Photos From Thailand

Is there “HOPE” … for her?

She lived in a small Hill Tribe village with her single Mom. The daughter was an outgoing and very intelligent child…so her mother moved to a nearby town, so she could go to school.

When they moved to Chiang Dao, her mom found it was impossible to send her to the public school as there was no money for her uniforms, mandatory meals at school and pay for her school books.  Her mom heard that there was a free school in the area.  The only “hitch” was that she would need to live away from home to get her education.  Because her mom had no income, she qualified to be admitted to the government welfare boarding school.

She was thrilled and entered first grade at nine years of age!  She loved learning and made very good grades all through school.  When she got to high school, her sophomore year, she learned about Sustainable Hope’s We Can English Club.  She was excited about all the club meetings that taught leadership skills, life skills AND conversational English.

When she was 20 years old, she graduated from school with confidence … knowing she would have a great future with her English-speaking skills.

The first place she interviewed for work, she was hired before the interview was over because of her English skills!

She now works six days a week and on her day off is taking online studies at a local university in business management!

Hear her story at www.sustainablehopeinternational.org

2019 UP-DATE: Promoted to Customer Service at Home Pro.

There are many youth like her … very intelligent, desperately wanting to escape the bonds of poverty.  They can’t do it without YOU…you can make a difference helping more youth like her experience the “We Can English Club”.  Please join us today to create a better future.

Your donation will help Sustainable Hope expand its We Can Club program into other schools … many schools like this one are asking for the We Can Club program … your gift will ensure more youth can set goals to a brighter future.

 Are you ready to change the life of a student?  Your donation will go directly to creating more We Can Clubs.  Yes, your donation will go directly to helping youth change their world.

Yes, you can make a difference … you can change their world, one youth at a time!  You can celebrate HOPE!

Thank you for your generous donation.  Go to www.sustainablehope.org press the “Donate” button.  Give a one-time gift OR give generously each month of the year.

Is there “HOPE” … for her?

It was a monsoon rain … raining so hard you couldn’t see the road ahead!  You had finished working at a construction site – it paid well.  Your only transportation was a motorbike.  You and your wife run off the road and are killed.  … now the rest of the story …

He was two-years old … waiting for mom and dad to come home.  They never made it.  His grandmother adopted him.  This made a new challenge for this fatherless family consisting of a diabetic grandmother, the mother (grandmother to the 2-year old boy) and an 11-year-old daughter.  Their lives changed forever!

The mother of the couple had recently lost her job as a seamstress when a flood washed out her business.  She had to go to a larger town to earn enough to now feed four people.  This meant that the 11-year-old daughter now became the “mother” for her 2-year-old nephew!  This meant that she had to get up no later than 5 a.m. to iron her school uniform, awaken and feed her nephew, see that Grandma had her diabetic medicines, take the nephew to day care and then walk to school! After school, she picked up her nephew, saw to it that everyone got fed and did her homework.  Eight years later, faithfully fulfilling her role as “mother”, she maintained a 3.4 grade point average.  She knew how very important it was to finish high school to avoid the hard life her mother had … who only went through 9th grade.  She wanted to be an accountant and received a scholarship to get an A.A. degree in accounting.  From there she achieved a bachelor’s degree in accounting.  Her last two years were especially challenging because her accounting classes were all held in English. Hope … and lots of hard work brought her to this point in her life.  Today she works as a public accountant and is the bookkeeper for Sustainable Hope’s Thailand office.

She wants to tell you how thankful she is to Sustainable Hope for making her dreams come true.

2019 UP-DATE:  Auditor for a car dealership and Accountant for Sustainable Hope Thailand.

There are many youth like her… very intelligent, desperately wanting to escape the bonds of poverty.  They can’t do it without YOU…you can make a difference helping more youth like her experience Sustainable Hope’s “We Can English Club”.  Please join us today to create a better future.

Your donation will help Sustainable Hope expand its We Can Club program into other schools … many schools like this one are asking for the We Can Club program … your gift will ensure more youth can set goals to a brighter future.

Are you ready to change the life of a student?  Your donation will go directly to creating more We Can Clubs.  Your donation will go directly to help youth change their world.

Yes, you can make a difference … you can change their world, one youth at a time!  You can celebrate HOPE!

Thank you for your generous donation.  Go to www.sustainablehope.org press the “Donate” button.  Give a one-time gift OR give generously each month of the year.

