It’s not too early to save the date for this year’s Annual Gathering to be held at Surly Brewing Company from 5:00 – 8:00 p.m. Hear stories of students transforming their own lives through education, meet a special guest from Kenya, purchase beautiful handmade items from Kenya and enjoy a Surly beer. All are welcome!
Life Skills Pilot Program Launched
Once our students graduate from a post-secondary program, their chances of becoming employed are over 90 percent. As of the end of 2017, 93 percent of our students were employed or in internships that we believe will lead to employment. But getting them there is hard work.
Over the last ten years, only 83 percent of our students who began secondary school (high school) completed their education. And 87 of those who entered post-secondary completed their post-secondary education. Students drop out due to unintended pregnancies, getting caught up with the wrong crowd, drugs and other challenges teenagers with significant trauma in their background often experience across the globe.
We are determined to increase our secondary and post-secondary graduation rates. To do so, we are kicking off two new programs. In December we launched a sexual and reproductive health program, and just last month, Meghan and Evan Feige traveled to Kenya for the second time to lead a two-week life skills training. The training is designed to support recent secondary graduates in making the important transition from secondary to post-secondary education and into a career following their post-secondary education.
Meghan is the Global Talent and Performance Manager at Cargill Inc. and led students through topics such as personality style, effective communication and listening, emotional intelligence, and resume and interview preparation. Evan is a Senior Planner in Graphics and Design Collaborations at Target. In the follow-up survey, students said:
- “I had to critically evaluate myself and think of my inner being and how I carry out my things. I had never done this before, so it challenged and stretched me.”
- “The training helped me learn how to communicate better with people and to provide the correct information. It also helped increase my confidence.”
- “I believe I can now make wiser decisions for myself.”
The program is going to be launched with all secondary students and recent secondary graduates in November of 2018 in partnership with a Rotary Global Grant. The South Metro Minneapolis Evenings and Kikuyu Rotary Clubs are sponsoring the program and are instrumental in making such an urgently needed program possible for our students to continue succeeding and transforming their lives.
2017 Annual Appeal Match Met!
Together we met the 2017 Truscott Family Match of $60,000 and more! Thank you to everyone who donated generously to provide important programming for students to transform their lives through education in Kenya. The Friends of Ngong Road Annual Appeal funds elements of our program that sponsorship does not. This includes nutrition support, healthcare, a Saturday program, caseworker support, the library, a computer lab, and more.
This year’s annual appeal success of over $132,000 raised could cover the cost of 5,280 meals for families who are particularly needy, 220 new computers for the computer lab, or the gap for 264 students who attend boarding school but their sponsors are only able to provide tuition support.
Thank you for helping to change lives. From the children, their families, and Friends of Ngong Road, “Asante Sana.” Thank you very much.
Notes from Paula
Dear Friends,
As Friends of Ngong Road begins our 12th year of operation, I would like to share a few thoughts with you about the progress the organization is making in leadership succession. Our board of directors began thinking about this challenge several years ago and we continue on the path we devised. Although I expect to lead Friends of Ngong Road for the next several years, it is prudent to lay plans.
- Staff and Board. We are making progress in transitioning from a volunteer-run organization to one with a more traditional staff/board model. Lacey Kraft completed her second year as Director of Development and we added a part-time Operations Associate and a part-time Chief Financial Officer. Jil Bakko is our long-serving, faithful accountant and together these people are transitioning activities from volunteers to staff where appropriate.
- Financial Model. We are also making progress in creating a financial model that does not rely 100% on U.S. philanthropy. The elements of a sustainable long-term financial structure include building a successful business in Kenya (Karibu Loo), a strong endowment fund, and a professional development program. I believe that Karibu Loo will start to contribute to our charitable work in 2018 and with each year that passes our endowment grows and our development program matures.
- Leadership Succession. We are continuing to involve more people in the organization and remain committed to an active and engaged corps of volunteers who can provide substantive leadership. While we have not yet identified my successor, we are working on it. I feel confident that the right person will emerge.
