Bright students with disabilities are staying home, not because they cannot learn, but because they cannot afford school fees. Students with visual impairments depend on specialized boarding schools that provide Braille instruction, quality education, and trained teachers. Many come from extreme poverty, and some are orphaned or abandoned. When fees go unpaid, these students are sent home. Your sponsorship can keep a child in school and open up a world of opportunities.
A student will receive:
One sponsorship. One student. A lifetime of possibilities.
In Africa, over 400,000 children live with visual impairment, yet most have never touched a computer, read an e-book, or connected with the world online - not because they can't, but because the tools simply aren't available to them. You can change that now.
Since 2009, inABLE has been transforming lives by establishing cutting-edge assistive technology labs in schools for the blind across Kenya. In these labs, students who are blind or have low vision are mastering screen readers, coding, AI tools, and digital literacy. Skills that unlock doors to higher education, meaningful employment, and true independence.
Every donation brings us closer to a future where no child with visual impairment is left behind. Where every student regardless of their vision can access the education, skills, and opportunities they deserve.
Donate today and help build an inclusive digital future for Africa.
Lizzy Awuor, a young blind girl, embraces remote learning Using Her Laptop COVID-19 has caused significant harm to people's health and mental well-being. Businesses and the global economy have...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7yp6gE6MRBQ INABLE CODING INTERN Johnstone Ashura PATRICK Johnstone Ashura Patrick, a 23-year-old student, is one of the interns enrolled in the inABLE Coding for Interns project. The project is...
The President of Kenya, Hon. Uhuru Kenyatta, presenting a school bus to the Likoni High School for the Visually Impaired Choir Students at Likoni High School for the Visually...