
Global Education Partnership
(G.E.P.)
is
a non-profit 501(c)(3) organization with divisions in the United
States (Oakland, California), Kenya,
Guatemala, Tanzania
and Indonesia.
The mission of Global Education Partnership is "to provide access to
educational resources that increase the capacity of young people to become
employable and self-reliant in today's global marketplace." The
underlying philosophy of empowerment that permeates the programs that G.E.P.
offers in low-income communities in the U.S. and in developing countries is
that sustainable development - where people can access and then re-create
opportunities to both excel personally and improve their communities - is only
possible if the people that ultimately benefit from a program are viewed not
as recipients of the program, but as participants in designing and
implementing a program to suit their needs.
G.E.P. History
After finishing at UC/Berkeley, Tony
Silard, founder of Global Education Partnership, conducted a 3-month
teacher-training seminar in Guatemala, taught mathematics in an inner-city
public high school in Washington D.C. for one year, and then joined the Peace
Corps as a Community Development Worker in Kenya with the Ministry of Education.
After visiting many schools in Kenya and hearing community members consistently
voice the need for textbooks for their children, Barnabas Mwakisha, a Kenyan,
and Silard provided Kenyan parents with an incentive to raise funds for
textbooks for their children by matching the amount that they raised with funds
from U.S. donors. Mwakisha and Silard co-managed "the matching-funds
textbook project" for 2 years, and provided over $120,000 in textbooks to
over 40,000 students in 58 schools.
Later, while at Harvard completing a Master's of Public
Policy, Silard worked as Employment and Training Coordinator at Roxbury
Youthworks (an inner-city, community-based youth agency) teaching work
readiness and entrepreneurship skills. The focus of Silard's degree at Harvard
was Education and the Economy: in particular, the widening gap between the
skills required for high-wage jobs and the skills that most disadvantaged
youth obtain in school. Silard's work and research won 4 awards at the Harvard
graduation, including the Robert F. Kennedy Public Service Award, and set the
initial direction for G.E.P.'s Entrepreneurship and Employment Training
Program curriculum.
In
July 1994, Silard founded Global Education Partnership. Silard assembled a
team to develop the Entrepreneurship and Employment Training Program in
Oakland, California that included educators from Harvard, UC/Berkeley, various
Bay Area high schools, community leaders and students from UC/Berkeley. In
1995, G.E.P. divisions were established in Wundanyi,
Kenya and San
Francisco Bay Area, and in 1996 G.E.P. established its third division in Totonicapán,
Guatemala. Divisions in Lushoto,
Tanzania and Wonosari,
Indonesia were formed in 1998 and 1999, respectively.