We have much to celebrate in Kenya:
- We had 38 students finish 8th grade in 2017. 12 of them (31.5%) have been selected to attend national high schools, our highest percentage to date.  This demonstrates the impact of more selective student selection processes that began in 2012.  Our experience has been that when students are successful in academics they don’t get into as much trouble during adolescence!
- We had 27 students finish high school in 2017. 25 of the 27 (96%) are enrolled in our post-secondary program. They are currently taking computer classes, have completed a 2-week Life Skills training program, and will begin college applications soon.
- In December, we launched a new Sexual & Reproductive Health Program with strong support from Dr. Patty Kissinger from Tulane University. Â Our objective is to ensure that students understand their sexuality and feel responsible to manage their own bodies, that they have access to contraception and that there are safe places for them to go to get help. We trained 20 Youth Peer Providers, 8 of whom are leading the education of all students in Class 7 and higher. Â Â We believe this Youth Peer Provider model is the most robust available. We hope it results in fewer unplanned pregnancies among girls.
- We welcomed 31 new students to the program in 2017, giving them each hope for their future. Our waiting list remains long with over 200 students and our goal for 2018 is to add 40. If you or anyone you know would like to have a direct, positive impact on a child in Kenya, please follow this link to sign up: https://sandbox.ngongroad.org/sponsor/
This work would not be possible without the hundreds of you who believe that education can transform lives and partner in this important work with us. Thank you!
Paula Meyer
President and Founder
Friends of Ngong Road
Caring Adults Impact Student Success
As of June of this year, we have officially turned eleven years old! And in the past eleven years, Friends of Ngong Road students consistently outperformed their Kenyan peers achieved higher levels of education and were employed at rates far above their peers. In fact, 91 percent of our students who have completed a post-secondary course are either employed or on their way to employment in internships. This is compared to just 15 percent of the young adults who try to enter the Kenyan labor market each year according to the 2016 Kenya Economic Report.
With such impressive results, we wanted to know why our students have been outperforming and achieving at such high rates. Tulane University also wanted to know what was happening at Friends of Ngong Road to produce such great results.
In August of this year, Dr. Izabela Steflja, a professor of Global Development at Tulane University, interviewed 35 of our top-performing secondary and post-secondary students. Her goal was to identify what components have been leading to such high rates of success.
The initial findings are that it is the web of caring adults that we have wrapped around the students that are making the biggest impact. The consistent school teachers, concerned guardians, caring caseworkers, dedicated volunteers, and sponsors who students do not want to disappoint, all have an impact.
While a correlation between the number of caring adults in a child’s life and student success aligns with other research about children affected by trauma, we were surprised to find what an impact sponsors have had on students. Most sponsors do not get the chance to meet the child they sponsor. They do their best to write a few times a year, about twice a year has been our recommendation. And yet, Tulane’s research concludes that the sponsor relationship is integral for students’ success along with the other caring adults in the student’s life.
Sponsor Portal Launched
With these results, we decided we needed to find ways for sponsor and student interactions to be more accessible. Last month we launched the sponsor portal where sponsors can easily write an email to their student, review all historic assessment reports and school marks, learn more about the student’s school, view any photos Friends of Ngong Road has tagged of the student and more. If you are a sponsor and have not yet logged into your portal, click here to learn more about how to log in and use the portal.
Sponsor Tips and Tricks
We also interviewed a few sponsors who have had uniquely personal sponsor relationships to learn more about how they created such a deep relationship and to share their tips and tricks. Here’s what we learned:
Bob and Karin Oliver
From the beginning of their relationship with their sponsored child, Edmond, Bob and Karin worked on remaining authentic and honest in their writings. Karin shared the pain of losing her mother and the joy of their new granddaughter’s birth. She let herself be personal and open, and she thinks this helped create a safe space for the relationship to flourish.
