Seattle Computers To Help Children In Ghana

SEATTLE – Some students at Seattle’s Garfield High School are helping close the digital divide.

They’re rebuilding computers and creating a computer network not for their own school, but for a school in Ghana.

They’re part of Garfield’s Technology Academy. Founded in 1998, the academy was created to bring needed technology to underdeveloped communities.

“We hope to bring computers and technology throughout the world,” explained Pranoti Hiremath, a freshman at Garfield.

At the beginning of next month, eight Garfield H.S. students will travel to Ghana to set up the computers at a high school there. They’ve already shipped 120 computers to Ghana.

The used computers were donated from Seattle and Eastside schools.

“We’re very excited”, says Julia Marks, a junior.

Students from Garfield’s Tech Academy have travelled to Mexico and Mozambique, Poland and India. Their next stop Ghana.

Two weeks of teaching and inspiring kids their age who don’t know the first thing about a mouse, who’ve never e-mailed anyone.

That’s about to change.

Source: GhanaWeb

You may like

Peter Turkson

Ghana’s Peter Turkson among key contenders as Vatican eyes next pope

Chop bar

Foreign aid fails Ghana’s chop bar workers, new findings reveal

Qatar opens Quran centre in Accra

Qatar-funded Al-Mustafa Mosque opens in Accra as new centre for worship and Quranic studies

Ghana military leaders in Zimbabwe

Ghana military delegation tours Zimbabwe’s model waste facility

Ghana's economy is recovering

Ghana’s inflation eases again as stronger cedi boosts economic recovery

Ekperikpe Ekpo

Nigeria’s Ekpo elected to lead West African gas pipeline committee, vows to prioritise Ghana’s supply needs

WP Radio
WP Radio
OFFLINE LIVE