Needy Nairobi students to get revision books to aid studies
Education
By
David Njaaga
| Aug 29, 2024
Needy students living in Nairobi's informal settlements will benefit from revision books designed to aid their studies and improve their academic performance.
Brian's Community Outreach Foundation (BRICO), the organisation behind the initiative, seeks to inspire students to achieve academic excellence.
Brian Oduor, the organisation's founder, noted that the mentorship programme aims to support students during this challenging period.
"We started this programme to reach out to young minds during this challenging time. With the ongoing teachers' strike, students can't revise effectively, so we decided to step in and offer support," said Oduor.
He added that the initiative in Nairobi is just the start of a nationwide rollout targeting vulnerable students across the country.
READ MORE
Ketraco gets nod to reappoint board after petition struck out
Kenya targets 240,000 youth jobs in fisheries sector expansion
Kenya's insurance industry faces its claims moment
Co-op Bank posts Sh29.75b profit, proposes a record Sh14.67 billion dividend
MPs push KenGen to upgrade its power generation technology
Mwangi's Sh734m windfall as Equity posts record earnings
MoUs without jobs? Kenya's seafarer strategy under scrutiny
Why World Bank has banned PwC Kenya for 21 months
Property sector reaps big from rising demand for luxury healthcare
The books were distributed to Dagoretti Mixed Secondary School and Lavington Primary School on Thursday, August 29.
The foundation plans to extend its support to more schools in other informal settlements and underserved areas in the coming months.
BRICO co-founder Lumwachi Wycklife explained that the foundation aims to empower students on the verge of abandoning their education due to a lack of resources.
"We are focused on education and want to ensure that students who feel they can't make it are inspired to continue their education. Our goal is to help them realise they can become people of substance after their schooling," he said.