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We believe IC is not just a charity, but a group of people choosing to live differently. This blog highlights what we're up to as an organization, what inspires us, challenges us, and makes us laugh. It's our collective mind written down. We invite you to read, think critically, and speak openly.

INVISIBLE CHILDREN INC.

Invisible Children uses film, creativity and social action to end the use of child soldiers in Joseph Kony's rebel war and restore LRA-affected communities in central Africa to peace and prosperity.

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Posts Tagged: schools in uganda

May 28, 2010

S4S update: Roofing project done at Layibi

A glimpse of the underbelly of a new IC-built roof that has just gone up on one of Layibi’s buildings.

In late March, the S4S team blogged about the start of a refurbishment project at St. Joseph’s College Layibi. The project consisted of renovating a building block that housed the school’s main auditorium, a computer lab, and a library. Although time and labor intensive, we knew our S4S team could handle the challenge.

Fast forward to today:  After months of hard work, plans, and site visits, the S4S team has nearly finished the first phase of the renovation project. Using Round 3 funding of roughly $35,000, the team focused on external upgrades, which included replacing the entire roof, removing old plaster and windows, and putting in new flooring.

In the next few weeks, the team will begin focusing on the second phase of the project:  refurbishing the internal elements of the structure. These tasks will include everything from painting to replacing furniture and installing new electrical systems.

The project will finish in the next two to three months. We couldn’t be happier, as this completed project means an upgraded auditorium for the students, a laboratory that will hold 30 computers (provided by our partners at Computer Aid International), and a quiet place where students can read leisurely and study in-between classes.

- The S4S team

The shiny new roof!

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April 22, 2010
Category: Homepage, IC in Uganda | Tags: , , , | Contributor: Invisible Children

Acholi Culture: Graduation

Masaba (center) stands with his family at his graduation celebration

“Humans learn.  That is what we do.  It is part of who we are.”  Masaba’s father, slow-speaking and a pillar of a man, stood before us next to a pole flashing with Christmas lights.  With red, green, orange, and blue light splashing across his face, he said,  “If you cease to learn, you perish.”

Silence had settled over the room like a morning fog, and this statement seemed to echo.  Anywhere else, a sentence like this could be mistaken for hyperbole; here in Uganda, a place where education directly determines one’s access to employment and quality healthcare, it served as an ominous warning:  Learn or lose.

Masaba, my co-worker, had just received his post-graduate diploma, an award that marks the completion of the first year of a two-year masters program.  Thirty of us had gathered at a local restaurant to celebrate the achievement.  For a few hours we ate, danced, and listened as people gave heartfelt speeches.  Most speeches focused not only on Masaba’s tenacity, but on the importance of education, as well.  Listening to people describe the way Masaba latched onto education, using it to pull himself to where he is today, I couldn’t help but think about how I took school for granted while growing up.  If learning is living, was I half-dead in college?

*****

Once exams were finished, as campus emptied and slipped into its summer hibernation, I did what most American students do after leaving their universities for the last time:  I had dozens of people over to my parent’s house for a barbeque.  I think I gave a three-minute thank you speech to my folks, but for the most part, the night revolved around food and socializing, around reveling in the present.  Graduation in northern Uganda is a different affair.

For starters, a proper graduation party is only thrown for college graduates; one of my co-workers said it best:  “When you finish high school here, you have only made it half-way.”  Finishing college, for many, is something that requires such extreme levels of personal and familial sacrifice that a cathartic party is almost a necessity.  Most universities charge fees that are well beyond what any family of farmers or laborers (ie. most families in Uganda) can comfortably pay.  As such, many college students in Uganda are so broke from paying school fees that they eat one meal or less a day to save money—the common expression ‘having a university figure’ comes from this scenario.  Parents, too, will often starve themselves of meals to avoid spending potential tuition funds.

The Acholi, the most populous tribe in Gulu district where I live, see college graduation as an event that is as important for a student’s parents as it is for the student.  Graduation is an affirmation of parental prowess, a public declaration that parents have accomplished their responsibilities and primed their kids for life.    Students, too, don’t take graduation lightly, for it changes the way their communities see them.  A Ugandan friend of mine said, “After graduation, members of your clan will look at you as an achiever.  They will want to be associated with you.  In clans where not many people have gone to university, you will be seen as one of your clan’s problem-solvers.”

The party itself can take one of two forms:  a Western-style party with a DJ, rented sound system, and catered food, or a traditional party with Acholi dancing and a home cooked feast.  With each passing year, fewer and fewer graduates are opting to dance the bwola and the dingi-dingi at their parties, replacing the sounds of the adungu, lukema, and the nanga with the pounding bass of Ugandan club hits.

