Matènwa Community School

Children and teachers engage in hands-on education, critical thinking, and mutual respect.

Institute for Learning

Teacher training for schools seeking to find a more effective way to teach.

Mother Tongue Books

Empowering children to become literate by reading and writing in their native language.

Women’s Leadership Fund

Seven Matènwa graduates are now continuing their university education—fully supported for the year—thanks to this community.

Creole Gardens

Students cultivate organic produce, practice environmental stewardship.

Summer Camp

Inspiring meaningful exchanges that strengthen community ties and inspire collaborative learning.

Art Matènwa

Nurturing creative expression by supporting women artisans.

Community Outreach

Help students and families care for elders and build lasting food security.

College Scholarships

Matènwa grads who've earned full-tuition scholarships need your help to cover costs like housing, meals, books, and more.

Support Matènwa programs

Update from Meg – March 2016

Mar 12, 2016

Maureen Plaisimond, MCLC's newest long-term volunteer, arrived in February and has quickly taken charge of our computer lab and elementary computer classes. As well as being open for regular classes, the lab is now open during recess every day for elementary students to learn, play, and explore on laptops.

Making houses with geometric shapes in Makanaki’s computer class.

Each class has a day of the week to spend recess in the lab, and students who have been respectful and engaged in class that day are allowed to come. Students are very excited about this privilege; Maureen says that the entire school learned which class was assigned which day by word of mouth almost immediately.

The lab is full every day. Students choose to play educational games, write stories in Word, or just explore the computers and what they can do. Some of the younger students are still figuring out how the computer works, how to move the mouse and click, how to open and close windows, and so on. Older students are more advanced, and one or two students come regularly after school to work on computers and are picking up new skills even more quickly.

The students have access to educational games in Kreyòl developed for MCLC by MIT professor Michel deGraff and the MIT Haiti Initiative. These games, which teach math through soccer, cooking, and other fun activities, are favorites for the students. Here, a fourth-grader plays "Machann Manje" (Food Merchant).

We're all having a great time in the computer lab with Maureen!

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