By Pham Thi Ngoc Mai | Marketing and Fundraising Officer
At REACH, our approach to helping disadvantaged youth follows a simple formula: three months of intensive vocational training followed by six months of job placement support.
And the results speak for themselves.
In 2015, 1117 students successfully graduated from our specialised vocational training courses: hospitality, web & graphic design, sales & marketing, hairdressing and spa & beauty therapy.
However, more important than what we teach our students in their three months with us is how they use their newfound skills and knowledge to find meaningful employment and improve their quality of life.
In 2015, our students seized the opportunities presented before them, with more than 85% of students finding stable employment within six months of graduation, well above our target of 80%.
We have plenty more in store for our students in 2016 and so, in the spirit of the New Year, we would like to share with you the stories of REACH students that have inspired us and will hopefully inspire you too.
These incredible stories illustrate the disadvantaged circumstances many of our students face, their journey through the REACH program and their life after graduation.
Thuyet
Thuyet was born into a farming family of five children in a rural district of Thua Thien Hue Province. Like her siblings, she dropped out of school after finishing primary school and at the age of 13, she began her first job as a maid 16 km away from home.
For Thuyet, it was a particularly difficult time in her life.
"I would cry seeing other children go to school and spend time with their family while I had to work,” said Thuyet. “Every night I dreamt of being a normal school girl and then I would wake up in the morning disappointed.”
But after three years working as a maid, Thuyet began searching for a new job. She soon started her second job as a shop seller but was promptly fired for her lack of education. She desperately applied at other shops but none would hire her.
It was then that she learned about a nearby REACH vocational training center through a friend.
"I worried that I wouldn’t be accepted because of my educational background,” she said. “However, after talking to the teacher, I knew I’d have a chance and for the first time I had hope.”
The following week, Thuyet received her acceptance letter from REACH, offering her three months of free vocational training in the Beauty and Spa Therapy course.
Following graduation, Thuyet was introduced by her teacher to a small spa. She worked hard and was eager to put her newfound knowledge and skills into practice.
After only a month, Thuyet was asked to apply for a job at the Eldora Hotel – a 4-star hotel in Hue city. She was offered a full-time job with a starting salary of $200 per month – her hard work had finally paid off.
"When I found out, the first person I called was my teacher at REACH,” said Thuyet. “I couldn’t believe it, I was crying. She changed my life.”
Now, Thuyet says her only remaining wish is to meet the donors who funded her time at REACH. “I want to thank them for making my dream comes true."
Khang
At the age of 23, Khang decided he wanted to study web and graphic design. For Khang, who was living with a physical disability, his study options were limited. But given a chance to choose a different career path, Khanh wouldn’t choose anything else.
At just 15 Khanh underwent surgery for a brain tumour. The surgery, however, was so complex that it caused hemiplegia. Paralysed on one side of his body, Khang had stopped schooling for a year to recover at home.
Although Khang was soon able to walk again, he trembled and couldn’t move his left hand. In spite of this, Khang - like any other child his age - was eager to get back to school and see his friends.
But bad luck struck again when Khang had to undergo brain surgery a second time, and the medical costs left his family broke. The income from the family farm and his father’s construction work was not enough to feed the family.
Khang later dropped out of school before finishing grade 11.
It wasn’t long, however, before Khanh was packing up his life in the country and starting a new life in Hanoi as a student at REACH. He knew the challenges would be great and that the road to finding a job would not be easy.
“All I wanted was to get a job after I graduated,” said Khanh. “This is a simple dream but it was my biggest dream.”
But more than achieving his own dream of finding a job, Khanh also wanted to show his parents that he could be financially independent and responsible.
Three months later, Khang graduated from REACH as a fully qualified graphic designer and landed his first full-time job at Esoftflow, a reknowned graphic design company in Hanoi.
He hopes that his story can show other students from disadvantaged backgrounds that they too can achieve their goals. “We need to take full responsibility for whatever we do,” said Khanh. “So said, so done.”
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