*****

“When Masaba used to bring home his grades at the end of term, I’d look at the high marks—he always scored well—and I would say, ‘Son, these are good, but good is not great.”  His father cracked a smile.  With the sting of this moment long buried in memory, even Masaba, too, let a smile slip.

His father continued.  “And so today, Masaba, as we gather to congratulate you on your most recent accomplishment, I want to remind of you one thing.”  He paused and turned to grin at his son.  We all started laughing, knowing what was coming.  “As nice as this degree is, as hard as you have worked, know that this is not the end.  There are more degrees to get.  Good, remember, is not great.”

–Andrew

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February 24, 2010

S4S Update: The Books are Here!

small books

Workers unload boxes of books destined for the libraries of our 11 Ugandan partner schools

In December 2009, Books for Africa generously donated more than 24,000 titles from books collected throughout the United States. The books were shipped overseas and upon their arrival, the Invisible Children staff quickly began sorting through them and preparing them for distribution.

Today, we are excited to announce that all of our 11 partner schools will receive non-core curriculum books that will be used to furnish their once bare libraries. As of now, the majority of school libraries do not provide students with the resources needed to continue reading outside of the classroom. This is the first major push from Schools For Schools (S4S) to encourage children to embrace reading culture.

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December 3, 2009

Schools for Schools Update: Lacor dormitory completion on the horizon!

Girl's dormitory construction at Lacor Secondary School

Girl's dormitory construction at Lacor Secondary School

The first girl’s dormitory at Lacor is on its way to completion. Builders have been working around the clock to get the fist story finished before the break for the holiday season. At this lightening speed of construction, the dormitory should be ready to house 192 girls in no time. But it cannot be completed without your help! Keep up the Round 4 fundraising efforts everyone in order to see the final product!

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October 15, 2009

S4S Update: New Classroom Block at Keyo SS!

15-10-2009 Keyo SS Receives New Classrooms!The students at Keyo SS received their new IC-built two-classroom block

Today was a great day:  our Country Director, Jolly Okot, and the S4S team traveled to the Keyo SS original site to hand over their first completed project—a brand new two-classroom block!  As our newest partner school, Keyo SS had yet to benefit from the funds raised in Rounds 1 and 2.  However, with funds from Round 3, the S4S team has managed to construct a much needed facility.  These two new classrooms are only the beginning of the many structures S4S intends to build at Keyo SS.

In her welcome speech, Jolly noted that the buildings S4S is putting on the ground are the tools to take Keyo’s students out of poverty; but tools are only useful in the hands of those who work hard.  “Your brain is your brawn.  Use it every day,” Jolly remarked.   The students committed to care for and maintain their new classrooms, pledging a huge thank you to all supporters of Keyo SS.

Donations from Round 4 are going towards a second (and hopefully third) classroom block.  For more information on Keyo SS and the work that remains, please check out the S4S website.

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September 28, 2009

On the Ground: S4S Update from Uganda

Walter Knox, Head Teacher at Pabbo Secondary School, poses with the new generator Invisible Children provided for his students

When schools outside of Uganda raise money for the Schools for Schools Program (S4S), that money gets spent in two ways at our 11 Ugandan partner schools:  on ‘hardware’ (physical construction projects) and ‘software’ (curriculum development, teacher training, and teacher exchange placements, among other things.)

As always, S4S is charging full-steam ahead with the implementation of its software and hardware projects here in Uganda.  I just got an update today from Patrick, the Schools for Schools Program Manager.  Our four full-time S4S engineers are busy checking up on contractors and evaluating bids; our Education Officer and her assistant are sorting out placements for Ugandan teachers slated to visit the US.

Check out all of the exciting stuff that’s happening on the S4S front in the next few weeks.

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July 21, 2009

Education: A Priority in Northern Uganda

IMG_9301 by you.

Above:  Different local leaders in front of the new peace monument in Gulu, Uganda.  From left to right:  the LC5 of Amuru district, the mayor of Gulu, the Dutch Ambassador to Uganda, Archbishop Odama, and IC Country Director Jolly Grace Okot

Invisible Children isn’t the only organization in northern Uganda concerned about improving education.  More than a dozen NGOs and a large group of government officials recently met in Gulu to celebrate the educational progress taking place in the area.  To commemorate education’s importance in ensuring peace, The Dutch Embassy commissioned a sculpture—two children reading from a pillar of books—that now stands in the center of one of Gulu’s main intersections.  After speaking at length about education’s role in a post-conflict environment, the Dutch Ambassador, Jeroen Verheul, celebrated the sculpture’s unveiling by hosting a lunch for local community leaders.

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