Thursday, April 02, 2009

ELWA Academy

Now we take a break from our usual updates to bring you a series of blogs on the ministries of ELWA. As the title says, we'll Start with the ELWA Academy.

ELWA Academy started out as a school for missionary kids in 1957. It was one of the larger MK schools in West Africa. The school enrollment quickly dwindled during the early years of the civil war and the school was closed in 1996.

The Academy reopened as a school for Liberian children in 2003. They have been adding additional grades every year and have classes through the 8th grade now with over 530 STUDENTS total. There is no free public school system in Liberia, so families have to pay to send their kids to the Academy. The Academy tries to keep their fees low, to keep the tuition affordable, but a semester is still equivalent to 1 month+ salary.

So with that in mind, I sat down with the principal, Benedict Nagbe, today to see where we could help. Here's what I found...


Recreation is a real problem. As you can see they have many many kids who use their very limited playground equipment. They have a huge need for both new playground equipment and athletic gear. Footballs (soccer to us Americans), kickballs and basketballs are needed. They are also trying to purchase jerseys for football teams they would like to form. Another need is toys or equipment to play with inside during the rainy season...

Here is the Academy's computer lab. The students are very eager to learn how to use computers. Out of the computers in this picture, only the one on the left works. 530 students and one computer...not good.
So here's what we are thinking. I would like two volunteers to coordinate collection efforts:
1. One person to coordinate the collection of athletic equipment.
2. One person to coordinate the collection of computers and accessories.
I know before we moved we had a couple of old computers in the garage. They still worked, but we had purchased newer faster machines and had no use for them. If we had a volunteer that could collect computers and ship them to Tennessee to Service to Servants, and same for the athletic supplies, we can get them to the Academy. We'd like to try to have these supplies ready for school next year (September). Please let me know if you'd be interested in helping with either of these efforts...don't make me beg.





7 comments:

D'Linda laird said...

I will start collecting sports equipment. Anything they don't need?

Dustan and Becka said...

I have an Emac that we are not taking with us. When you get a coordinator, I will send it wherever they say.

Jamie and Rusty Laird said...

Thanks Dustan & Becka. My parents have graciously offered to coordinate the effort from the stateside. I'll be posting in the next couple days with information on shipping and collection.

Jen Perry said...

I already got about 30 soccer balls and 10 basketballs in a box to send. I work with D'linda and TAG to see if we can get uniforms...how many teams (colors) and how many per team.

Also, I will see if the new Missions team at Church want to take on the gathering of computers. If not I think TAG will.

Andrea @ The Train To Crazy said...

I'll help however I can. Just let me know what you need help with Mom and Jen.

Oettelalert said...

I sent the request to everyone I know that is in IT. We'll see what pops up.

Mark Moeller said...

On the PC side of things I'd like to get clarification on their needs. Are they mostly interested in just having functioning PC's for students to use or do they want to be able to have students work on them and learn computer repair skills? What do the teachers want the students to use the PC's for?

As I was thinking about the general need two thoughts came to mind -
1) The new OLPC (One Laptop Per Child) initiave (http://laptop.org/en/) which provides, for $200 each, a wifi laptop loaded with software. The storage is on NAND flash so no hard drive problems. Companys also sell comparable priced 'netbooks' that run Windows XP. Again, the use NAND Flash instead of HD's.
2) That giving them a bunch of random used equipment would be a maintenance headache for them. Each machine would need to be gone over by someone, scrubbed of unlicensed software, viruses and private data. Do they have staff to do that (would it be seen as an educational opportunity) or would it be best for us to do this state side before sending over?

Looking forward to your thoughts.