Some of you might remember a year ago when I so joyfully sent
A Chance for Change Part
II: A Way Out
Anyone who has been in
Most of those moments occur when I’m at a school. I know how much
of a struggle it is for parents to afford to send their children to get an
education. The issue is: what do they get for their money?
The sad answer is that they don’t get much. It isn’t that
the teachers, for the most part, aren’t sincere and hardworking. But
without resources like books and additional teachers (average class size is
almost 60) it is unrealistic to have high expectations. Many of the teachers
are not well educated; some are parents who long for more for their children
but never were educated themselves.
I was talking to a teacher who scraped up the money to take a computer
class at a college. After taking a class for the whole term, she still had not
even SEEN a computer. She `learned’
to type on a piece of cardboard.
Oracle, the second largest software company in the world, was, at one
time, almost 40% Indian. What is interesting about that is that in ONE
generation,
Technology changed that country.
And so what I want to try is rather outlandish considering the poor
I want to build a computer center at each school that we feed.
Instead of constructing a building, we want to convert old metal
shipping containers into classrooms. The cost is so much cheaper, and the
buildings will be secure. Since only one of the schools has power, we will
install solar panels on the roof. With a battery, inverter and a few items, we
can get set up:
Container: $1200.00
Remodel: $3000.00
Solar Panels:
$3000.00
Batteries:
$1000.00
Inverter:
$650.00
Charge Controller:
$350.00
Cables:
$160.00
Back up Generator
$700.00
Transport $400.00
Construction fee: $530.00
$10990.00
The problem with buying computers in this country is that they
don’t tend to synch the chips well, so we would probably buy refurbished
Dell’s. I can get Pentium 3’s for about $200.00 each. We would
begin with ten to twelve computers @ each school.
Our software would begin with all Microsoft products: the Office Suite,
Typing Tutor, Encarta and Magic School Bus. I’m hoping to be able to talk
with someone from MS when I’m in the states to get a better idea of cost.
I’ve trained two Kenyans on the packages because I think it is
important that it isn’t “big whitey” coming to the rescue. A
wise friend of mine told me once that the solution needs to come from the
people you are trying to help. I just want to help provide the tools.
Let me add a few thoughts:
I’m so grateful for the support you have given to the school
lunch program, and I think it is so important to the children. It has enabled
children to stay in school, and provided proper nutrition to 5000 kids six days
a week. I’m excited about the
computers because if it works right, it can be a means to give them a chance to
escape the inconceivable poverty here.
I just want them to have a way out.
I’m so tired of it being the way it is.
It doesn’t have to be this way.
Your pal
Steve
Stateside
Address:
Phone:
011-254-20-32046-252
peifer@kijabe.net
http://peifer.kijabe.org