By Jane Kaye-Bailey | Founder
We have just come to the end of another financial year and I am pleased to report that donations are well up on last year, which has enabled us to reach out to more orphans and vulnerable children. Over 30 schools are now benefitting from our support, most recently Sinsimuku, Bunsanga and Chaba Primary Schools.
For Sinsimuku, the school has two new classroom blocks, a teacher's house, latrines and a bore hole for the 270 pupils attending this school. Construction is now underway for Bunsanga Community School. In 2015, we added a bore hole, now the pupils are also going to have new classrooms, teachers' houses and latrines. The existing school, built by the community, was made from poles, mud and straw. Sadly, due to recent storms the roof had collapsed and the pupils are being taught in a church made from the same meterials. The new constructions will be permanent and should last for at least 50 years. Both schools are in Nyawa Chiefdom.
Chaba School, in Mukuni Chiefdom, has attempted to teach grades eight and nine as there is no other school within a radius of eight miles. However, due to insufficient classrooms the Ministry of Education has removed grade 8. 56 pupils of their pupils must now walk to Livingstone, which is 8 miles from the school. For pupils living in the opposite direction the distance increases to 12 to 15 miles each way. As a result, children have dropped out of school. The reason for the government’s decision is that three classes were being taught in one classroom and teaching time, which should be five and a half hours per day, was reduced to three hours. Consequently, the pupils were not completing the syllabus. Two feeder schools, Kamwi and Ndele, both previously developed and supported by The Butterfly Tree, feed into Chaba School.
Another major challenge for young pupils, mostly orphaned or vulnerable, is that they must walk through an unsafe compound, on the approach to Livingstone, putting the children at risk of being attacked or raped. Having the extra classrooms will enable the school to reintroduce grade 8 and continue with grade 9, instead of it being removed.
Providing adequate educational faclities for rural communities gives every child a right to educaton, something The Butterfly Tree strongly believes in. Besides buildings we supply a great deal of educational materials, most recently in the form of text books for Mukuni, River View and Kamwi Schools. There is a huge shortfall in all rural schools due to the Ministry of Education introducing a new curriculum in 2014. During the past year, your donations have helped to develop these schools and enabled us to purchase almost 800 text books.
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