Wema Children's Centre

Field Partner

Wema Children's Centre and Highway Academy are a private orphanage and school in Western Kenya in an area with some of the highest poverty and HIV/AIDS rates. Kenyans Teresa Wati and Stephen Juma formed Wema to give poor and orphaned children a home and a high quality education. Today at Wema, 510 children are provided with a loving home, three nutritious meals a day, and most importantly, an education at one of the highest performing primary and secondary schools in Kenya.

Location:
Bukembe Village, Bungoma, Kenya
Partner Type:
Community Based Organization, Private Primary & Secondary School
Population served:
Orphans and vulnerable children from the Village of Bukembe, a poor community of 10,0000 people in rural western Kenya. There are currently 510 students enrolled at Wema evenly split by gender.
Student selection criteria:
Wema does significant outreach into the local community to inform families that their children are eligible for full scholarships. The prospective students are required to take verbal and written tests and they and their families are interviewed at the school. At least 50% of accepted students are female.
Services provided:
Education, boarding, meals, textbooks, counseling (social, college, career), training (agricultural, computer), athletics, clubs and healthcare support.
TSF student promotion rate:
2018 - 100%
2017 - 100%
2016 - 100%
2015 - 100%
2014 - 100%

Wema Children's Centre is raising money for 70 students' school expenses. 2 have been fully funded so far.

  • Benjamin

    50%

    Benjamin

    Kenya

    Benjamin is a sweet boy and loves science. He is a partial orphan. His mother has no stable income to care for him and his six siblings. He needs help to aquire a high school education.

    School Year 2025

  • Joel

    50%

    Joel

    Kenya

    Joel loves science and academics. His parents are unemployed and cannot afford school fees.

    School Year 2025

  • Malik

    50%

    Malik

    Kenya

    Malik enjoys science and school. He lives with his aunt as his parents are unable to take care of him. His aunt is unemployed and cannot afford a secondary education for him.

    School Year 2025

  • Jacinta

    42%

    Jacinta

    Kenya

    Jacinta loves English and writing. She comes from an extremely poor family in which she would be the first to graduate high school. She hopes to overcome the generational barrier and needs support.

    School Year 2025

  • Titus

    50%

    Titus

    Kenya

    Titus lives with his sibling and an old poor grandmother. He enjoys math and science and would like to be a doctor.

    School Year 2025

  • Alex

    50%

    Alex

    Kenya

    Alex lives with 8 siblings and physically handicap father. He loves science and social and would like to become a teacher.

    School Year 2025

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