Civil Society Strengthening programme -Shift the Power (CSSP-StP)

Rural Resilience Foundation is fortunate to partner with STAR-Ghana Foundation in the implementation of the Civil Society Strengthening programme -Shift the Power (CSSP-StP) – an eight-year Star Ghana Foundation Project which seeks to enhance the effectiveness, responsiveness and resilience of Civil Society Actors in delivering the priorities of their constituents (underserved groups), and to improve access to social services and public goods by members of underserved population, networks, and associations. Through this project, we are strengthening our organization and technical capacities to be able to implement our interventions effectively.

BookTrek

BookTrek is a literacy enhancement project by the Rural Resilience Foundation which seeks to enhance literacy among rural students in Northern Ghana specifically in the Tolon, Nanton, and Sagnarigu districts by providing them with teaching and learning materials (TLMs) and reading sessions (in the form of mobile libraries) to enhance their vocabulary and that of their command of the English language as well as help them improve in their academics. This project will employ the services of volunteers who will be designated to specified schools in the districts. These volunteers will run bi-weekly reading sessions with designated rural schools. The project will assess student’s progress every two months to help in the improvement of the project as well as make amendments if need be. We also solicit for TLMs such as books, pens, school bags, computers, etc. and distribute to deserving students in our catchment area. 

Northern Ghana is one of the regions with a low literacy rate specifically among rural folks. Also, the issue of lack of learning and reading materials by rural folks makes it difficult for them to catch up with other students from the urban areas. Hence, this project seeks to help bridge the gap between rural and urban areas. The short-to-mid-term goal is to fully operate mobile libraries and reading clubs in our schools with the long-term goal being the establishment of ultra-modern libraries in these communities.

I WASHED Kpachelo Project

The Improved Water Sanitation Hygiene Education in Kpachelo (I WASHED Kpachelo) project with support from the U.S. Embassy Accra, Ghana, through the Ambassador’s Special Self-Help Program seeks to provide a mechanized borehole for the people of Kpachelo in the Nanton District. For over a decade, the nearly 1,000 inhabitants of Kpachelo have been sharing their drinking water source(s), battling, and competing with animals for portable water and their pupils studying under trees. This project will significantly improve access to safe drinking water, sanitation, hygiene, and educational infrastructure for the community’s 836 people (383 males and 453 females) and 37 pupils of the Kpachelo E/A Primary School.