The
organization that caught my attention and chose to explore is Save the
Children, an international organization. To give a brief history about the
organization, in 1919, the Save the Children Fund was founded in England by Eglantyne Jebb, an Oxford-educated
teacher and sociologist to aid children in war-ravaged central Europe. “We
cannot leave defenseless children anywhere exposed to ruin — moral or
physical,” she said. “We cannot run the risk that they should weep, starve,
despair and die, with never a hand stretched out to help them.” Following her
vision, Save the Children USA was established in 1923.
The mission of the organization is
to ‘inspire breakthroughs in the way the world treats children and to achieve
immediate and lasting change in in the lives of children in the United States
and around the world’. Their philosophy is based the concepts of self-help and
self-reliance — the belief that development is a process by which people take
charge of their own lives. They help children and families help themselves by providing
families and communities with the tools they need to break the cycle of
poverty.
Presently, the organization works in
more than 50 countries working in the areas of child
protection, child survival, education, emergency response, health and
nutrition, HIV and AIDS.
Although
I have subscribed to their newsletter I have not received as yet. However,
while browsing through the website, I noted their work in the area of
education. The website describes education as ‘the road that children follow to
reach their full potential’. Save the Children recognizes that there are many
children throughout the world who don’t have access to quality education for
various reasons; poverty, conflict, disasters etc. and therefore implements education
programs to support children’s learning at home and at school. Their current programs
focus on increasing education for girls in parts of the world where access is
limited, teaching children basic math skills needed for daily life through the Numeracy
Boost program, addressing the emotional well-being of children affected by disease,
conflict, natural disaster through the HEART program- Healing and education
through the arts and literacy programs to increase reading skills in rural America.
With children like Pakistani schoolgirl Malala at the forefront advocating for
education for all children including children affected by war and conflict,
Save the Children is calling on world leaders to criminalize attacks against
education and increase humanitarian funding for education. Their report ‘Attacks
on Education: The impact of conflict and grave violations on children’s future’
address the hidden crisis in countries affected by conflict.
Listening
to Malala whose only crime was her desire to learn, address the UN was very
moving and eye opening. It shows the struggles that children throughout the
world of varying ethnic, religious and cultural backgrounds continue to face in
gaining their rightful access to any education and why the work of
organizations such as Save the Children is so crucial for bringing about needed
change.
Save
the Children:
Save
the Children Report – Attacks on Education:
Hi Keshika
ReplyDeleteSave the Children Foundation is a good choice. I enjoyed reading your post and thanks for the very needed information.
Keshika,
ReplyDeleteI had heard of Save the Children foundation before but really did not understand what it was all about. Thank you very much for the summary that you gave. I think I will add it to my list of professional resources as well.
Thanks!
Jamie
Keshika,
ReplyDeleteI can tell by your web resources that you have been visiting some great sites. I hope you get the newsletter and continue to follow these sites. Thank you for sharing your resources.
Keshika,
ReplyDeleteThanks for your post. I will definitely be adding Save the Children Foundation to my list of resources.