Is there “HOPE” … for him?

There was a terrible car accident … both people were killed!  They had a two-year old son waiting at his grandmother’s to get their hugs and kisses … those hugs and kisses were snuffed out in that car.

His parents were educated and made a good living and would come home on weekends to enjoy their son.  The accident ended the good income, the grandparents adopted him.  They had very limited income and earned a living by harvesting rubber trees and sugar cane.  His grandpa died when he was 9 years old.  It was up to grandma to care for him.  But, like most rural Thai’s the grandma worked her body to death in labor-intensive harvesting.  She could not work enough to pay for his education.  (Education is free in Thailand … sort of.  It does not pay for uniforms, books, meals, shoes, transportation to and from school, etc.)  So, he was sent to a government welfare boarding school.  She died while he was in high school.

He had a difficult life that most of us cannot even imagine.  The school housed boys in large dormitory room that would sleep 50 – 70 boys.  The bunk beds had one-inch thick mattresses filled with straw.  If there were more boys than beds, the overflow must sleep on the floor.  The school constantly had insufficient water, thus requiring the children to bathe in collected rain water, when available.  The discipline there can be brutal because they use bamboo sticks to hit and discipline the children.  The often study in 100-degree rooms with no fans so they can have a middle and high school education.

He found the We Can English Club in high school … it changed his life!  It was in the Club he decided he wanted to be an English teacher and worked toward that end.  His friend Bekah helped him get a scholarship at a university but was soon rejected from that college because “his English was better than most seniors at the college.”  They sent him to another university where he excelled in English.  When he graduated, he decided he wanted to be a university professor and would pay his own way to achieve this goal.

2019 UP-DATE: He is now serving in the Military.

“Thank you Sustainable Hope and We Can English Club … you made my dreams come true!”

There are many youth like him … very intelligent, desperately wanting to escape the bonds of poverty.  They can’t do it without YOU…you can make a difference helping more youth like him experience the “We Can English Club”.  Please join us today to create a better future.

Your donation will help Sustainable Hope expand its We Can Club program into other schools … many schools like this one are asking for the We Can Club program … your gift will ensure more youth can set goals to a brighter future.

Are you ready to change the life of a student?  Your donation will go directly to creating more We Can Clubs.  Your donation will go directly to helping youth change their world.

Yes, you can make a differenceyou can change their world, one youth at a time!  You can celebrate HOPE!

Thank you for your generous donation.  Go to www.sustainablehope.org press the “Donate” button.  Give a one-time gift OR give generously each month of the year.

Is there “HOPE” … for her?

Her mother died when she was 8 years old.  Her alcoholic father abandoned her!  Where should she and her sister go?  No one wanted them.  No one cared!

Do you care?

This is her story … her Grandmom took them in … for a while, then they were shifted to an aunt and uncle.  Even this was hard.  They already had two children of their own with barely enough income to feed their family of four.  What do you do?

She is a very intelligent focused child!  When she was 13, she was enrolled in a government welfare boarding school.  The good news is she had enough food to eat.  (Could you live on this? … the common meals were rice in a soup of chicken feet!)  She lived in a girl’s dormitory, had a thin mat on the floor and shared this one room with 70 to 90 other girls.  All she owned was the space of her floor mat.

In senior high school she joined Sustainable Hope’s We Can English Club.  Here she became confident in speaking English, learned to be a leader of the group and excelled in confidence to seek her future!

She worked very hard to have good grades.  After high school she received a full scholarship and went to pharmacy school.  She is now employed in a hospital pharmacy.

She stated, “Thank you Sustainable Hope’s We Can English Club.  I am lucky and hope I can help others later in my life.”

2019 UP-DATE:  She is now a Pharmacist Assistant at a hospital.

There are many youth like her … very intelligent, desperately wanting to escape the bonds of poverty.  They can’t do it without YOU…you can make a difference helping more youth like her experience the “We Can English Club”.  Please join us today to create a better future.

Your donation will help Sustainable Hope expand its We Can Club program into other schools … many schools like this one are asking for the We Can Club program … your gift will ensure more youth can set goals to a brighter future.

Are you ready to change the life of a student?  Your donation will go directly to creating more We Can Clubs.  Your donation will go directly to helping youth create a brighter future.

Yes, you can make a differenceyou can change their world, one youth at a time!  You can celebrate HOPE!

Thank you for your generous donation.  Go to www.sustainablehope.org press the “Donate” button.  Give a one-time gift OR give generously each month of the year.

