Friends of Ngong Road

We empower Nairobi children living in poverty to transform their lives through education and support, leading to employment.

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December 28, 2018 By Mary Wanjiru Leave a Comment

SRH Program Update

In December 2017 we launched a Sexual and Reproductive Health (SRH) Program with the generosity of several U.S. donors and support of Tulane University. SRH is based on a youth peer provider model created by Tulane University as the best practice for our students.

Planned Parenthood Global trained fourteen students to become Youth Peer Providers of the SRH Program. After the training, 8 students were selected to conduct peer training (two-year commitment) due to their mastery of the materials and effective communications skills. Since December 2017, the Youth Peer Providers have trained approximately 70% of the students in seventh grade through post-secondary school. The remaining students are to receive training in December 2018, April 2019 and/or August 2019.

Excellent Preliminary Results
In its first year, the most positive outcome of the SRH program is that only one young woman became pregnant in the past year compared to seven in the previous year. Fortunately, she was close enough to her post-secondary graduation that it did not derail her education. While this is just one year’s data, we’re hopeful that we’re on the right track by providing facts and resources in an effective manner.

Continued Tulane University Support
We have continued to receive support from Tulane University for the program. Last summer, a Tulane student spent the summer in Nairobi evaluating the program under the supervision of Dr. Patty Kissinger, a professor and researcher at the Tulane School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine. She made several important recommendations, such as:

  • Helping students become more likely to access medical care by scheduling tours of the partnered clinic and bringing healthcare professionals from the clinic to the training sessions.
  • Making the educational material available to students online.
  • Providing more training for Youth Peer Providers on SRH topics and skills such as presenting and handling difficult conversations.
  • Educating parents and guardians on the importance of the training to create further buy-in from the Kenyan community.

Going forward, we will be implementing Tulane’s recommendations, doing a refresher training in January 2019 with the Youth Peer Providers, recruiting future Youth Peer Providers, and training the remaining 30% of students who did not receive training in year one.

Pioneering Sex Education
Sex education in Kenya lacks consistency, and we need to dispel numerous misconceptions. For instance, people wrongly believe that condoms cause cancer or that using contraception will permanently prevent women from conceiving a baby. Having access to factual information about their bodies and access to contraception is something our students in Kenya need to stop the cycle of early pregnancy.

We are excited about the results of the first year and believe it to be critical for all students’ success in the future. If you are interested in helping to fund this program in 2019 and beyond, please contact Lacey Kraft at lacey@ngongroad.org or 612-568-4211.

December 12, 2018 By Lacey Kraft Leave a Comment

Help us meet the match by December 31

This holiday season, we give thanks to the 93 percent of our post-secondary graduates who have secured a job or internship following graduation. Here are photos and job titles of some students who are starting to transform their lives. They graduated from our post-secondary program and have since gained experience in a job or internship.


We are so proud of these students! But there is more work to do. Just over $40,000 of our $65,000 Ted and Kathy Truscott Annual Appeal Match has been met. Help us meet our match so we can continue providing this exceptional program for students.

George, a program graduate and now a caseworker for the program say he “sees peers from his childhood in the slums without work. Many are wrapped up in drugs or have unplanned pregnancies at a young age.” But George has a job and a bright future. Your support has meant the world to him.

Help us meet the Annual Appeal Match today
by donating at www.ngongroad.org/donate or by sending a check to P.O. Box 581308, Minneapolis, MN 55458. Donating your gift in honor of a loved one can make for a meaningful holiday gift.

If you have already given to the Annual Appeal Match, we thank you! Together we can keep making a difference for kids in Kenya.

Happy holidays to you and yours,

Lacey Signature

Lacey Kraft
Development Director

December 10, 2018 By Mary Wanjiru 2 Comments

2018 KCPE Results

Fantastic Grade 8 Exam Results Received
The end of the calendar year is also the end of the school year for our students in Kenya. For those completing eighth grade, this can be an especially taxing time as they take their KCPE (Kenyan Certificate of Primary Education) exams. These exams take a number of days to complete and involve comprehensive testing of all their primary education studies. KCPE results determine what type of high school the student will be accepted into. The maximum score a student can achieve is 500 points, They are tested on the subjects of English, Swahili, Math, Science, and Social/Religious Studies – each subject being worth 100 points to make the 500 point total.

