Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Books for the Children

We are very grateful to Steve Junker and Erin Rollins in Canada who have provided us with books for the children at our school in Kpilinyung. These are some pictures of the children after they have received their books.



It is not everyday that they get to receive a shiny new book. Their smiles say thank you.


They are also very serious now about learning. They realize that it is important for their future.


Here they are with their new books and their teacher.


More pictures of the children who are very excited when there is a digital camera around.



It is not everyday that they get to take a photo so sometimes they can be serious about it too.


The following are the children in the Village of Kpilinyung that are using these books:

abukari amira, alhassan bintu, iddrisu ayisha, neindow sikena, zakaria latifa, zakaria asana, zakaria asana, abdulaia anshiru, abdrahaman nudeen, alhassan shirazu, rauf hardi, ayuba issifu, mahamadu amena, abulai mohamen, ibrahim. faruku,seidu zakariya, yakubu wumpini

Friday, May 30, 2008

Home Grown Support, and the first Graduate!

Farming is a major way of life in Ghana. It counts for the livelihoods of over 70% of the population in Ghana's Northern Region. Dan's has a farm just outside of Kpuliying where his family has been growing groundnuts (peanuts in North America) corn and rice since he can remember. This year he is just growing groundnuts because there was not enough money to plant any other crops. His farm and his students keep Dan making the 11 mile journey on his bicycle every day - or two at most.


The roads out to the village and Dan's farm will become much more difficult to travel as the rainy season gets underway


Dan was able to sew 6 acres of his 8 acre plot through some the support of friends and family and the help of a friend with a tractor.



Soon this field will be green with the soil nutrient restoring effects of the groundnut plants.



A farm is not just a source of income, it's a way of life, and in Ghana, you can't help but consider the daily, labour intesive demands of the farm on the rest of every day life. School terms are scheduled to break accoring to the seasons when children will be needed most on the farm. Families invest in the future in one of the few secure things they have here - the farm. This can mean having to buy inputs for the farm before paying for children to go to school. It's a lot of work, and the challenges of droughts, floods, pests, a rainy season that is no longer predicatble, and market prices increasingly influenced by external forces mean that what you have left in the end may not be a lot. But it's what Dan and his school have got to sustain themselves.




Small groundnut seedlings can already be seen sprouting up on Dan's farm


and the pests can already be found ready to munch on their leafy shoots.


Quite encouraginly, the Quality of Life for the Girl Child programme is on-going despite not having significantly attained any external funding outside of individual friends and family. It was hoped by now that the school could have grown in terms of learning aids and capacity for more students, but happily it is celebrating its first graduate! Shara is around 17 years old and she has been attending the Quality of Life for the Girl Child programme for 1 1/2 years now. During this time, when other children were happy to be out of class, Shara could be found with her books determined to do her best and learn as much as she could well into the evening. The beginning of the May 2008 term marked Shara's enrolment into the public Junior High School. After meeting with her father and the headmistress of the school, Dan arranged for Shara to join the other children at the JHS level. Upon review of Shara's performance, the headmistress belives that Shara will be able to pass more than one year of school this year, and join students closer to her age in the following year. JHS is free in Ghana, but Senior High School charges a tuition. This tuition can be covered by a scholarship in Ghana's Northern Region, but the families must pay for the first year of tuition before getting reimbursed by the government. This is often a difficult task, it seems there are always more challenges ahead.

Shara is the tallest girl in the centre of the photo with her classmates, she is now attending the first year of JHS in the public school.



Motivated by Shara's graduation, Dan is not worried about his programme, and the original aim and reason that were behind its inception are still compelling him to continue in his work. Progress will be made, and for the girls and boys enrolled that means more than a yearly report, that means opportunity.

Dr. Agrey, a Ghanaian Scholar in social studies, stated that before any country can meet its development agenda, that country must channel its resources, both human and materila, towards developing the girl-child. There are many studies which support this, but it is easy to see the central role that the matron of the home plays here, and to see the undeniable influence that she plays on the next generation. It is out of this logic that comes one of the greatest things we can do for all children is educating their future mothers. Thus the girl child is a major focus of the project, but the program goes beyond this and aims to reach vulnerable children who struggle to attain 3 daily meals.

With this belief, the management under the chairmanship of Dan, is appealing to benevolent organizations and other philantropic bodies to help him sew the seeds of knowledge in the students of Kpuliying.

Friday, February 22, 2008

Saturday, January 12, 2008

School sessions during the holidays

Over the holidays, children around the world took a break from school and celebrated various religious and government supported holidays. For the children in Kpuliying community, their holidays were spent catching up to those children more fortunate than them. The children of Kpuliying are not so fortunate, getting them in school requires overcoming the financial barriers as well as the incentives their parents have to keep them out of school and have them help out at home and on the farm.
Children washing clothes -
a daily task usually assigned to the younger girls in the household.
A small girl carries water to her home -
another task that is usually divvied up to young girls.
Once the children of Kpuliying are able to get to school, there still remains the challenge of receiving quality education. Teachers in rural areas have little incentives to show up to class regularly and to ensure their students learn and progress. Most teachers come from urban areas and are less than pleased with a rural post that means less amenities such as accommodations, electricity, water, and school buildings. This, along with the feeling of being an outsider in the community affects teacher motivation and leads to disappointed children (http://www.newsfromafrica.org/newsfromafrica/articles/art_848.html)

Over the holidays, Dan was busy taking advantage of the school break. He was able to coordinate a team of skilled and committed individuals to start offering opportunities for the children of Kpuliying to not only get into school but to receive quality education. He organized 25 children (10 females, 15 males) to start attending school over the holidays. The building used was graciously opened up to Dan by the community pastor and other community leaders. Two teachers volunteered to put their college education to use. Books were provided by the 'School For Life' which has similar goals to Dan (http://www.ghanavenskabsgrupperne.dk/index.php?id=26).
School Book written in local language (Dagbani)

Pastor Danaa - one of the amazing people supporting this program.
The aim of the program was to give the children a sort of sneak peek into what school is all about. Most children really enjoyed the experience and many took their studies seriously. The teachers have been quite impressed with the students' performance and are surprised at how some have excelled and progressed through the material. With enthusiasm from both teachers and students, the training is still on-going, with a meodified class schedule to accommodate for the resumed regular classes.
Moses - one of the two volunteer teachers hard at work.
The children, although they may not look excited (it's Ghana culture to look serious for photos), they are both serious and proud for the opportunity to attend school.
Next, Dan says he's planning to work with the paid teachers of the school and see if he can't help encourage them to do a better job. Well keep you posted on this next effort.