By Margaret Kenyi | Founder and Executive Director
EMPOWER 30 STUDENTS WITH DISABILITY IN TANZANIA, REPORT NUMBER 9: MAIN ACTIVITIES AND ACHIEVEMENTS OF STEP BY STEP LEARNING CENTRE, SSLC IN 2022.
INTRODUCTION: This report will summarise the main activities and achievements of 2022 vis a vis our vision, mission, goals and activities.
MISSION STATEMENT
SSLC’s mission is to promote the physical, intellectual, psychological and social development of each child through a holistic educational provision in an inclusive, empathetic, respectful, positive and stimulating environment so that special needs students and their families feel safe, accepted and loved. Staff use child-centered training and learning methods to encourage all children, including those having severe disabilities, to reach their maximum potential.
VISION STATEMENT
SSLC aims to grow its capacity to provide a safe and stimulating learning and working environment for mentally and severely physically challenged students for as long as they need such support to progressively improve and learn appropriate Life and Job skills in order to achieve a degree of independence and dignity.
MAIN GOALS
MAIN ACTIVITIES
STAKEHOLDERS: In 2022, we had a total of 222 project participants and beneficiaries (115 females and 107 males). These were students, staff, parents/guardians/caregivers and their families.
JUNIOR CORE PROGRAM (AGES 3 TO 17)
All 20 of the Junior Program students made it to the end of 2022. They had varying degrees of physical and mental challenges: 8 with autism, 9 cerebral palsy and 2 Downs syndrome and one slow lerner. Over 80% of the students were able to attend school 80% and above of the time. 80% and above of the students met the goals set in their Individual Learning Programs (ILPs).
HOME BASED PROGRAM (HBP)
The HBP served 4 students who could not attend school due to distance, difficult family circumstances and severe physical challenges. The four teachers followed them home on Fridays and solely focussed on each one of them. When we had visitors offering intensive specialist services and training , such as in physiotherapy or occupational therapy in August 2022, we invited them and their parents/guardians/caregivers to attend the workshops.
One big challenge in this programe is the cost of travelling which became an additional buden on SSLC. All four parents could not afford to contribute to transport costs. But the benefits are enormous to these otherwise excluded students, their unsupported immediate families and the uninformed communities that very often heap stigma on them.
ADULT PROGRAM (AGES 18 AND ABOVE)
By the end of 2022, SSLC’s Adult Program had 8 (from 12) adult students most of them graduates from the Junior Program: 2 are living with autism, 1 cerebral palsy, 2 Down’s syndrome, 1 slow learners, 1 albinism and 1 Pfeiffer’s type I syndrome. They learnt job/employment skills on the job in our Income Generating Projects (IGPs). These activities have been our most effective advocacy demonstrating that disability is not inability. They also enhanced the students’ independence and value to their families thus reducing the stigmatization and rejection that most of them experience. Each of these eight vulnerable young adults have now mastered one project which they enjoy and is potentially a business we will set them up with when they are ready to settle back in their communities. Five of them are ready to be employed by SSLC as assistants to the teachers and IGPs pending funding for their salaries.
ADVOCACY
SSLC was an active participant in community activities such as Sports and the colorful marches around town on World Autism, Downs’ Syndrome, Cerebral Palsy and Disability Days. These activities created public awareness of disability as a dignified state deserving of equal respect as the rest of society. SSLC’s work has become a model of care and provision for this population. In the past 17 years of my involvement, I have witnessed extreme denial where children are hidden to acceptance and even celebration where many parents, guardians and community members turn up in large numbers to support students with disabilities. In 2022, the awareness went up as we could tell from more parents/caregivers seeking placements for their children at SSLC.
MAIN ACHIEVEMENTS OF 2022
SUSTAINABILITY
SSLC is supported by donations, grants, student Sponsors and Volunteers. The Income Generating Projects bring in some income. Competition for grants from big donors became stiff. We are therefore happy to have stepped up our fundraising on GlobalGiving and made new partners in 2022. Even then, lack of substantial funding remains the biggest threat to SSLC.
Submitted by Margaret Kenyi
Founder and Executive Director
Step by Step Learning Centre
By Margaret Kenyi | Founder and Executive Director
By Margaret Kenyi | Founder and Executive Director
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