John

Broke the 400 Point Ceiling!
This year, one of our students, John Githui, has set a new NRCF record by scoring 409 points! This is compared to the best score in the entire country of 453. Only about 1% of students in Kenya score above 400 on the KCPE. Some of our other top-scoring students include Levy Otieno, Boaz Marube, Peter Leon, Latifah Njeri, and Angela Arina. Only two of our students who took the exam this year scored below the national average of 251, with more than 65% of our students scoring between 300-400 points. Our students accomplished an average score of 313.

A Great Accomplishment
We are immensely proud of these students, their caseworkers, and their sponsors for helping them to achieve such high marks. These scores will result in the students being accepted to more prestigious high schools, therefore paving the way for their post-secondary and life-long success. We are looking forward to future years of high KCPE scores and to seeing what these students are able to achieve!

October 16, 2018 By Lacey Kraft Leave a Comment

Notes from Paula

Joy and George from Kenya Visiting U.S. in late October

We are delighted to welcome two Ngong Road Children’s Foundation case workers, Joy and George to the U.S. in late October.  

  • Joy serves as head of the Post-Secondary and Alumni Department.  Her team helps recent high school graduates find a post-secondary program that matches their academic performance and interests; when they have finished their studies her team helps them find jobs. The program now has 83 students in post-secondary programs and 33 alumni.
  • George is a caseworker with our primary-aged students and our first visitor who is a graduate of the program.  George joined the program in 2007, finished high school in 2013 and then completed a 2-year diploma in Community Development.  When he graduated, Ngong Road Children’s Foundation had a caseworker opening and George got the job.

Employment Results.  We have had 30 students complete post-secondary programs, and 28 of the 30, or 93%, secured a job or internship following graduation.  Many more will graduate in the coming months. We hope that with the support of our alumni caseworker, local board, and new life skills program that they will get jobs soon.  We already have some wonderful stories:

October 15, 2018 By Lacey Kraft Leave a Comment

Sponsor Spotlight: Lori Harris

Lori Harris

Lori Harris always wanted to sponsor a child, but she was skeptical. She served in law enforcement for over twenty years and had seen and heard too many stories of the funds not getting to the children and programs with big executive salaries. Then her pastor, who knew about the program through her colleague at the seminary, invited founder and president, Paula Meyer, to speak at their church.

She was impressed by the transparency that Paula Meyer and the Friends of Ngong Road program offered. She appreciated the sustainable model they worked to create. Lori had never heard of a program where you could go to the country and meet the students, see their schools, hear the stories of their guardians, and really make a difference. She decided to become a sponsor.

Lori’s connection with Friends of Ngong Road and her students deepened when she traveled to Kenya with Meyer and other sponsors in 2012. Lori says, “My experience on that trip cemented my belief, trust, and passion for the program, which grew exponentially as I was able to see firsthand where my money went. I was able to see the passion and dedication in the teachers and the enthusiasm of the children and sincere appreciation for the program to give them a brighter future.”

Lori feels blessed to have had the chance to learn about kids on the other side of the globe. She enjoys reading their letters and cherishes the memory of meeting her students and their families.

Lori sponsored Fredrick who graduated with his certificate in construction and plant mechanics at the Kenya Institute of Highway and Building Technology in 2017. He is working in construction in northern Kenya and has been an Associate with Karibu Loo. Lori also sponsors Esther in Form 1 (freshman in high school) and John in Class 4 (grade 4).

If you are interested in traveling to Kenya with Friends of Ngong Road, please contact Lacey Kraft at lacey@ngongroad.org or 612-568-4211.

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Friends of Ngong Road
100 1st St S #581308
Minneapolis, MN 55458
(612) 568-4211 | info@ngongroad.org

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