Is there “HOPE” … for her?

Her mother had been sold into the sex industry when she was 12 years old.  Her uncle, with the help of police released her back to her family.  She married young and had two girls one year apart.

The youngest girl was sent to live with her grandparents for three years because there was not enough to eat.  When she was 8 years old, she had to stay home and care for their father, so Mom could go to work.  He had TB and often hit them with his cane.  When he died, they were sent back to live with grandparents.  Because there was not enough rice, they were often very hungry and cried because we were so hungry.  When she was nine years old, she and her sister found their own way to a bus that took them to a government welfare boarding school.

Good news!  We had enough food to eat … and we got to go to school and learn to read, write and so on.  She said “at the start, it was very difficult.  I had to live like a soldier and the school had many rules.  During holidays, I never had a chance to go back home because this school doesn’t let students leave school unless we can have a family member to come to take us out.  But my family always said they didn’t have time and I stayed too far from them.  I still remember the holidays and how my friends’ parents came to visit and took them home.  But I had to stay at the school … this made me sad.  … so I spent 6 years there until I graduated.   When I started middle school, I realized that I didn’t want to have the same life as my family.  I wanted to be educated.  I wanted to have a good future.”

“When my friends would go play, I learned how to do massages and earned money, saving every penny for my future my family couldn’t help me.  I told myself, “I will do the best that I can do.”  I promised myself that I will be successful in the future … I will not do the same as my family.  I choose to be happy and thankful for the good things.” A dear friend, Bekah, helped me get a scholarship to go to a university.

“Thank you, Sustainable Hope, for helping me dream big and make my dreams come true!”

2019 UP-DATE: Now she is a Flight Attendant

There are many youth like her … very intelligent, desperately wanting to escape the bonds of poverty.  They can’t do it without YOU…you can make a difference helping more youth like her experience the “We Can English Club”.  Please join us today to create a better future.

Your donation will help Sustainable Hope expand its We Can Club program into other schools … many schools like this one are asking for the We Can Club program … your gift will ensure more youth can set goals to a brighter future.

Are you ready to change the life of a student?  Your donation will go directly to creating more We Can Clubs.  Your donation will go directly to helping youth create a brighter future.

Yes, you can make a differenceyou can change their world, one youth at a time!  You can celebrate HOPE!

Thank you for your generous donation.  Go to www.sustainablehope.org press the “Donate” button.  Give a one-time gift OR give generously each month of the year.

Our Mission & Goals

Our Mission & Goals

Who We Are Sustainable Hope International (SHI) is a 501-C-3 U.S. not-for-profit, providing education resources and training for teachers and marginalized students.  Sustainable Hope Thailand Foundation is a Thai Foundation (SHTF) is registered with the Thai Government since 2010.   SHTH has developed the “We Can (English) Club” a three-year training model and curriculum that teaches, trains and certifies English teachers and student’s basic skills in learning, language, life skills, leadership and living in community.  In the country of Thailand there are 54 Government Welfare Boarding schools.  SHI, since 2010, has established its program in eight of the Government schools impacting over 600 students.  SHI provides annual workshops in two sections of the country and provides incentives for the teachers and students that excel in the program.  To date SHI has sponsored 7 students that have completed the program and gone on with assistance from SHI to get a graduate degree from their respective universities.  The need for the program is greater than SHI’s current staff allows, however we have also been working collaboratively with other government schools that have requested the program in their schools. This program assists in providing access in helping to build the next generation of productive workers and leaders for the country. Our Mission Sustainable Hope International empowers vulnerable youth to claim a self-sufficient future through education, life and leadership skills What We Do Sustainable Hope International works collaboratively with the 54 Government Welfare Schools, some public schools in rural Thailand, with English teachers and students primarily with sophomore, junior and seniors (M4, M5, M6) in high school.  Students in Thailand can legally leave school at the end of the M3 to go to work, vocational program or discontinue their education.  Research shows that students that have a high school education and have a command of the Thai and English languages can earn 40% more income in their lifetime.  (The South-East Asia Economic Union, 11 countries have stated that by 2015 English should be the common language in their countries) Sustainable Hope International through the SHTF provides effective methodology for
youth leadership development. SHTF Provides

