Saigon Children's Charity

Saigon Children's Charity (saigonchildren) is a non-profit organization based in Ho Chi Minh City that provides direct support to disadvantaged children in order to ensure wider access to education in Vietnam.[1] The organisation was established in 1992 and is registered with the UK Charity Commission. saigonchildren is also registered as a non-profit organization in Vietnam and US.

Saigon Children's Charity
Founded1992
TypeNon-governmental organization
FocusChildren, education
Area served
Vietnam
MethodSchool-building, scholarships, Vocational training, special needs education
Key people
Damien Roberts, Executive Director
Saigon Children's Charity scholars

Philosophy

The organisation's strategic aim is sustainable economic development through education, with a focus on inclusion, empowerment and safeguarding.

Development

saigonchildren works across all of Vietnam.

Schoolbuilding

Up to 2019 saigonchildren has built 200 kindergarten/primary schools through partnerships between donors and local representatives for Ministry of Education and Training.

Scholarships

Up to 2019 41,000 children were supported with scholarships including fees, rice, text books, uniforms, social care and extra help (health support, reading glasses and bicycles) to enable them to focus on staying in education.

Thăng Long School

The vocational school in Ho Chi Minh City offers free classes in English, IT, and hospitality as well as social skills development through art, dance and photography projects. Each year around 1000 children study here.

Special Needs Education Programme

saigonchildren also has an extensive Special Needs Education Programme, including a national autism education framework, and also supplies resources and expertise to Vietnamese disability charities.

Finance

Accounts are audited annually by KPMG and lodged with the UK Charity Commission.

Directors

Saigon Children's Charity was founded by Paul Cleves in 1992. The current Director is Damien Roberts.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.