Women‑led study circles run
Evaluates the active support for women-led study circles (halaqāt), fostering dedicated spaces for female scholarship and spiritual development. This empowers women, deepens community engagement, and fulfills the Islamic imperative for all to seek knowledge (`ilm) while ensuring robust safeguarding, governance, and quality assurance. Drawing upon the rich historical precedent of female scholarship, this practice upholds hifz al-‘aql (preservation of intellect) and hifz al-din (preservation of religion). By nurturing female educators, institutions revive the prophetic tradition of comprehensive tarbiyah (cultivation).
| Metric | Halaqah Performance Dashboard |
|---|---|
| Target | Retention >60%; CPD 100% |
| Frequency | Termly |
| Method | Composite score of Active Circles, Retention %, Satisfaction (NPS), Leader CPD %, and Safeguarding Incidents. |
| Unit | Composite |
Level 1: Initial/Ad-hoc
Informal & Ad-Hoc: Women-led study circles exist informally, driven by individual initiative with no formal organizational recognition or support.
Level 2: Developing
Recognized & Facilitated: The organization acknowledges existing circles and provides basic logistical support (e.g., room booking, promotion) on an inconsistent basis.
Level 3: Established
Structured & Supported: A formal program is established with a regular schedule, designated leaders, and a basic curriculum framework. The organization actively promotes participation.
Level 4: Advanced
Resourced & Integrated: The program is well-resourced with a defined budget, leader training (CPD), and a structured curriculum governance. Feedback is systematically collected to improve content and delivery.
Level 5: Optimizing
Center of Excellence & Empowerment: The program features a leader pipeline, comprehensive impact dashboard, and serves as a model for other communities. It actively fosters female scholarship and leadership.
Organisation Types
By Organisation Size
| Size | Applicability | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Micro | optional | Formal documentation, dedicated funding, and DSL requirements are disproportionate for volunteer groups; informal circles are encouraged instead. |
| Small | partial | Expected to host women's circles, but heavy administrative requirements like 'Halaqah Launch Packs' and formal scholar sign-offs should be scaled down. |
| Medium | full | |
| Large | full | |
| Major | full |
Applicable When
- The organization serves a community with women who would benefit from study circles.
- The organization has the resources (space, funding) to support a study circle.
- The organization has connections with women who are qualified and willing to lead study circles.
Not Applicable When
- The organization has a very small or exclusively male demographic.
- The organization lacks the resources or infrastructure to support educational programs.
- The organization's mission is entirely unrelated to education or community development.
Discussion (1)
📋 **Version updated: 1.0.0 → 2.9.7** **Changes:** Full import from mizan-297.json
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