TEACHING-EMPOWERING-MENTORING-BUILDING OPPORTUNITY Mission: to partner with individuals and communities in Western Kenya to support entrepreneurial activities, education and health through training programmes, scholarships, water and sanitation projects

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

December

December is a crazy month here. It's the end of the school year, so mark taking is held for scholarship organisations and students bring their fee schedules for the next school year for payment. Our job training students follow the same schedule.
Big exams are held in schools in November, then there's a marking frenzy to get results of elementary schools out by Dec 28. Then students are 'called' to schools and those fortunate enough to have marks high enough for scholarship applications can be called for interview. We have two girls moving up to a Provincial school in the second year of HS, so we shall have to get all their 'shopping' (a long list of items and uniforms) completed by Jan 3.
We shall be interviewing for new scholarships at the beginning of January since form 2 (second year) doesn't enter school until February.
There are many choir festivals during the month and confirmations and bapstisms are traditionally held at this time. A whirlwind of activity!

Monday, November 28, 2011

hand up, not a hand out




Succesful workshop on Saturday with 30 leaders from self-help groups. Our trainer is great and doesn't pull any punches. They are beginning to gel and to plan constructively together. We are holding our breath to see if they will come together to form a cooperative. Although it is helpful to give funds directly in certain circumstances, the international NGOs have created a culture of 'we are poor, we need help'. Yes, help is needed but of a thoughtful, discriminating kind. Africa has received billions in aid, but is still the poorest continent. Africans need to empower themselves to move forward.
We are also inundated with requests for job training support. This is where there is a huge need: vehicle maintenace, food and beverage certificates and so on. So few students progress any further than the lower levels of secondary school, that a formation to earn a living is lacking for most. Unfortunately we will not have the funds to accept more than half a dozen of the candidates.

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

workshops and planning & a new logo



We are busy planning the teacher seminars in January and Read for the Top in a Primary school. We can purchase the 'story books' now and consult the school staff, but the new school year starts in January when we will be able to confirm class numbers. At that time we will squeeze in a full presentation for the teachers as we set up the teams.

Yesterday we traveled an hour from town to meet a community group for Virtues training. They are so well organised and eager that we think we will be able to incorporate them into our business training model in the new year.

We have a new logo! Thanks to the wonderful people at GoVolunteering we now have a professionally designed log. We love our elephant family and may continue to use it for some things, but here is our new, eye-catching design. You can see us featured at
http://govoluntouring.com/help-build-skills-western-kenya

Saturday, November 19, 2011

Dedication of Virtues Centre






During the past year we received donations from the Virtues Facilitators mentorship in Victoria, Canada, and a shipment of materials from the Virtues Founders in memeory of John Kavelin (co-founder) It has taken a while but last Saturday we dedicated our centre in Kakamega to the memory of John. We hosted a number of Virtues-trained people (and some who aren't yet) and had a few of our facilitators on hand. We set out a display of sample materials.

A proud grad




On Friday we were invited to a graduation celebration for Tony, who obtained his B.Ed with distinction in Geography and KiSwahili.Tony and his fiancee Caroline have been doing some of the business training for us in that they go out to rural groups and teach poultry keeping (for example) and basic bookkeeping. Tony struggles all through his schooling relying almost entirely on 'well wishers' to stay in school. Because of his excellent results he is hoping for a junior teaching post at the University and the chace for a schoalrship to continue to the Masters level.

Friday, November 18, 2011

a word from Nancy, our agent in Kenya


It is so beautiful here in the early morning. Dark, natural honey from local beekeepers in my coffee, meusli and Kenyan fruit juice; roasted groundnuts bought from the local market which I roast in a 275 F oven for an hour after sprinkling with sea salt dissolved in water, stirring every 15 minutes.
Fresh papaya, mango and pineapple diced on my cereal and Kenyan yogurt. Brown oatmeal bread. Local peanut butter and a little tin of jam. Everything from Kenya.
I am not suffering.
I beat the 'water demon' this morning and brushed my teeth before the water went off. I think it's still on. About to have my breakfast. When the water is off I have half a glass of boiled water. I brush my teeth and try to rinse my mouth, rinse off the outside and clean my toothbrush, then do something about the wee sink. I prefer doing it when the little tap pours forth its miracle!

