x
  • Umudee Umukehi Orji, Nigeria
  • info@ethanaeworld.org

Education & Skills

Children and community learning support
2017 Education has been part of EEWHO's development mission from the beginning.
Education and skills

Education is how communities move from survival into possibility.

Ethana e'World sees education as a direct path out of poverty and underdevelopment. Our education work supports children with scholarships, learning materials, mentoring, and community learning spaces while also opening practical skill-building opportunities for women and adults whose access to formal education has been limited.

In the PDF records supplied, EEWHO documents support for approximately 150 children through basic education scholarships and large-scale women skill acquisition work across Niger State. These figures should be confirmed before being used as public counters, but they clearly show the shape of the programme: children learn, women gain skills, and households become stronger.

Support Education

What the education programme supports

We combine formal learning, practical skills, nutrition awareness, digital tools, and local leadership so education becomes useful in everyday life.

Scholarships & Materials

Support for children through school fees, writing materials, teaching resources, and mentoring, especially in rural communities affected by poverty, insecurity, and weak infrastructure.

Women Skill Acquisition

Practical workshops help women and adults learn skills that can serve their households, improve self-reliance, and strengthen local economies.

Learning for Life

Education connects with nutrition, WASH, green energy, e-health awareness, and entrepreneurship so children and adults can apply knowledge to real community needs.

Impact areas to confirm and publish carefully.

The source documents include strong education and women empowerment records. Before using them as final counters, the team should confirm the documentation and dates in admin.

150Children reportedly supported with basic education scholarships.
5,000+Women reportedly reached through skill acquisition work.
7,077Women listed in later Niger State training records.
9+Communities and locations named across training records.