Educate the Girl Child Campaign
Most children in remote rural communities in Zimbabwe fail to attend or complete school due to financial challenges. Some are orphans, parents are unemployed, they are hungry or they have to walk very long distances to go school. Some children will never go to school, and when girls fail to go to school, their likely alternative is that they are at risk of early marriages or vulnerable to abuses at home and in the community. Our solution is to provide education funds targeting those girls who would not otherwise go to school if no one helps them. If this solution is scaled globally, it empowers more women and girls as they create positive economic impact by getting better jobs, and raising educated children. Education for girls reduces their vulnerability to HIV/AIDS, trafficking and exploitative labor. Global Health Facts 2012 shows that education for girls reduces the risk of infant mortality.
In Zimbabwe, about 90% of the population were not formally employed in 2017 (New York Times). In remote rural communities, 95% of families survive through subsistence farming. The most dominant resulting effect is that families lack the education funds needed to get their children into school. Failure to pay tuition results from limited employment opportunities for parents. The Zimbabwe Vulnerability Assessment Committee in 2019 cites that 61% of children are turned away from school for nonpayment of tuition. 20% of children are out of school, and for those who remain 25% do not complete school. 8% of girls between age 13 - 17 are impregnated, and the other 8% loses interest because of long walking distances or hunger. For those in school, absenteeism is common. Only 9.36% girls complete upper secondary education and 7.71% complete post-secondary education. 32 million children are out of school in sub-Saharan Africa. According to UNICEF, 250 million children globally cannot read, write or do basic math. 130 million of them have never attended school. Unfortunately, for girls in remote rural communities they face multiple barriers when they fail to attend schools including lack of employment, the risk of HIV/AIDS, child abuse and the poverty trap.
Our solution includes three components which address challenges that collectively affect girls' ability to attend school. Our solution is to provide education funds and it does the following initiatives:
1. Education scholarships - we award scholarships that cover full tuition, school uniforms and shoes, stationery and limited medical expenses for those children who would not otherwise go to school if no one helps them. They include orphans, the disabled, and children from unemployed or low income families.
2. School feeding initiative - Most of the girls we support have to walk long distances to get to school and some miss classes because of hunger or helping their parents to work in the fields. By giving them one meal a day, we help them to stay in school and away from household commitments.
3. Leadership interventions - As part of their education, we help our girls to prepare for future leadership roles through emotional development, mentoring, coaching, entrepreneurship training, volunteerism and a program on sexual health and women's rights. We bring speakers and innovators to their classrooms to help them navigate through their career paths.
We support our girls individually depending on what they need for them to succeed.
By giving education scholarships, coupled with school feeding and leadership interventions, we are giving access to education to those children who would not otherwise go to school if no one helps them. We are targeting children at 13 years particularly those who complete their primary education but fail to proceed to secondary education due to financial challenges. In Zimbabwe, 79% of girls complete primary education, many of them with the support of the Basic Education Assistance Module supported by the UK Department of International Development and the Campaign for Female Education. However, only 9.36% of girls complete upper secondary education, and only 7.71% of girls complete post-secondary education. To understand the needs of these children, we are working with interns from the University of Chicago to do research and storytelling. By understanding the individual stories of our girls, we are continuously convinced that most girls drop out of school because their parents fail to pay for tuition. Our scholarship opportunities help children who are out of school to return to school, and those who are at risk of dropouts to stay in school. Our scholarships also help to reduce household poverty by creating employment opportunities for girls.
- Reduce the barriers that prevent girls and young women—especially those living in conflict and emergency situations—from reaching key learning milestones
Our solution relates to both the selected challenge and the dimension because our provision of education funds or scholarships together with interventions that include school feeding and leadership help to create opportunities for access to education for girls, particularly those who would not otherwise go to school if no one helps them. Children in Zimbabwe are living in an emergency situation exacerbated by many years of political violence and undemocratic governance. Schools lack infrastructure and the government is failing to support the rural majority who are facing drought and starvation. For mothers, children's education is undermined by other urgent priorities.
- Pilot: An organization deploying a tested product, service, or business model in at least one community

President & CEO