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Well committees

Went out today to visit and sign contracts for three wells. The first (Kwamujumbe)was down a terrible road, the committee was not assembled, the chair lady was away and they have done nothing to procure a legal agreement to put the well on private property. The water source they use is appalling, but we are handling donated funds that must be properly managed. We left amid wringing hands and said we would be back when they have their legal affairs in order. Too many wells (not ours) in the past have relied on promises from land owners that the water would be available to the community, only to find it fenced off for the owmer's use.
The second was a delight (Wandugu). The committee (on the left)was waiting for us, they have no outstanding issues, so they will hopefully have their clean water supply by Christmas.
The third site was also well organised. Some bright, articulate women who are also asking for business training in the new year. I am hopeful we can do that. They have one legal issue that should be settled tomorrow.
On our way back we stopped at a spring (Mudede) where work to protect it is in progress.

Monday, November 14, 2011

Read for the Top success!





Wonderful day at Mwiyenga Primary for Read for the Top. This is a poor rural school that used to be bottom in results of their division of 54 schools. This year the grade 7 who did R4T last year captured the top three places in English and one girl had 100% in math. The teachers are ecstatic. I mentioned this is a Virtues school and about 30 of the students recited their virtue for us, which I have on video. Unfortunately it needs some captions before I can post it as the accents are hard to understand. I'm adding a couple of shots of the students in the competition (Concentration and Consultation), the staff and one of the flat tire that greeted us as we left. The road was very bad and stony!

Here's a different story

The newspapers are full of Somalia skirmishes, university closures because of the strike by profs, costs of staple foods and exam cheating. All getting quite ho-hum. Two days ago the news was that Maasai morans (young warriors in beads and red cloaks and spears,) had invaded a girls' boarding school looking for wives and attempted to abduct some of the girls. They were repulsed, the girls fled and hid in the bush. The young men claim they are not being provided for by their elders.The Principal is putting in more security (which the parents will have to pay for)

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Pace of Grace workshop





Twenty eight highly focused people attended the seminar on Satusrday, Their evaluations of their day are humbling. Here are some pictures: the Virtues table with meaningful things from Kenya and Canada; the working group, and the ladies who prepared tea and mandazi (delicious small donuts) and a very substantial lunch for us. Many people travel with little or no breakfast, so we like to give them a snack at the break. Then we usually continue to the end of the workshop (maybe 2 or 3 pm), eat a meal and everyone goes home with a full tummy

Friday, November 11, 2011

Two weeks of silence!


So much has been happening that I had no idea it is nearly two weeks since I posted.

Rod has flown to Canada for his medical appointments. He is booked to return Dec 4 but we are hoping it could be sooner. So I am alone and busy boiling & filtering water and taking care of all the other little tasks that need to be done when you live in rural Africa. Our agent, Nancy, has arrived and settled in to her cute little apartment on the compound. maybe pictures later.

Johnstone, our medical student, passed his exams and went to Nairobi for
his certificate. He has an internship at a public hospital about 30 minutes away and not too far from his home. Here he is proudly showing his qualification.
We have contracted six water projects, three shallow wells and three protected springs, bringing in all clean,safe water to about 2,000 people. Next week we shall start to visit the communtities who have to set up a management committee to take care of the well. The shilling has dropped against the dollar, so we are hoping to have enough remaining funds to put in eco- san toilets in a school where the girls' latrines collapsed. The school cannot reconstruct in another spot because the water table is too high and the latrines will contaminate the ground water.
The news here is full of the rise in prices. Our Advisory Committee chair says he has never seen anything like what has happened in Kenya over the last four months. Prices of basic foods have tripled and those already constantly hungry are in a desperate way. There are real fears that hostility and violence are on the rise and that next year's election could go badly. We are putting together a plan with our Kenyan facilitators to expand Virtues training to more communties to promote Civic Education and peace. We very much need funding for this effort.
There was a scathing article this week about the public universities and the so-called parallel program. Anyone with enough money and a mediocre pass can get into any prgramme including the formerly tightly controlled medecine and engineering faculties. There is a low fee subsidized program for 'A' students. The universities are coining money but have not added staff or facilities. Instead they are investing in commercial enterprises. Classes run to the hundreds and lecturers pay others to teach the class. There is little research anywhere. Now the professors are all on strike, students have been sent away, graduation ceremonies (usually in Dec) will probably be cancelled and exams have been interrupted. All this only reinforces our focus on job training for those who ahve not been able to continue their education.
Our meeting with our Advisory Committee this week set our dates for the next few weeks:
Pace of Grace (advanced Virtues) seminar Nov 12; Read for the Top at Mwiyenga pri (their own initiative) Nov 14; Visit to Isecheno to set up Read for the Top and hopefully a feeding program Nov 17; Dedication of our newly painted Virtues Centre Nov 16; Business training for leaders of the groups Nov. 26, soap making for the Youth Group Nov 25 and interviews for job training scholarships Nov 30.
I think I'll leave December's plans for later!