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Técnico Maya Vocational School Project
Start Date: September 1, 2007
Main Contact: Tecnico Maya, Nemesio Mux
Project Manager : Mateo Paneitz, E.D.
Current Status: Seeking Funding
Purpose
The purpose of the Vocational School Project is to provide the young people
of Comalapa with marketable skills that will enable them to be responsible citizens and entrepreneurs.
There is a severe lack of educational opportunities for teenagers and young adults in
rural Guatemala, and this project will give the young people of Comalapa the tools they need
to be competitive in the local job market. The production of alternative energy at the
Vocational School will educate the local people, create jobs, and combat environmental
degradation in Guatemala.
Description
Long Way Home will team with an existing school in Comalapa, Guatemala, to build an Appropriate Technologies Vocational School. In addition to the standard educational curriculum, the Vocational School will offer coursework in carpentry, masonry, mechanics, electrical, welding, and horticulture, along with the business and technology aspects of alternative energy production. The project will create a new group of Guatemalan students, environmentalist and entrepreneurs, uniquely skilled and motivated to be innovative. Long Way Home's role will be to fundraise for the project, construct the school, and oversee the new curriculum's implementation.
Background
The Técnico Maya school endures persistent problems with obtaining sufficient funding, and the dedicated staff and faculty at the school have sacrificed time and money to provide a multicultural education at a low cost to students, only charging a nominal fee. Teachers often work many months without salary due to lack of funding, along with the substandard building the school currently occupies. The Long Way Home Vocational School project aims to alleviate these problems.
In 2008, Long Way Home purchased a piece of land in Paxán, a village 1 mile from downtown Comalapa. The school's construction is scheduled to begin at the beginning of 2009.
Sustainability
The Vocational School will provide a venue for young Comalapans to learn such trades as masonry, carpentry, and bicycle repair. The workshops in the school will serve as hands-on classrooms, and will be viable businesses where the students will work as apprentices to professionals in each field. The income generated by the workshops will pay the teachers' salaries, helping the school near its goal of financial sustainability. The school will also include an area where students can learn alternative energy production. Once the school is successfully producing alternative fuels, the sale of fuel will provide additional funding for the institution.
Interns and volunteers from around the world who come to work at the Técnico Maya Vocational School will also contribute to the financial sustainability of the project. The $200 per month fee that each volunteer pays will directly fund educational programs at the school and supplement teacher salaries.
Environmental Contribution
The first aspect of the school that will make an environmental impact on the community of Comalapa is the techniques we will implement for its construction. Using environmentally friendly construction methods such as trash bottle, rammed earth, and earth bag, the school will be a practical demonstration of how to reuse discarded materials. The locals who participate in the school's construction will have hands-on experience with these money-saving construction techniques and will apply their new knowledge within the community.
Environmental education will be a main focus of the school's new curriculum. From organic gardening to environmentally friendly construction methods, young Comalapans will be learning responsible stewardship of the Earth through their coursework. The addition of alternative fuel production education should make a long-term impact on the surrounding communities as well.
Economic Contribution
The most immediate way that the construction of the vocational school will contribute to the economy of Comalapa is through providing jobs for its teachers. Not only will the current Técnico Maya teachers have a more consistent source of income, but the newly added vocational curriculum will require the addition of several new teachers from within the community. The long-term economic effects of the vocational school will be felt when a group of skilled young Comalapans, uniquely trained to be environmental entrepreneurs, enter the Guatemalan job market.
Click here if you would like to help donate toward the develpment of this project or just make a general donation to the vitality of the project. Long Way Home appreciates your contributions and interest in helping make the world a better place.
Site of Vocational School
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