  • technical, administrative and organizational support, and helps establish and strengthen university-based and community-based programs
  • Conductsgrassroots “training of trainers” workshops, using an interactive approach
  • Developsand assists in the development of interactive curricula and manuals for English teachers and students,
  • Coordinatesand hosts English Club camps for eligible participating students.
  • Organizes and facilitates visits, provides incentives for advancement and exchanges and trainings between students and teachers
  • Worksto connect students with university and vocational programs with established university and corporations
  • Offersopportunities for service clubs such as Rotary and corporations to sponsor “We Can English Clubs and Government school programs
  • SHI seeks to develop and strengthen positive partnerships and networks locally, regionally and internationally. We endeavor to link our program to community service organizations, governmental policy makers and municipal educational institutions. We welcome partnerships to support the Government Welfare schools.

WHY A CLUB? The purpose of the
We CanTM English Club is to promote feelings of acceptance and belonging.

  • Youth join clubs and organizations because they want to be an active part of a group. If they do not feel they are welcome, or that they don’t “fit in” they will very quickly stop coming. Often, groups do not intentionally leave out members, but simply overlook new or quieter members.
  • Plan group-building activities for every meeting. Through these activities, young people can be pulled into the group without feeling left out.

SHTF Provides Opportunity to Develop Relationships It is impossible to develop relationships without talking to one another. Club meetings that do not provide lots of opportunities for youth to talk with one another, do not take advantage of one of the unique learning opportunities a club meeting can provide. Some simple ways to provide structured interaction beyond get-acquainted activities are team-building activities, small group discussions, and committee work. Remember to include unstructured interaction time as well. Provide Safety and Structure Youth feel safe in a group when they know the behaviors that are expected of them. To clarify these behaviors, it will be important to lead the club through a process of identifying the standards of behavior they all agree they want for their club. These can be written in the form of Club Rules and posted in a place where everyone can see them. Club rules help members monitor their own behaviors and decrease the need for the adult leader to control behavior. Posted rules also help prevent misunderstandings between members and adults and leaders about appropriate behavior at club meetings and events. Provide Opportunities to Contribute to the Group A sense of belonging to any group, whether family, school, community, or club, is formed when there are opportunities to contribute to that group and when those contributions are essential to the group. Club meetings must offer ways for all members to contribute and see themselves necessary to the success of the club. STRUCTURE AND GOALS Adult leaders should identify skills and talents of members that can help the club run better. All members serve in two positions throughout the year (except the Senior Leader who holds that job all year). The Teacher/Advisor selects the Senior Leader at camp and the students decide among themselves all other positions. Then, at the end of the semester, the Advisor assigns everyone to a new leadership position.  Training and mentoring are needed for new leadership positions. At the 1st Semester Celebration, roles change. Each Club member will train their replacement, then be trained for their new position. Promote Competence and Independence (the items below should be bullet points !!!) Help youth plan and conduct their meetings. Provide opportunities at age appropriate levels to have input into the design of the meeting and to provide leadership for the meeting. Prepare youth for the leadership roles they assume and provide support as they practice these roles. Help members evaluate their plans and use that information in future planning. Assist youth in developing plans for future meetings. Structure and Organization:  Official enrollment requires:

  • A recognized sponsoring organization, (may be a community group, welfare school, government program, etc.).
  • A certified trained adult advisor who is actively involved in each meeting guiding the activities.
  • The Club is organized with a youth leadership team.
  • There are nine youth selected and trained as Club leaders.
  • A suitable meeting place is secured for the program year.
  • The Club will meet a minimum of ten times during the year.
  • The curriculum is followed and adapted as needed.
  • Basic information on each participating youth is gathered in the Secretary Record Book and kept with the Advisor/Teacher.
  • Attendance is taken at each meeting.
  • Enrollment forms will include releases for use of photographs, agreements for non-discriminatory membership, agreement to expectations of behavior, agreement of criteria for possible
financial assistance for the Advisor/Teacher and signature of youth or volunteer.

CLUB GOALS Some clubs discuss things they would like to do together. This is called setting goals and planning. Writing goals down is important because it helps us keep focused on what we want to accomplish. A long-term goal is something that takes a lot of effort and time. The ideas can be simple (learning to play a new game every month), (Every club member graduates from high school), or they can be complicated (the club will build a new boathouse), (the club will design a flower garden and plant it). A short-term goal usually is an idea that can be done quickly or is easy to make happen. (i.e. Each club member will bring a friend to the next meeting.) (The club will help the school workers clean and paint three classrooms. An easy way to discuss different ideas is to brainstorm:

  • Everyone who wants to share an idea gets to. The more people there are thinking of ideas the better!
  • One person writes down every idea on a large sheet of paper. Every idea is accepted! You do not criticize someone else’s idea.
  • Everyone has opportunity to discuss the ideas.
  • Vote on the ideas you want to keep.

