Education, including school in the early years and vocational training later in life, is an essential springboard for farming communities around the world. Education helps farmers and their families to develop the knowledge and skills they need to achieve greater financial security and independence. But, in many remote and rural communities decent education is out of reach.
As part of Sustainability Development Goal 4, the UN wants all boys and girls to have access to education by 2030 and to promote lifelong learning for adults, including technical education. The educational needs of farmers and their families range from the basics of reading and writing to management training and the operation of advanced machinery.
Our initiatives include:
Service centres and teams on the ground from which farmers can get advice, and digital channels (including apps and websites) for agronomic guidance
Vocational traineeships, peer education, and scholarships, including special programmes for women
Education and skills development opportunities for ofi employees
Skills transfer programmes that enable local employees to learn from highly skilled foreign nationals
School materials, equipment, and infrastructure
Tackling child labor effectively requires collective action at the individual, community and national level. That is why we are partnering with the Ivorian government, key chocolate manufacturers, cocoa processors and the Jacobs Foundation in a new initiative to promote effective learning at scale in Côte d’Ivoire and tackle the root causes of child labor.
Together, we are funding the Child Learning and Educational Facility (CLEF), which aims to provide quality education for five million children and positively impact the behavior of 10 million parents in cocoa growing communities by 2030. It will do this through measures including the construction of 2,500 classrooms and other educational facilities.
AtSource+ allows customers to track education support provided to the farming communities, as well as the impact those interventions are having on the ground. It measures key metrics including:
Percentage of school aged children attending school
Number of beneficiaries with access to education support
Includes literacy classes, vocational training and sponsored teaching activities
Number of beneficiaries from school infrastructure and equipment
Includes construction of classrooms, libraries, canteens, teacher housing and dormitories
Number of beneficiaries of education services
Includes efforts to reduce entry barriers to enrolment such as help to get birth certificates, initiatives that raise awareness of the importance of school, and support for school transport
Providing access to education for farming communities in Côte d'Ivoire
AtSource+ metrics to track progress:
Supporting social investments in communities is not only better for farmers and their families, it’s better for customers too.
In Côte d'Ivoire, one cocoa farming co-operative representing 340 farmers ringfences 30% of the net premium it receives for its cocoa to be used for social investment. The board recently decided to use the funds to construct a primary school in Jeannotkro, a village in the Divo region which is home to 150 of the co-operative’s farmers and their families.
Over 70 pupils, all aged 7-10 years old, now benefit from three fully trained teachers, saving them a 6km walk to the neighbouring village school. Through AtSource+ data, we can monitor the positive impact of the new school and teachers. We do this by tracking the number of children in the community who are going to school and how many people in the farmer group are benefiting from education support, infrastructure and services.
Olam’s ambition to improve smallholder farmer livelihoods cannot be fully achieved without addressing gender equality.
For farmers in the Quindío region of Colombia, a coffee education is proving a popular way of boosting livelihoods.
Despite significant progress, child labour still occurs in the cocoa supply chain, often as a result of social and economic challenges like migration, poverty or lack of infrastructure. If there is no school nearby or parents cannot afford school fees, children can be kept at home to work on family farms and support household incomes.
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