The school of St Jude was opened in 2002 by an Australian young lady from a sheep farm, Gemma Rice (now Gemma Sisia) in Northern Tanzania with the help of her family, friends and local Rotary Club. What started with only a handful of children and one teacher is now in 2009 a thriving school of almost 1200 children, 130 teachers and 200 staff.
The President's Africa Education Initiative (AEI) is a $600-million multi-year initiative that focuses on increasing access to quality basic education in 39 sub-Saharan countries through scholarships, textbooks, and teacher training programs. Eighty million African children will have benefited from AEI by 2010.
This a Global Initiative on Education and HIV & AIDS led by UNESCO in collaboration with UNAIDS. It seeks to promote, develop and support comprehensive education sector responses to HIV and AIDS. EDUCAIDS provides a range of tools to so support a comprehensive response to HIV in the education sector.
Nyaka school project uses a community-based approach and is committed to developing sustainable solutions to the challenges presented by the HIV and AIDS pandemic. It is a community development project initiated by the community for the betterment of the community.
The Partnership for Child Development (PCD) works with governments, communities and agencies to enable effective and sustainable school health and nutrition programmes to be delivered to millions of children around the world.
A project managed by Boston University's Center for International Health and Development (CIHD) to improve coverage and quality of Orphans and Vulnerable Children (OVC) programs in developing countries through conducting applied research on PEPFAR programmed activities.