Archives

Next Step

NickUganda41-1

ECM’s Next Step program exists to help ensure that our children are fully prepared for life after sponsorship. It consists of three steps, all critical in guiding our children from sponsorship to a Spirit-filled life of independence, from being learners to being leaders in their families, churches, and communities.

Step 1

In this step, children in the last two years of secondary school are introduced, through the Crossroads Curriculum, to the various aspects of moving from sponsorship to independence. These include but are not limited to:

  • Internships and job skills
  • Financial matters, including budgeting
  • Decision making
  • Leadership skills
  • Relationships building and service to others
  • Personal spiritual growth
  • Personal physical and emotional health
  • Educational choices
  • Correspondence with US sponsors

 

To accomplish this goal, ECM staff will provide:

  • Counseling and guidance services
  • Skills and vocational training
  • Appropriate opportunities for service
  • Educational mentoring opportunities

 

Step 2

In this step, young adults who have completed secondary school or have reached the age of 20, will receive support allowing them to successfully navigate the transition from sponsorship to independence, building on all that was learned in Step 1. This support includes the following:

  • Financial support through scholarships whenever possible (see Next Step Financial Support policies)
  • Vocational counseling, mentoring, training
  • Spiritual guidance
  • Business startup assistance

 

Young adults in the final year of Step 2 will be encouraged to live in an independent setting, apart from family and/or caregivers.  (At Haven of Hope in Ghana, this setting will eventually be a transition home, built on the Haven of Hope campus, designed specifically to house these young adults).  During this transition year, these young adults will be strongly encouraged to take care of their own household chores, make financial decisions, build adult relationships, and make biblical choices regarding their own physical, emotional and spiritual health, all while still receiving guidance and supervision from ECM staff.  Young adults in Step 2 include:

  • University students
  • Vocational students
  • Gap year students
  • Those starting a business

 

Step 3

In this step, young adults make the final transition from sponsorship to independence.  After successfully completing Step 2, young adults will leave the sponsorship program, will no longer be eligible for financial support, and will live independently of ECM supervision.  However, ALL former ECM sponsored children will continue to be eligible for non-financial support through counseling, mentoring and spiritual guidance.  They will be encouraged to seek advice from ECM staff and to give of their time, abilities and resources, to support other vulnerable children

Naigobya Hope Center

Uganda176-1

ECM’s ministry in Naigobya, Uganda began through a missionary project, the Afayo Project, started in 2012. That project’s close ties with the local community and school led ultimately to the development of a Hope Center for vulnerable children, including several true orphans. Naigobya’s very rural, poverty stricken setting has led to many children being unable to attend school. The Naigobya Hope Center works closely with the school as well as the local families to meet the spiritual and educational needs of the most vulnerable in the community.

Lwengo Hope Center

NewCoordinatorwiththechildren2cLwengoSaturdayClubwebsite

Masaka in the Lwengo district of Uganda was the scene of a terrible abduction of a preschool age girl for purposes of child sacrifice. (See Resty’s story.) When ECM learned of the plight of young Resty Nakijiira, we came in to help her and to develop a program that would lessen the vulnerability of other children around the area. The Masaka Child Sponsorship Project resulted. Children receive scholarship assistance and meet weekly for Bible stories, games and training in practical skills.

Karamojong Kampala Hope Ctr

KARAMOJAKAMPALAHOPECENTER

They are the most hated children in Uganda–the Karamojong beggar children in Kampala. Some were brought to the city by adults in search of a better life. Many were trafficked and put on the streets to beg for the benefit of a master. From proud families, experts from time immemorial in all things relating to cattle, they have ended up homeless, hungry, abused, outcast, and hated. Unschooled, unskilled, and with no future. If they don’t beg, they will starve. If they don’t bring in enough cash, they will be beaten. If they do beg they may be rounded up by police and sent away from their families. Caught in the middle of forces beyond their understanding, it’s hard for them to win no matter what they do. No wonder the Lord has laid the Karamojong beggar children on our hearts at ECM!

In the Katwe & Kisenyi slums of Kampala, through partnership with child sponsors, ECM has taken Karamojong beggar children off the streets and enrolled them in boarding school, where they are all making excellent progress, despite the fact that they had no previous schooling to prepare them for their entry into school. A weekly club continues with their mothers and other mothers of the communities to teach basic hygiene, family living skills, and to give spiritual counsel. After determining that it was not safe for the Karamojong children to return home during holidays, ECM began to provide the means for them to remain in boarding school during that time.

Our plan is to continue taking beggar children off the streets through child sponsorship while we also develop programs in Karamoja, Northern Uganda (see Karamoja Homeland). While the situation of the children in Kampala is very difficult, at least at boarding school they will be safe, be learning, and be able to receive visits from family.

Karamoja Homeland Hope Center

Lopei SC

The Karamoja Homeland Project is an direct result of ECM’s goal to stop trafficking where it starts. Recognizing that it is more effective to stop the flow of trafficking at the source than it is to only help the children who have already been trafficked, ECM began the Karamoja Homeland Project. As our workers address the root causes of child trafficking in the area, we hope to also show each child and family the personal love of Jesus Christ.

Kamwokya Hope Center

kamslum

Kamwokya (pronounced kuh-moh-chuh) is a downtown slum area in Kampala, Uganda, and is home to many ethnic populations including refugees who moved from the north when Joseph Kony’s LRA bands were terrifying the countryside. In Kamwokya, ECM helps vulnerable children, including those with albinism, stay in school or receive vocational training through child sponsorship, seeking to reach these children and youth with the Gospel and to help provide developmental opportunities for them. Some families have been helped with assistance to start family businesses.

Haven of Hope Children’s Home

posterboardplaygroundatHH

Haven of Hope Children’s Home is the boarding section of Haven of Hope Academy. The Home offers students a loving, homelike atmosphere for more than forty children. The Hope Center began in 2002 when ECM reached out to dozens of orphans and vulnerable children near the capital city of Accra, Ghana. As the children grew in age, a need to start a school arose, and eventually the children’s home became part of the Haven of Hope boarding school. (see Haven of Hope Academy). Scholarship assistance is available to children in crisis situations through child sponsorship.

Haven of Hope Academy

posterboardbusandtheschoolbuildingincreasedpixels

Haven of Hope Academy offers quality Christian education Nursery through Junior High School (US equivalent of 9th grade). HHA aims to help the next generation in Ghana prepare for the future through academic, skills and character development.

HHA help students break generational cycles of poverty by preparing them for careers of the future in science, technology, engineering and math, among others. Through a partnership in 2013-2014 with Girls for Africa, technology was installed in all the upper-level classrooms and teachers were trained in creative teaching methods.

With a student body of over 350 and a large staff, students are able to get the attention they need.

The school also offers a boarding section for needy students (see Haven of Hope Children’s Home), providing a loving, homelike atmosphere. ECM offers scholarship assistance to children in crisis situations through child sponsorship.

hh1
hh2

Gayaza Hope Center

Uganda30-1

The Gayaza Hope Center helps many children whose families are in crisis situations for various reasons. The children receive scholarship assistance, and help with vocational training as appropriate. They meet weekly for Bible teaching, fun and exercise, and help with schoolwork. The children have learned a variety of other skills too, including gardening and then cooking the food they raised, cakemaking, beadmaking, choreographed singing, and various art projects. Several children with albinism are also being helped by the project.