Send Rural Girls to School in Zimbabwe

provide rural education in Africa

Summary

In the rural area near Victoria Falls, many girls are in great need of school fees to continue their education. This fund provides school fees, uniforms, meals and support for an empowerment center. progress reportread updates from the field

How Donors Like You Helped

Thanks to donors like you, a total of $13,642 was raised for this project.

Other Projects Run By Girl Child Network (GCN) That You Can Help

Send Rural Girls to School in Zimbabwe
Send Rural Girls to School in Zimbabwe

Received $13,642 from 101 donations from people like:

More Information About this Project

Project Needs and Beneficiaries

The majority of rural Zimbabweans live in poverty due to political and economic challenges and severe drought. Failing crops and record inflation translate to a great number of families unable to send their girl children to school. School fees and uniforms are impossible to pay as prices keep rising. Sadly, families must choose which of their children to send to school and sons are usually first choice. It is likely many girls will never return to school after dropping out.

Activities

IDEX partners with the Girl Child Network (GCN) who uses the funds to pay for school fees, a uniform and hot meals as well as counseling, AIDS prevention and leadership training for the most disadvantaged girls in the area outside of Victoria Falls.

Funding Information

Total Funding Received to Date: $13,642

Funding Information

This project is now in implementation and no longer available for funding. Received funds will be used to accomplish concrete objectives as indicated in the project's "Activities" section. Updates will be posted under the "Progress Report" tab as they become available.

Donors' contributions and pledges to this project totaled $13,642 .  The original project funding goal was $20,323.

Additional Documentation

This project has provided additional documentation in a Microsoft Word file (projdoc.doc).

Resources

Why this Project is Important

Potential Long Term Impact

GCN’s work shows that educating and counseling impoverished girls over the long term reduces HIV-prevalence and provides opportunities for economic independence. Supporting girls’ education and empowerment is an effective tool to eradicating poverty.

Project Message

“What I have actually learned is that as a girl child, I should not be looked down upon. I am empowered to do something.”
- Brenda, 16-year old President of a GCN Girls Club

Who is Running This Project

Contact

Sarah Dotlich
IDEX Africa Program Director
IDEX
827 Valencia Street, Suite 101
San Francisco, CA 94110
United States
415-824-8384
Email:

Project Sponsor

International Development Exchange (IDEX)

Organization

Girl Child Network (GCN)
c/o IDEX 827 Valencia Street, Suite 101
San Francisco, California 94110
United States
415-824-8384
http://www.idex.org/gcn.html

Where this Project is Located

Country

This project is located in ZimbabweZimbabwe and can also be found under ChildrenChildren.

For more information about Zimbabwe, read the Human Development Report on Zimbabwe or the Wikipedia entry for Zimbabwe.

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 August 15, 2007

Latest Update from the Field

Reaching Over 60,000 Girls

By Gillian Wilson - Communications Director, July 02, 2009 10:57 AM

Our most recent update from GCN comes directly from its founder, Betty Makoni.

Business in the high-density suburb of Chitungwiza in Zimbabwe came to a halt on March 28th when hundreds of girls marched in celebration of their 10th Anniversary. Chitungwiza is a high-density suburb east of Harare and this is the place where Betty Makoni and the first ten students (many who are in different parts of the world now pursuing their careers) launched GCN’s first girls club.

To date, more than 60,000 girls are believed to be members of the Girl Child Network and thousands of girls have been transformed from perceived victims into survivors and then leaders. There are over 700 girls clubs in Zimbabwe and the network has 80% of its members in remote parts of the country.

17-year-old Stembile Mabhena who is GCN’s Secretary General and girls representative on the board, delivered the keynote address. Meanwhile, Betty Makoni delivered a speech to girls in Zimbabwe and urged them to do whatever in their capacity and empowerment skills they acquired over the past 10 years to continue the vision and mission of Girl Child Network where their activism is critically needed.

She reassured girls that all efforts are being made to keep poor and orphaned girls in school and support girls empowerment program. An impassioned appeal has already been made to the donor community to continue to allocate resources to girl child empowerment programs.

Meanwhile, GCN communications has also opened a congratulatory book where many girls and GCN stakeholders continue to pour in their messages. Thousands of girls have thronged GCN offices across the country to pass on messages since many cannot access the Internet. It is reported many girls in their respective clubs have organized activities at club level to mark the 10th Anniversary.

Many events to mark GCN 10th anniversary will be ongoing throughout the world and GCN supporters based in California, including IDEX, met in April to congratulate GCN.

Three Global awards for GCN have also been announced. California-based Wisdom In Action will honor Betty Makoni with an Unsung Hero award while the World Children’s Prize has announced that 13 year GCN Publicity Secretary Lisa Bonongwe is part of the Child Jury that will select 2009 child rights decade hero. Ashoka recently released a statement that Betty Makoni has been selected as one of the Young Global Forum Leaders for 2009 and this is expected to take GCN to greater heights.

Looking ahead, many girls in Africa have joined girls in Zimbabwe and this year countries like Tanzania and Ghana are on course to replicate the Girl Child Empowerment Model.

Read 8 more "Updates from the Field" Subscribe to Email Update Subscribe to "Updates from the Field" by E-Mail Subscribe to RSS Subscribe to RSS Feed

Was this report valuable...
vote divider
Loading...
Tell us why (your comments may be shared publicly).
Rules for Comments 
Comments