Take Heart International
Friday, April 29, 2011
New Estimate of Costs to Build the Schoolhouse
Claire Powell, our partner in Kasama, met with the Ministry of Education last week and learned that the cost of building the new schoolhouse (2 classrooms and an secure administration room to keep valuable supplies and equipment) will be about $24,000, not the $18,000 Claire had quoted us earlier. The Ministry of Education not only has specific plans for such a schoolhouse but specific payments to contractors, builders, and workers for each stage of construction. So we definitely will need your help to achieve this goal.
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
Inside the Classroom
By Bob Griffin
We took the accompanying photograph inside Gilbert's classroom, showing Gilbert, Shirley, and part of Gilbert's afternoon class. You can see that the classroom is quite spare. No electricity, so no electric lighting. No projectors, computers, or other devices requiring electrical power. No individual books for pupils. The school has only a meager library of books. The children do learn to read, write and perform simple arithmetic, but so much is missing, even at the basic needs level.
Are any of you able to donate solar panels and battery storage for the school? Also, if we plastered the walls, added bulletin boards and additional chalk boards, the classroom could be made much more vital and spirited. Who among you can supply books for the school? Remember that shipping and payment of duties are the major expenses, not the books themselves. Picnic tables are used in lieu of student desks in the classroom, mainly for the older children. There is no desk for the teacher and no school desks for the children. The teacher stands and the younger children sit on the floor.

If we could just electrify the school with solar panels and battery storage, we could then power a computer and a digital projector, greatly enriching the school offerings. Once we are able to connect to the internet, its resources can be used to enhance the educational experience. All we need is a knowledgeable and generous donor to help us. If we can do this for one school, why not many?
If you are ready to donate funds for the schoolhouse, or to enrich the classroom experience, make out your check to
Take Heart International and send it to
Take Heart International
4913 Puma Way
Carmichael, CA 95608
Telephone: 916-359-4913
(Ask for either Shirley or Bob Griffin)
We took the accompanying photograph inside Gilbert's classroom, showing Gilbert, Shirley, and part of Gilbert's afternoon class. You can see that the classroom is quite spare. No electricity, so no electric lighting. No projectors, computers, or other devices requiring electrical power. No individual books for pupils. The school has only a meager library of books. The children do learn to read, write and perform simple arithmetic, but so much is missing, even at the basic needs level.
Are any of you able to donate solar panels and battery storage for the school? Also, if we plastered the walls, added bulletin boards and additional chalk boards, the classroom could be made much more vital and spirited. Who among you can supply books for the school? Remember that shipping and payment of duties are the major expenses, not the books themselves. Picnic tables are used in lieu of student desks in the classroom, mainly for the older children. There is no desk for the teacher and no school desks for the children. The teacher stands and the younger children sit on the floor.
If we could just electrify the school with solar panels and battery storage, we could then power a computer and a digital projector, greatly enriching the school offerings. Once we are able to connect to the internet, its resources can be used to enhance the educational experience. All we need is a knowledgeable and generous donor to help us. If we can do this for one school, why not many?
If you are ready to donate funds for the schoolhouse, or to enrich the classroom experience, make out your check to
Take Heart International and send it to
Take Heart International
4913 Puma Way
Carmichael, CA 95608
(Ask for either Shirley or Bob Griffin)
Monday, April 18, 2011
How Take Heart International Got Started
by Shirley Griffin
Take Heart International was started by me, my husband Bob, and our daughter, Laura Kennedy, when the need for funds to build a schoolhouse in Zambia became evident to us during a visit to Africa earlier this year.
Zambia has been on our horizon for some years now, ever since we began sponsoring students in rural Zambia. Education usually ends by 6th grade for most students from rural areas because they do not live within walking distance and cannot afford the cost of boarding at high school. For many years, we sent a modest $350 to $400 a year to enable a student, sometimes orphaned by AIDS, to board and attend high school. Later, we supported several students who graduated from high school so that they could attend a two-year teacher’s college in Kasama, northern Zambia. One of the students we supported, Gilbert, eventually obtained a job teaching at a rural school in northern Zambia.
Last year, I wrote Gilbert, asking what we could bring when we came to Zambia and visited his school. Gilbert defined the extreme need for a roof for one of their two buildings, which had a thatched roof that leaked both water and insects. After many conversations and a school visit from us, teachers and students at Mission Avenue School in Carmichael decided to raise money for the new roof (some $3,000)! We were excited to visit Gilbert and show him pictures of the American children who had committed to raise funds to help Kapoma Basic School.
| Fork in the dirt road; the sign lists the rural schools in the area and directed us to the right for Kapoma School |
| Sign giving directions to Kapoma School |
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| Children from Kapoma School running out to meet us |
But where was the schoolhouse that needed the new roof? We saw only a thatched roof suspended on poles, no walls or floor. The walls had caved in during recent rains, and not much was left—
| The former two-room schoolhouse with thatched roof |
With the collapse of the 2 room mud brick and thatched-roof schoolhouse, Kapoma School now depends on a single adobe brick structure of three classrooms (1x3) for five teachers and over 300 children! That presented a challenge, which we hope to meet head-on: We are now committed to build a new two-room schoolhouse for these children and their teachers, so Kapoma School will have a total of five classrooms with sturdy walls, a concrete floor, and a tin roof?
| Children who attend afternoon school in front of collapsed schoolhouse. Bob (pale green polo shirt) and Shirley Griffin in the background |
A major expense for this project comes from the school's remote location and the cost of transporting equipment and supplies to the site for construction. Also, the Ministry of Education (MOE) requires that the villagers make and bake the bricks for the building before construction can begin. We are now gathering estimates for building the 1x2 schoolhouse (the MOE's name for a two-classroom structure), and hope to have a detailed estimate of costs soon. Villagers will start making the bricks at the conclusion of the rainy season, about the end of April. We believe that construction can begin in late May. Another fortuitous event: the daughter of the proprietors of the guesthouse where we stayed is building a similar school on the edge of Lake Tanganyika, funded by a ladies' club in Great Britian! She has found an honest contractor and is committed to improving education in the country where she grew up. Claire Powell has agreed to be our representative for the project and introduced us to her building contractor, who gave us a rough estimate of costs—about $18,000+ for a 1x2 school that meets government standards. The project will be divided into eight parts and funds will be disbursed in steps, after each stage of construction is completed. We also visited another 1x2 school currently being completed by a man who lives in the U.S. but travels to Zambia each year to monitor his projects. We will show you photos of that building in another blog.
We invite all of you - family, friends, students, and those of you who have found us on the internet - to help build this school. Mission Avenue School is raising money for the roof. We estimate that the rest of the school will cost about $15,000. Please join us by contributing to this project. We are in the process of seeking tax exempt status. We will keep you informed throughout the project. To donate, please send a check or money order to "Take Heart International" and send it to the following address:
Take Heart International
4913 Puma Way
Carmichael, CA 95608;
916 359-4913 (Ask for Shirley or Bob Griffin)
take.heart.international@gmail.com
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