Club Rules: As a group, have the youth decide what ground rules they all agree to follow. Write down on a large sheet of paper and have everyone sign the agreement. Post the rules at the meetings so that everyone will remember them. Here are two rules that Sustainable Hope has for every We Can English Club: We CanTM English Club:

  • Show respect for everyone you come in contact with by your actions and your words.
  • Remember that you are an ambassador for We Can English Clubs and Sustainable Hope

International, and your actions and words can provide a good or bad example. Discussion:
How will the rules be enforced?

  • What will happen if the rules are broken?
What does it mean to have rules that no one follows?
  • Why are rules important?

DEVELOPING TOMORROW’S LEADERS The We Can Club leadership training model helps develop a young person’s ability to make positive life choices based upon sound values and a vision of a successful future. The youth of today are the world’s leaders of tomorrow, and we are committed to providing them with the skills, perspectives, and opportunities to serve their communities and our world. To accomplish this, our goals are to: ✓ Give youth the tools and skills of leadership. ✓ Provide them with opportunities to build their foundation of experience. ✓ Teach the importance of global awareness. ✓ Instill qualities of service to their communities. ✓ Inspire, empower, and lead through example. Program: 
The We Can Club is focused on developing the skills of the youth in a practical atmosphere in which the youth are experiencing each lesson through group activities and exercises, personal reflection and action assignments. From Learning to Leading 
We start teaching skills and lessons, and then shift to letting the youth be the leaders – putting into action the lessons learned. Focus Self to Community 
We encourage practical opportunities for Club members to connect with their communities and grow in understanding and tolerance while identifying issues and working toward practical resolutions. Reflection into Action 
Club members are trained then given opportunities and experiences to develop their leadership skills. Three Success Keys of the We Can Club:

  1. Inspiring leadership development and English reinforcement.
  2. Outstanding Advisor/Teacher certification training program.
  3. Career planning and focus on continued education in universities and vocational training.

You Serve and Help Club Members 1.Develop leadership skills that become community leaders. 2.Instill the value of “giving back” to others and becoming models of community service. 3.Learn, reason, communicate, and make informed choices regarding their lives. YOUTH LEADERSHIP MODEL Sustainable Hope International has developed the We CanTM Club Advisor training based on the Synago Global Youth Leadership ModelTM. Destined2Win LLC added to the training methodology. Club members grow into successful adults as they develop skills necessary for survival and success in life. Your We CanTM English Club helps youth develop lifelong skills that benefit your school and your community. Youth become strong individuals and community leaders with developed skills in: ★ how to learn, ★ how to communicate, ★ how to express personal character and values, ★ how to lead others, ★ and how to be good citizens in their communities. FIVE KEY ELEMENTS OF TRAINING LEADERS 1. Learning:
Learning is a lifelong process. Learning is acquired through learning styles. Some learn from reading while others can hear something and retain it. Some learn better when they move, draw a concept, or build it with their hands. When youth use multiple styles, the greater their ability to learn and apply new information. Our program teaches youth how to learn through a variety of experiences, teamwork and individual effort, and encourages lifelong learning tailored to the need.

  1. Language: Knowing how to communicate enables a young person to convey thoughts and opinions, influence others, and lead groups as a confident, successful leader for our communities. Being a global leader in the 21st Century requires mastery of one or more languages. Fluency in English is becoming critical to success in cross-cultural situations, as it is the most commonly used language among foreign language speakers. English is the language for technical innovation, economic development, and science (i.e. Internet, film industry and international business). Youth who are bi-lingual will be more successful as a global leader in every area of life and career.
  2. Life Skills: The term “Life Skills” refers to the skills usually associated with managing and living a better quality of life. They help us to accomplish our ambitions and live to our full potential. There is no definitive list of life skills. Certain skills may be more or less relevant to you depending on your life circumstances, your culture, beliefs, age, geographic location etc.

Perhaps the most important life skill is the ability to learn. By learning new skills, we increase our understanding of the world around us and equip ourselves with the tools we need to live a more productive and fulfilling life. Life skills are not always taught directly but are often learned indirectly through experience and practice. Developing character, confidence, and values are critical to success in life and work.

