Showing posts with label Little Sisters Fund. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Little Sisters Fund. Show all posts

Friday, May 27, 2016

Teacher Training Programs from Little Sisters Fund


A longtime educator and graduate of Harvard University’s Graduate School of Education, Cissy Lewis most recently served as assistant head of school and academic dean at Castilleja School in Palo Alto, California. Apart from her professional commitment to education, Cissy Lewis supports charitable organizations such as the Little Sisters Fund, which provides scholarship opportunities for disadvantaged girls in South Asia.

Among numerous initiatives to make education more accessible to girls in Nepal, the Little Sisters Fund operates a primary education training program for teachers at the organization’s partner schools. By training Nepalese teachers to combine multi-sensory and child-based techniques with more traditional methods, Little Sisters Fund aims to cultivate an educational environment of collaboration and group learning. A cost-effective way to encourage curiosity and love of learning in the classroom, teacher training programs emphasize critical thinking skills and give teachers the tools to more effectively reach between 50 and 100 students daily.

Thursday, May 19, 2016

How the Little Sisters Fund Improves the Lives of Nepalese Girls


Cissy Lewis is a distinguished educator who previously held the role of interim head of school at Castilleja School in Palo Alto, California. In addition to her current work as an independent educational consultant, Cissy Lewis supports the Little Sisters Fund.

Founded in 1998, the Little Sisters Fund aims to help economically disadvantaged girls in Nepal rise above their conditions of poverty and oppression to make better lives for themselves. To avoid the all-too-common traps of child marriage, trafficking, and labor, the fund offers girls several different programs, such as long-term scholarships to pay for school uniforms, books, supplies, and their full tuition at private schools. Other initiatives include awareness-raising campaigns and instruction in proper hygiene to maintain health.

The Little Sisters Fund also partners with 70 government-operated and semi-private schools throughout 18 districts of Nepal, enabling them to cover school costs for underserved girls. Currently, over 1,500 girls are enrolled in this program.