BMJ Open (Nov 2021)

Can the ‘Learn in peace, educate without violence’ intervention in Cote d’Ivoire reduce teacher violence? Development of a theory of change and formative evaluation results

  • Karen Devries,
  • Louise Knight,
  • Katherine G Merrill,
  • Clare Tanton,
  • Elizabeth Allen,
  • Beniamino Cislaghi,
  • Mazeda Hossain,
  • Manuela Balliet,
  • Kerrie Thornhill,
  • Fanny Procureur,
  • Yah Ariane Bernadette N’Djoré,
  • Dedou Gruzshca Ferrand N’Guessan,
  • Mustapha Dally,
  • Lucia Quintero

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2020-044645
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 11

Abstract

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Objectives To gather evidence on whether a brief intervention (Apprendre en paix et éduquer sans violence, developed by the Ivorian Ministry of Education and Graines de Paix) to promote peace in primary schools by reducing teacher violence perpetration and improving pedagogical techniques was acceptable to teachers and affected change in intermediate outcomes.Design Mixed-methods formative research.Setting Primary schools in Tonkpi region, Cote d’Ivoire.Participants 160 teachers participating in the peace training, surveyed three times during implementation; qualitative in-depth interviews with 19 teachers and teacher-counsellors.Interventions Learn in peace, educate without violence–a brief intervention with primary school teachers designed to promote peace in primary schools.Outcomes For survey data, we generated composite measures of intermediate outcomes (teachers’ awareness of consequences of violence, self-efficacy in applying positive classroom management methods, acceptance of physical discipline practices in school) and used random intercept linear mixed-effects models to compare responses over time. Qualitative research included open-ended questions about acceptability and perceived need for such an intervention. A framework analysis was undertaken.Results Four-months post-training (vs pretraining), teachers had higher self-efficacy in applying positive classroom management methods (pre-mean=26.1; post-mean=27.5; p<0.001) and borderline lower acceptance of physical discipline practices (premean=4.2; postmean=3.6; p=0.10). We found no change in teacher awareness of the consequences of violence. Qualitatively, teachers found the intervention acceptable and understandable, perceiving it as useful because it provided methods for non-violent discipline. Teachers had mixed views about whether the techniques improved classroom dynamics.Conclusions Data suggest that the intervention is acceptable and leads to change in intermediate outcomes for teachers. Further evaluation in a randomised controlled trial is warranted.