  1. Leadership: Leadership is a critical component for today’s youth to be healthy, productive contributors in society and the workplace. Employers list leadership as one of the essential skills entry-level workers lack, including strong work ethics, problem solving, creativity, organizational and interpersonal skills, openness to new perspectives, and cross-cultural communication skills. These skills are ranked ahead of writing, math, reading, and job specific skills.
  2. Living in Community: Youth learn to solve real-life problems while working with others in their community. We care not only about ourselves but also about others in our community and the world around us. Our school, neighborhoods, and communities have many needs. As good citizens, we can help meet these needs with our time, our creativity, our talents and work.

Service Learning is helping others in our community and learning lessons along the way about communication, relationship-building, assessing need, gathering information and resources, planning, developing strategy, implementing a project, program or activity. Service Learning is not simply community service. The basic educational strategies are based on authentic community participation methods to help youth to

  • feel trust and comfort in learning together (integration),
  • practice new learning in groups (role playing),
  • apply the new learning in their everyday lives, (application and mobilization) and
  • learn how to use these skills again to approach and solve new problems (sustainability).

  Skills needed for success in life include:

  • Self- knowledge (understanding their personal skills and goals)
  • health issues
  • education and work
  • managing money
  • becoming a citizen

English literacy is encouraged in the activities, organization and structure of every club meeting. Youth speak and write in English for all activities, practice new vocabulary, and enjoy English-language songs and games. Global intelligence theory is a key part of this curriculum and allows it to be used in any culture or country. While young people throughout the world have the same basic life skill needs, differences exist between country and culture.

  • Activities are based on cultural intelligence research to help any advisor in any culture meet the needs of their youth.
  • Activities are explained so that trainers understand the goals and can adapt the activities to their youth.

We’re going to have fun together, become friends, and learn useful skills. Through the We Can Club, your language, confidence, and knowledge will grow! Activity Design

  • Every step of the lesson is important: In every session, we practice the basic life skill strategies: how to communicate, collaborate and work in teams
  • identify what the problems or challenges are and prioritizing them,
  • finding resources or solutions to the problem and making decisions,
  • and taking action.

The five subjects we study: self-knowledge (learning what our skills and our goals are), taking care of health, education and work, managing money, being a citizen.

Where We Work

Sustainable hope International currently helps to develop and support “We Can English Club” programs in the United states and Thailand.  SHI also has working partnerships with eight of the 54 Government Welfare schools.  Our administrative offices are located in the United States and Chiang Mai. Why We Do What We Do All over the world, marginalized youth yearn to access a brighter future through education and job skill but lack the power to obtain it.  In Thailand, recent statistics indicate that there are over 1.4 million at risk youth in the country.  The Government Welfare Schools provide a bridge to success for these youths.  Sustainable Hope International’s objective is to help provide leader ship skill through an educational program.  SHI builds bridges between Government Welfare schools, students and communities that would otherwise not have access to this assistance.  SHI fosters professional ethics and teaches students practical skills for tomorrow, while helping marginalized communities today.

We Can Clubs

In the next few days starting November 10, 2014, Ken Brookens, CEO and Field Manager for Sustainable Hope Thailand Foundation will be visiting eight Government Welfare School that have complete the certification training and have formed “We Can English Clubs”. One of our schools is the Chiang Dao “We Can English Club pictured here and we want to extend to them our thanks and appreciation for their Hospitality in hosting the the “we Can English Club” Camp last May. We hope to see who has qualified qualify for the free T Shirts this November. In the next few days all of the workshops clubs each of the schools will be featured here.

Which your clubs will qualify for the “We Can English Club” T Shirt November 2014?

We will determine the students that have qualified for the We Can English Club T Shirt. Each Clubs teacher/facilitator will need to have the club secretary to document and forward the information to Sustainable Hope International on its website. The club students that have completed the following will be eligible for the T Shirt:

Schools needs to have an organized and active “We Can English Club”

Have had 6 to 8 club meetings before the end of the first semester (October 2014)

The club secretary needs to fill in the forms in the Secretary Hand Book and forward the reports to Sustainable Hope International via the www.wecanclub.org web site

The guidelines for the “We Can English Club can be found in the Facilitator Certification Training Manual provided to the facilitators at the May Training workshop.
If your need more information contact me at sus.hope.mail@gmail.com.