Karin said that whenever they heard from Edmond, they would make an effort to respond within a few days, and they would highlight just one or two areas from his letter and respond. They kept it simple and would write something like, “In your last letter you wrote that “___.” Tell us more about that. Or, “Now we have one other question for you.” Karin said by keeping the communications to just one or two simple questions, they were not overwhelming Edmond and they were able to more quickly respond and keep the conversation going.
Bob and Karin also noted that they worked to find common ground. They learned that Edmond loved basketball, so they educated Edmond about the Spurs basketball team in their home state. They would send news articles about Spurs players visiting patients and volunteering in the community. Again, they never threw too much to Edmond at once. They kept it to one or two stories and let him respond.
Finally, Karin said that Edmond always responded positively to photos she would send. He somehow “inserted himself into our family” after seeing pictures of us with names written on the back or below if in an email.
Overall, Karin suggests keeping correspondences simple. Do not fret about responding to everything. Just sit down, write something simple and specific, and let the relationship grow naturally over time.
Just last month Edmond completed his Kenya Certificate of Secondary Education exam. The exam results determine what type of post-secondary education he can be admitted to in Kenya. Bob and Karin are involved in U.S. higher education systems and have been deeply committed to communicating with Edmond about the next steps in his education.
Janet Gleason
Janet Gleason is the mother of Tom Gleason, longtime Friends of Ngong Road volunteer, camp director, and past board member. Tom connected Janet to her sponsored student, Victor, and over many years a wonderful relationship formed.
Janet said she communicated most often with pictures. She would send photos of Misty their dog or of flags flying along roads for Memorial Day or the Fourth of July. She would send copies of photos that she received of Victor when he was younger. She found that any time she sent a photo, Victor would eagerly open up with questions and comments.
Janet also commented that she was intentional about opening up about hard topics. Tom came back from a trip to Kenya one summer frustrated by the little progress that had been made across the country to provide sexual and reproductive health education and resources and the consequences it had on our students. Janet took a deep breath and decided to write to Victor about the topic. She said that conversation was one of her greatest joys. She trusted that her relationship with Victor was strong enough to dive into hard topics. He always accepted the conversation and appreciated her honesty and openness.
Overall, Janet says that she believed in building a long-term relationship with Victor. And it paid off for both Janet and Victor. They are still very connected. Today Victor is studying Computer Mathematics at Kenyatta University and is a role model for younger students.
Midge Steuber
Midge has had the opportunity to visit her students quite regularly and today has a very comfortable, relaxed relationship with each of them. But it wasn’t always that way. Midge says she remembers a lot of nervousness and shyness when the relationship first started.
While Midge has had the opportunity to visit her students nearly every year, she still finds joy in the mailed and emailed communications. Midge says “While our worlds are so incredibly different, students get a geography lesson from me and both of our worldviews get to be expanded. Sometimes I write about stories from my past like what it felt like when I started high school or my relationship with my siblings and parents. I also try to offer them encouragement and support to stay focused on their studies and to stress that I “have their back.” And sometimes their letters just crack my heart right open! The students feed my soul and restore my faith in humankind. They are deeply loving and appreciative souls!”
Midge also commented on how getting to meet the guardians of the children she sponsors really deepened her relationship with them. She is grateful for the relationship she has been able to build with the students and the guardians over the years.
Midge suggests being patient with students as the relationship continues to form over the years. She says that students are nervous and do not want to disappoint their sponsors. Plus there is a huge cultural difference that must be bridged over time for a deep relationship to form. Patience for the process and patience for the students can go a long way.
Midge is very proud of all of her students. Lydia and Victor graduated from high school and are pursuing higher education in business & finance and procurement & management respectively. Nixon and Enos are entering their senior year (form 4) of high school and Tina is entering her sophomore (form 2) of high school. Several of the students have been leaders at camp and throughout the year among their peers.
If you are not yet a sponsor but are interested in what sponsorship entails, please contact Lacey at lacey@ngongroad.org or 612-568-4211.
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