Educate 500 Orphans and Needy Children in Tanzania

Education in Africa for needy

Summary

This project will provide grants enabling schools in rural Tanzania to keep 500 orphans and vulnerable children in school by paying for uniforms, supplies or fees needed to continue their education. progress reportread updates from the field

Donations to this project are being matchedDonations to this project are being matched

How You Can Help  Help

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Received $7,644 from 68 donations from people like:

ILSA at SNESL Santosh ajowens
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More Information About this Project

Project Needs and Beneficiaries

In rural areas of Africa, a small amount of money to pay for school uniforms, school supplies, and exam fees often makes all the difference between a child staying in school or dropping out. In rural communities, Camfed's Safety Net Fund helps children who are orphaned, or from child-headed households.This project enables schools in the Kilosa district of rural Tanzania to meet the pressing needs of 500 children at risk of dropping out, providing security and hope.

Activities

Safety Net grants empower primary and secondary schools to address the neediest children's difficult circumstances as they arise - often for as little as $10-20 per child - thus helping more children stay in school and continue their education.

Funding Information

Total Funding Received to Date: $7,644
Remaining Goal to be Funded: $3,626
Total Funding Goal: $11,270

Additional Documentation

This project has provided additional documentation in a PDF file (projdoc.pdf).

Resources

Why this Project is Important

Potential Long Term Impact

The project will meet school costs for 500 orphans and vulnerable children, enabling the neediest children in a community to obtain the education crucial to improving their long-term prospects and supporting their own future families.

Project Message

"Support to continue my education will help me achieve my goals, like being a doctor or a minister. At the end of the day, I have been helped, and I will help others."
- Innocent, from Iringa, Tanzania, Safety Net Fund beneficiary

Who is Running This Project

Contact

Brooke Hutchinson
Director
369 Pine St
Suite 420
San Francisco, CA 94104
United States
415-963-4489
Email:

Project Sponsor

Skoll Foundation

Organization

Campaign for Female Education (Camfed) Logo

Campaign for Female Education (Camfed)
369 Pine St. Suite 420
San Francisco, CA 94104
United States
1-866-979-1556
http://www.camfed.org

Campaign for Female Education (Camfed)'s Current Projects on GlobalGiving

Help Mothers in Zimbabwe Keep Children in School
Help Mothers in Zimbabwe Keep Children in School

Where this Project is Located

Country

This project is located in Tanzania, United Republic ofTanzania, United Republic of and can also be found under EducationEducation.

For more information about Tanzania, United Republic of, read the Human Development Report on Tanzania, United Republic of or the Wikipedia entry for Tanzania, United Republic of.

When this Project was Updated

Last Updated

This project was last updated on November 6, 2009.

Date Added to GlobalGiving

This project was added to the GlobalGiving project catalog on March 28, 2008

Latest Update from the Field

I used to dread going to school...It’s different now...I look forward to it."

By Gary Conway - Manager of Individual Giving, August 10, 2009 12:17 PM

A class in Tanzania supported by Camfed
Your support for our project is changing lives in Tanzania. As a thank you, I wanted to share the story of one of the girls in Tanzania who has been supported to stay in school by Camfed's Safety Net Fund

From:Hadija, Aged 14, Kilombero District, Tanzania.

I am the last born of six children, and my father is a rice farmer. My mother didn’t go to school, and my father only attended school until standard 7, so they struggle a lot to make a living. They very much want me to go to school because they know that it’s the only way to build my future. Though, even the small small costs are too much for them. For three years, I was wearing the same school uniform. Both the skirt and the shirt are ripped. Every morning when I put them on, I felt ashamed.

I remember the day in January when my teacher told our class that there was a fund to help struggling students buy new uniforms and books, and one of the students in my class submitted my name. She had noticed my torn uniform and she felt pity for me. When the teacher told me that I was on a list of children who would be provided with a new uniform, I felt something lift in me. I used to dread going to school, because I was afraid that the teacher would call me to go to the blackboard. Then I would have to stand before the whole class in my torn uniform.

It’s different now. I can get up in front of the class with no anxiety. I feel good about going to school. I look forward to it. I want to keep doing better and better, because I have a goal: I want to be a nurse, and take care of the sick people in my family.

Pictures:

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