Bangalore

Lakes and Tanks

261 in 196081 in 199755 in 2000

Solutions

Basin Management Rainwater Harvesting

RecyclingDemand management

Integrated water management Participatory management

Ecosan

Why harvest Rainwater ?

• A NATURAL RESOURCE PRESENTLY WASTED

• PREVENTS GROUND WATER DEPLETION

• A GOOD SUPPLEMENT TO PIPED WATER

• POSITIVE COST BENEFIT RATIO

• RELATIVELY POLLUTION FREE

• WATER CONSERVATION & SELF-DEPENDANCE

• REDUCES “ECOLOGICAL FOOTPRINT”

What is Rainwater Harvesting?

• Collection

• Filtration

• Storage

• Future Usage

• Recharge

How much water do I get ?

Year Rainfall (mm) Rainy days

Possible Collection

(Lts for 100 sq.m)

1992 844.60 56 67,568

1993 1059.70 65 84,776

1994 587.10 45 46,968

1995 1072.20 61 85,776

1996 1173.30 64 93,864

1997 717.40 52 57,392

1998 1431.80 68 1,14,544

1999 1009.40 52 80,720

2000 1226 50 98080

2001 669 45 53520

2002 439 40 35120

AVG 929.03 54 74,320

HOW much water do I use ?

Consumption range : 50 ltrs - 300 ltrs per person per day

Components

• Catchment

- Roof, Paved area, Land

• Conveyance

- Pipes, chains, gutters, drains

• Storage

- Ponds, lakes, sumps, tanks, aquifers

A typical system

Catchments

Gutters

Gutter-for sloping roof :Gutter-for sloping roof :

PVC pipesPVC pipes

Polycarbonate pipesPolycarbonate pipes

GI pipesGI pipes

Aluminium PipesAluminium Pipes

Down pipes

Down water pipes made of

HDPE/PVC/AC PIPES

First-rain separator(Bypass)

Simple Easy to maintain

Filtration Units

Storage

Usage

Recharge

Do’s & Dont’s

Clean-roofs and terraces

Provide adequate storage systems

Pollution free storage systems

X Store—insecticides, rusting iron, manure, detergents

X Use Pets on terrace

X Use chemically polluted water to charge ground water

USEFUL tip : Guppy fish for mosquito control

Scaling the Project

• 2002: Made the school ‘Water Literate’

• 2003: – Installed prototype

– Designed promotional literature

• 2004:– Establish the ‘ Rainwater Resource Center’

– Plan to set up 100 units in 10 villages

• 2005:– Scaling it to 10,000 Households

– Creating global awareness on management of natural resources

Rooftop Rainwater system in a village

This is how it looks and works…

Let us make this a movement

Write to

info@cltindia.org

THANK YOU