Transforming education for children across Malawi
In this update I’m delighted to introduce you to VSO’s education project, where me and my fellow volunteers are providing educational technology and sharing our skills in hundreds of primary schools across Malawi. The impact this is having on children’s attendance, confidence and learning is incredible - and it’s only possible thanks to your kind support.
April's featured volunteer
Moni onse! I’m Theonas Kalumika, VSO Education Specialist in Malawi, and I’ll be taking you forward on your Sponsor a Volunteer journey. Read on to find out how, with your support, we’re giving children here the education they deserve.
In Malawi, poor learning conditions and a lack of resources have created barriers to children’s education.
Over two thirds of students don’t finish primary school and those that do often lack the skills needed to thrive as older children and adults. Many primary schools have classes full of hundreds of students but only one teacher, meaning many children get left behind in their education, and eventually drop out altogether.
By supporting children with educational tablets, they're taking huge leaps in their learning. I was very excited when I heard about the work VSO is doing in schools in Malawi, and ever since I started volunteering I've been able to share my knowledge with everyone here. I can't wait to update you on how our work here in Malawi is going, and how your support is helping change children's lives.
April '24 volunteer update
Why our work is needed
Here in Malawi, children are facing huge barriers to education. Most are living in poverty and their parents simply cannot afford to buy the textbooks, notepads, pens or clothing they need for school. Children are having to share materials with other students or, worse still, families are having to make the heartbreaking choice between feeding their children or buying them a school uniform.
For those who do manage to go to school, the poor conditions, overcrowding, and lack of teachers and resources make it incredibly hard to get a good education. Schools here have no running water or electricity. Children sit on bare concrete floors, in crowded classrooms with few learning materials. At one primary school I work in, there is just one teacher for a class of over 200 students. Can you imagine? My VSO colleagues in the UK say it’s like having seven of your classes crammed together in one room. The teacher cannot possibly support every child, so their progress suffers. Sadly, it’s the students who need the most support who end up being left furthest behind.
As a result of the situation here, many children drop out of school without the ability to read, write or count. I found out that around two thirds of students don’t finish primary school in Malawi, which is appalling. Even those who do complete their schooling often do so without the skills needed to build a good life for themselves in the future. It’s no wonder that many children find themselves trapped in a cycle of poverty. But, with you standing with us, we know it’s possible to change the path for these children. I’m very excited to share with you the work we’re doing in Malawi to support children in accessing a quality education.
How we are creating change
To tackle barriers to education, VSO has built special learning centres in 338 primary schools across 16 districts of Malawi. Each centre is equipped with tablet devices that have modules on literacy and numeracy to help children learn how to read, write and count. Because everything in the learning centre is solar powered, the tablets even work without internet or grid power.
I often think how amazing it would have been to have had these tablets when I was a child. They use fun tasks such as puzzles and picture matching to keep children engaged and even have a ‘digital teacher’ to instruct them on what to do. The students here are so excited to use them, I love watching them race over to the learning centre when it’s their turn!
Alongside these educational tablets, VSO volunteers like me are working closely with teachers in each school to provide guidance, support and mentoring. I really enjoy getting to work alongside the teachers here – we are learning so much from one another. What’s amazing is this combination of volunteer support and the new tablet technology is making it possible for children to access high-quality one-on-one style learning at their own pace, no matter how big their class is. Already we can see this is accelerating children’s progress, raising school attendance, and significantly improving their ability to read, write and count.
Currently the learning centres are used by students in standard class 2 (ages 7-9), but our aim is to expand the project to eventually reach more year groups across nearly 6,000 schools. Thanks to VSO supporters like you, our goal is to get these tablets into every primary school in Malawi in just five years. Doesn’t that sound amazing?
A bit about me and my role
I grew up in the central region of Malawi, with my eight brothers and sisters. School for us was not so different as it is today – but, back then, our parents had to pay for our education. This was a big challenge, and for many families, school was simply not an option. Thankfully, education in Malawi is now free, but it isn’t mandatory and conditions still have a long way to go.
When I finished school, I became a primary school teacher for 13 years, before spending another 18 years as a primary education advisor. I always really enjoyed the teaching. It’s where I felt most comfortable, and being respected by the students and wider community was really rewarding. I decided to join VSO when I heard about a pilot of the education project happening in the central region of Malawi where I lived. The more I learnt about what VSO and their partners were hoping to achieve here, the more I knew I had to be a part of it.
In my role as VSO Education Specialist, I work with 17 different primary schools across Malawi. This means there’s a lot of travelling with my job and every day is different. I recently visited a school in the rural Malawi and helped out in the new VSO learning centre, supporting students with their tablets. I then spent some time with the class teacher, Peter, to provide support and guidance with the lesson. It’s currently very hot and wet out here so the learning centre provides a much more comfortable place to learn than the hot, stuffy classroom with rain coming in through the roof!
