Wednesday, September 9, 2015

Fundraising happy hour was a success!


Thanks to everyone who came out to our charity happy hour!  Thanks to some very generous tippers, we received $131.27 for the Itiso Scholarship Fund!  That’s like, 1/3 of a scholarship!  We also received some online donations, which will also support scholars from Itiso Village.

If you would like to contribute, you can donate through Friends of Tanzania, as US-based nonprofit (so it's tax deductible!). Be sure to indicate that it is for the Itiso Scholarship Fund as shown under Designation below. [Check my really well-drawn red circle!]


Thanks in advance to anyone who chooses to donate to my project!  If you leave your contact info, I'll send you a card! :)

I'm planning to visit the village next summer and hopefully meet the students we're supporting and their families, which is very exciting.

Thanks again for your support, be it financial or moral.

Thursday, August 27, 2015

2 Bits of Great News!

News 1:
That's right!  I just heard that the 2016 scholarship recipient has been selected!!  I'm so proud and excited to help these students continue their educations and achieve their dreams.  Last year's recipient is still in school, so we will be supporting TWO students this year.

News 2:

We're having a fundraiser!
Tuesday, September 8th
Thomas Foolery (near Dupont Circle in Washington, DC)
6-8pm

Have a drink and play some games to ease back into the work week after a long weekend. I will be your bartender for the evening! All tips go directly to the Itiso Scholarship Fund through Friends of Tanzania/ Marafiki wa Tanzania, which supports Form V-VI high school students from Tanzania's Itiso Ward. So if you can't stay to drink, at least come, check it out, and stuff the tip jar!

With only 30 minutes of bartending training before I begin, I'm confident in promising that it will at least be entertaining!  Karibuni wote!

RSVP on Facebook here.
If you can't come, but would like to donate, you can find instructions here.

Saturday, August 1, 2015

The Role of English in Tanzanian Education


I want to share this video created by Tanzanian secondary school students in Zanzibar discussing the challenges around English medium education at the secondary level.



English medium education (where all classes except for Swahili are taught in English) has been standard in Tanzania for many years.  Many of the teachers themselves lack mastery of the language, and as a result students are unable to gain sufficient fluency at the primary school level before entering secondary school.  Most of my own students frequently failed every course in Form I due to their inability to understand the classroom lectures or textbooks.

Recently the Tanzanian Parliament has passed a law to make Swahili the language of instruction to replace English in secondary schools (Swahili is already the language of instruction for primary schools), but this has yet to be implemented.  Proper education in English is one of the many challenges faced by Tanzanian students in the educational system.

Saturday, June 6, 2015

Swahili Proverbs 1

Swahili Proverb
Ajifunzaye haachi kujua.

Translation
One who studies goes on learning.

Meaning
No learning is a waste of effort.


Source: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Center for African Studies

Itiso Secondary School graduation, 2010

Tuesday, March 10, 2015

Thank you! First scholarship paid!

Thank you to everyonr who helped by donating to the Itiso Scholarship Fund!  Your "thank you" cards are in the mail as we speak.  Thanks to you, I was able to surpass the goal needed this year and pay the fees for our first selected recipient, Emanuel.  My local counterpart, Mr. Sendege, together with Remedius from the NGO assisting with the bank transfers, went to the school to pay Emanuel's fees and check in on him.

Emanuel, left, with Mr. Sendege, right

Emanuel is doing well and excited to be furthering his education and we are proud to be able to help him get there!

Mr. Sendege (left), student Emanuel (center), and Remidius from Youth Empowerment and Support (right)
Since we surpassed our financial needs for this year, we have a little set aside already for next year, when we will be supporting Emanuel for his last year of secxondary school and supporting a new Form V student from Itiso.  For information on giving a tax-deductible donation, please see this post.  All donations go directly to the fund!  You can give a one-time donation or a recurring donation to be given monthly.  On behalf of the students, thank you for your interest and support!

-- Allison

Thursday, January 29, 2015

Help me help Itiso students further their education


As a Returned Peace Corps Volunteer, I have been wanting to give more back to the community that took me, cared for me, and at least humored my crazy ideas. (Girls' empowerment? If you say so, lady...)

My counterpart from my community in Tanzania, with the help of a local NGO, has helped me set up a scholarship fund for kids from the village who want to attend A-level schools. The village has only an O-level school (lower level high school, for those unfamiliar with the British system), requiring the students to attend a boarding school if they wish to continue their education. This is obviously costly, more costly than most families can afford.** This first year I only anticipate being able to support one student and I hope to continue supporting him and adding a new student next year, etc.

This first student has been selected and accepted into a school following his O-level exams and is waiting to start -- as soon as his fees are paid. With the various fees, tuition, supplies, uniforms, wire transfer fees -- all told will come to $370. If you would like to contribute, you can donate through Friends of Tanzania, as US-based nonprofit (so it's tax deductible!). Be sure to indicate that it is for the Itiso Scholarship Fund as shown under Designation below. [Check out the red circle!]  Normally I'd be able to raise this without begging on the internet, but the semester has already begun over there and the sooner we can send the money, the sooner he can start school!
Thanks in advance to anyone who chooses to donate to my project!  If you leave your contact info, I'll send you a note! :)

 **Why this? In my experience living in the community, kids will bomb exams when they don't think their parents can afford their continued education. I saw it, teachers at every educational level saw it. It was an unspoken way for the kids to relieve their parents of guilt for not being able to pay for schooling. After the secondary school was built in the village and youth no longer had to go to boarding schools, bringing the price of it down, primary school exam pass rates jumped. But pass rates for the secondary school are still dismal. That might be because the school is lousy, but it might not be. I want students to use the promise of a scholarship to try to excel and not lower their expectations because of their perceived financial circumstances.