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Achieving the Millennium Development Goals by 2015

A camel, a tree and a blackboard: Dertu’s mobile school

Math lesson under an acacia tree

Math lesson under an acacia tree

Sitting under a sprawling acacia tree, Abdulahi Bari Barrow points to his blackboard and asks the students to repeat the lesson after him. Here, there are no classrooms and no roof other than the branches, no walls other than the tree trunk which supports the blackboard, and no desk other than the straw mat laid on the sand. This is the mobile school of the Dertu Millennium Village, a community of 6,000 pastoralists in northeastern Kenya.

In the arid landscape, stretching yellow and grey until the border with Somalia, the colored head covers worn by girls and the bright maa’uus (traditional male wrap) donned by students cut a striking note. Obediently, they repeat the English alphabet. They also learn Kiswahili and basic maths.

Abdulahi setting up his solar lamp for recharging

Abdulahi setting up his solar lamp for recharging

Not only is the curriculum special here but so are the teaching methods. Abdulahi, the only teacher, works from morning till way past sunset. When the sun is high, half of the class is present while the other half tends to the cattle and leads them to water points. When night falls, the other half catches up on the day’s lesson. In the pitch black darkness, Abdulahi lights his blackboard with a solar lamp that he recharges during the day.

His pupils also include 19 adults, seven men and 12 women. Habiba, 17, has been a regular for the last three months. Before that, she had never set foot in a school. “I’m learning to count and write because I want to have my own business later on, selling tea to camel traders,” says the pretty young woman. Her four other siblings also learn with Abdulahi.

Livestock gather at one of the few remaining water points

Livestock gather at one of the few remaining water points

She and the other students here belong to the Auliyahan ethnic Somali group. Camels, sheep and goats have been their livelihood for generations. In Dertu, a man’s wealth is measured in cattle heads. And as livestock need water, the community has to move often in search for the precious element. Since the children can’t go to school, the Millennium Villages Project (MVP) decided to bring the school to them. Hence the mobile school was born in May 2008, the first of its kind in Kenya’s pastoralist areas.

Every few weeks, Abdulahi loads his blackboard, books, water gallons and green tent on his camel and moves with the group, in search for greener pastures. “I am very confident, because the children can now read from A to Z…and from one to one hundred, and they can greet you, they can welcome you in different languages,” says Abdulahi, proudly, a year after the project started.

“Enrolment has increased from 13% to 30% in two years mainly because of sensitization and awareness creation and the starting of a new approach, the mobile school,” explains Ahmed Mohamed, team leader and science coordinator at the Dertu MVP.

A man and his donkeys at a dried up water point

A man and his donkeys at a dried up water point

In addition to the mobile school, the MVP has rehabilitated and upgraded a permanent school, with dormitories for boys and girls. But in this hostile environment, this success is threatened by an increasingly potent phenomenon: climate change. Already prone to droughts, northern Kenya has seen erratic rains over the last few years. Since the beginning of 2009, no rain has quenched Dertu’s parched soil. This situation has pushed the community farther away from its traditional land to look for water. Some even go as far as war-torn Somalia.

“We are really worried. Erratic rainfall and prolonged drought might increase school dropouts and as a result erode the education gains,” says Mohamed Hassan, a village elder. As the drought settles in, it becomes more and more difficult for families to provide for children, who are in turn asked to help with domestic chores while the family heads go in search of water for their cattle.


Joelle Bassoul Mojon is a Millennium Villages Project Communications Specialist. She is based in Nairobi, Kenya.
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Category: Dertu, Kenya, Education

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5 Responses

  1. Gareth Hopkins says:

    Great post! It’s wonderful to see a development project that respects and maintains a community’s nomadic traditions. Are any of the adults attending the mobile class offered guidance of issues such as family planning and FGM or is it the traditional national curriculum?

    • Joelle Bassoul Mojon says:

      Dear Gareth,
      Thanks for your encouraging comment. Women from the Dertu community do receive family planning guidance from Community Health Workers, under the health policy being implemented. But the mobile school only tackles the national curriculum, and focuses on sciences and languages.

  2. assurance says:

    Thanks for your post! It is very encouraging. I have seen so many projects being a waste of time, money and hope. It is important to provide helpfull help, like this mobile school. Education being the most important thing for the future of those populations. Also keeping in mind that school is not about teaching what “we” know but what “they” need to know wich is totally different.

  3. Elizabeth Oyieko says:

    Very interesting indeed, this is in the right direction, education provided to the people where they are, with time, they will see the importance and the efforts will bear fruits. Such projects will surely see us achieve education goals.

  4. Julia says:

    this is a great step towards getting these peoples opinions out there because without education they have no way of having a say. Habiba is very fortunate in that not many women in foreign underdeveloped countries get to have an education so she will be able to campaign for womens right which can make a huge difference. i think to help, we should send supplies so that they can study on their own time and not just on a publc blackboard.

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DISCLAIMER: The opinions expressed by the authors and those providing comments are theirs alone, and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Millennium Promise, the Earth Institute or UNDP.