I love seeing children using and benefitting from the learning centres. The best thing about my role is monitoring and supporting how the children change their behaviours as they learn new skills. It makes me feel very proud to be part of this VSO project. I’ve met many students who would be struggling to learn, and might not be coming to school at all, if it weren’t for the work we are doing here. Work that you, as VSO supporters, are making possible. One of the students I work with, Memory*, loves her new learning centre and asked me to share her story with you…
Memory's story
Like a lot of children in Malawi, 7-year-old Memory has grown up in poverty. She lives in a remote village with her parents and sisters, in a small home with a cement floor and an iron sheet roof. A lot of adults in her village didn’t finish school and, without an education, the opportunities available to them were limited. Many had little choice but to become subsistence farmers which is a precarious way of living. If their crops fail to grow due to drought or flooding, or because someone needed to work the farm is injured, they will go without food. Memory even knows some children in her village who – like their parents – have never gone to school, or who have had to drop out. The terrible reality is that, by missing out on school, these children are likely to become trapped in the cycle of poverty that has affected so many generations before them.
It doesn’t have to be this way. Despite her family’s own challenges and the hour-long walk each morning, Memory attends one of the primary schools I volunteer in and visit regularly. She’s in Peter’s class 2, with 200 classmates. She says she finds it too big and crowded – and doesn’t like how cold it gets in winter – but loves to learn. When the learning centre was built in her school, Memory was so excited! She enjoys going there and says the tablets help her to read, count and do puzzles. Her favourite thing to do on them is read and write, and often talks to her friends about how they are helping them to learn. Since using the tablets, Memory is really excelling in her learning and is now one of the top ten students in a class of over 200! Memory dreams of becoming a nurse one day so she wants to keep coming to school and learning as much as she can. Thanks to your incredible support, we can help make Memory’s dream become a reality.
Thank you
Thank you so much for standing with us to improve education for children in Malawi. Together, we’re building the essential foundations for students to gain the skills, confidence and aspirations needed to stay in school, improve their learning outcomes, and move on to good jobs and brighter futures. I look forward to sharing more insights from our work here next time.
Until then…thank you and farewell.
Theo
P.S. Remember, you can ask a question or leave me a message below. I’d really love to hear from you!
Want to ask a question?
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Your latest questions answered
Thank you so much, Hannah, for reading the update. Indeed it is an amazing job being done here, but it is more amazing because of your support and we appreciate the support you always give to make VSO do it's project all over the world including our country Malawi, please continue. In my country many, many children are encouraged to complete their primary circle because of such education interventions, like the current one that is making children acquire skills of reading and computing during their early grades.
Hannah, you might have some questions about what we are doing in the project. Please, feel free to ask and I will respond accordingly.
Thank you so much, Hannah, and have a lovely time.
Theonas
Hope you are fine. Let me first apologize to you for my late coming back to you and share experiences. Indeed it is a great program, Alison, as I might have mentioned in my last email that the program targets all primary schools in our country, totalling to over 6,000 and will run up to 2029, if all goes well. So you should know that there is great appreciation and excitement over here because of your support.
Just to share with you, Alison, attendance of most learners has improved and some learners come to the point of reminding a teacher to have tablets session if they see time elapsing in a day.
Let me thank you so much, Alison for your encouraging words and you should know that your words are a source of strength to us.
Thank you so much and enjoy your time.
Theonas
Thanks for your touching and inspirational word, Alison. It is very nice and encouraging to hear that.
Briefly, Alison, I do monitor and support teachers and learners as they use tablets in all project schools. What happens is that the schools are identified, different experts provide different services to make a school ready to receive tablets. Such services include providing solar charging system for charging tablets and cages for safe keeping of tablets. The community does provide a security guard ( watchman) during the night. It all starts with community sensitisation about the coming of tablets in the community as a project or program of children to learn through the tablet. Then, teachers are trained on how to conduct and support a tablet session. Alison, take note that at the moment children learn mathematics and a vernacular language, "Chichewa" through the tablets.So what I do is go round to these schools and monitor and support the teachers and children during tablet sessions. We also provide information and reports about the way things are happening on the ground in relation to the project. We also support management in carrying out the project activities in the field such as meetings, trainings and open days, including supporting visitors who come and visit us.
Thanks a lot, Alison.
Regards
Theo
Did you know?
We bring about lasting change not by sending aid, but by working through volunteers to empower communities in some of the world’s poorest regions. You can read more about VSO’s areas of work and discover more about our projects here.
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