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Capricorn supports remote pre-schools through the Amos Meerkat Syllabus project

Capricorn supports remote pre-schools through the Amos Meerkat Syllabus project

Capricorn Foundation recently recommitted its support for the Amos Meerkat Syllabus (AMS) project, which equips informal pre-schools on farms and around farming communities in remote areas of Namibia with an appropriate curriculum and teaching aids with the objective of getting children aged 5 and 6 readies for Grade 1.

The foundation confirmed the support of N$300,000 to the project on Thursday, 02 December. Due to the remoteness of areas, long distances, no teaching materials, lack of knowledge and lack of appropriate means of travel, there are a lot of pre-school children (5 and 6-year-olds) that do not have the opportunity to attend a pre-school facility to ensure that they are school ready and on par with other Grade 1 learner.

This is a very focused and unique need that AMS is attending to since its commencement in 2012, reaching 5000 pre-school children every year across the country from Luderitz in the far south to Katima Mililo in the far North of Namibia.

The Christian based curriculum and training program have been put together by trained teachers to enable people who can read or write English or Afrikaans to run a small pre-school for the children on a farm or informal settlement. AMS provides the curriculum and the materials to support the curriculum, including twelve modular workbooks for each learner and stationery.

The person who uses the AMS syllabus must attend two one-week training sessions to equip them in using the curriculum and materials provided. In addition, skilled local Monitors in each town will visit the schools that fall under their responsibility once a month to monitor the implementation of the curriculum.

The farm owners, where a farm school operates, currently act as local overseers, responsible for providing a facility on the farm where the children are taught. Through partnerships with businesses, foundations, farmers, local churches, and nature conservation organisations in those areas, the organisation works to ensure that no child is left out.

“The Capricorn Foundation coordinates the Group’s corporate social responsibility programmes with the focus areas of Economic Advancement, Education, Health and Vulnerability Programmes. We have a keen interest in ECD because 90% of the growth of the human brain happens between 3 and 5 years old, and development at this stage is crucial. We want to continue to work alongside organisations like the Amos Meerkat Syllabus project, to ensure that every pre-school child in Namibia can have the opportunity to be well educated and be school-ready,” said Marlize Horn, Group Executive: Brand & Corporate Affairs.


l.t.r: Group Executive: Brand & Corporate Affairs, Marlize Horn, and Amos National Coordination Alet van der Merwe, at the official handover.


 

About The Author

Donald Matthys

Donald Matthys has been part of the media fraternity since 2015. He has been working at the Namibia Economist for the past three years mainly covering business, tourism and agriculture. Donald occasionally refers to himself as a theatre maker and has staged two theatre plays so far. Follow him on twitter at @zuleitmatthys