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Key Peninsula resident leads tech trip to Uganda
By Hugh McMillan
KP News
Key Peninsula Fire Department
firefighter/EMT volunteer Chance Gower, a Wauna resident
who teaches computer technology at South Kitsap High
School, will be part of a group that will travel in June
to Uganda to deliver computers for the country’s
education system.
Gower, together with SKHS staff
members Sean and Cathy Duttry and a group of students,
collected surplus computers from local businesses and
organizations. The students, from South Kitsap, Forest
Ridge and Mount Si high schools in Kitsap County,
collected 400 computers, refurbished them, and designed
a refurbishing center that will soon be established in
Uganda’s capital, Kampala to house the machines as well
as serve as a teaching center.
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John Nsambu will be traveling to Uganda with
Chance Gower
(in background) Photo by Hugh
McMillan |
Recently, John Nsambu, the youngest
Ugandan minister of information and communication
technology in the country’s history, visited the area
with fellow Ugandans, Sofia Nantongo, Mathias Muko, and
Nicholas Nyombi. They toured the Puget Sound area, met
with South Kitsap High students and teachers, and
enjoyed local cuisine.
Nsambu has visited SKHS several
times in the past. This is the fifth year of an ongoing
mission by “Computers for Uganda” to refurbish, install,
and train Ugandan students in the operation of
computers. To date the program has given many hours of
learning experience to Ugandan students and staff
helping to speed the progress of technology in Ugandan
schools.
Gower said, “The Honorable Nsambu’s
efforts in this program have helped to elevate Uganda’s
emerging technology market and shown a marked increase
in the math and science scores of Ugandan students,
thereby demonstrating this to be a successful ongoing
program … Nsambu described how, as he travels throughout
Uganda, he comes across children walking away from
school. When he asks why, the reply invariably is, ‘The
teacher sent me home as I have no pencil.’ This smallest
of things can forfeit a child’s education in Uganda.
Pencils are almost unaffordable luxury. Pencil
sharpeners are even less available and children have to
use razor blades to sharpen pencils.”
“Pencils, paper, and other
essentials are rare sights in any of the schools of
Kampala,” Nsambu told the gathering of student
volunteers assembled in the SKHS computer lab. “Local
Rotary clubs are working together with our students in
association with the Computers for Uganda and Computers
for the World programs to help touch children’s lives
with a reusable resource for years to come. With the
original intent to spread technological skill among
female students, the initiative grew into an
international connection. Associated schools refurbish
and install computers in the indigent schools in
Uganda.”
The program requires chosen Ugandan
schools to have at least 50 percent female students and
to continue to involve young women in technology. The
program has worked with some 25 schools and 1,500
computers.
This June, SKHS’ and Forest Ridge’s
16 selected students will be led to Uganda by a small
group of chaperones including Gower and Janet Graeber,
former principal of Forest Ridge High School. The plan
exceeds that of previous years. The main initiative is
to establish the refurbishing center that will be used
by in-country businesses to refurbish, recycle, and
repair computers, thus eliminating the step of
refurbishing them before transport from the United
States. It will also sustain computers and create more
self-sufficiency in Uganda. The count of computers
installed each year has been between 200 and 300; this
year will be the largest with 400.
U.S students and chaperones spend
three weeks of summer in Uganda teaching and installing
computers and sharing technological education with
impoverished communities. Students who volunteer for the
program are selected on the basis of desire to educate
and to experience Uganda’s culture. While there, they
also meet the president and members of Uganda’s
parliament — and even experience a three-day Safari.
Their mission is made a little easier because the
national language in Uganda is English.
Anyone seeking information on the
Computers for Uganda Program or wishing to donate
regular lead pencils and handheld plastic pencil
sharpeners to the children of Uganda may contact Gower
at 360-874-5680.
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News, all rights reserved.
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