Empowering refugees through higher education in RwandaSet in the oldest refugee camp in Rwanda, the Kepler Kiziba Campus provides learners like Mupenzi, Alice and Mawezo the opportunity to earn a university degree – and secure a brighter future.
Kiziba is home to a predominately young community – around 60 per cent of the people living there are under 24 years old. Ensuring youth have access to education is therefore paramount to humanitarian efforts at the camp.
The Kepler Kiziba Campus
Through a partnership with Southern New Hampshire University (SNHU), the Kepler Kiziba Campus provides refugee learners with an opportunity to earn a US-accredited degree.
Kepler also addresses learners’ literacy and numeracy challenges, strengthens their English-language and ICT skills, and promotes critical thinking for business and sustainable development.
To date, over 300 refugees learners have enrolled in the Kepler Kiziba programme. For alumni Mupenzi, Alice and Mawezo, earning a degree from Kepler has paved the way for a more financially secure future.
The Kiziba Refugee Camp
Some Kiziba residents, like Mupenzi, have lived at the camp for more than 20 years.
Mupenzi Niyomugabo, 22Mupenzi’s family moved to the Kiziba camp in 1996.
My life changed when I entered Kepler as a scholarship student.’
Alice Nyirambanguka, 23Alice came to the camp in 2001.
‘But I was determined to change my future through Kepler, and I wanted to keep growing. Now, I have a US-accredited bachelor’s degree in communications from Southern New Hampshire University.’
Mawezo Harindintwari, 30 A refugee and Kepler graduate turned teacher.
‘I kept applying until I got selected by Kepler. Now, I am a teaching assistant at Kepler Kiziba.’
Leonne Laura UwizihiweLaura is Kepler’s Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Manager.
‘Through technology, our students are able to have access to a US degree.’
Alice Nyirambanguka, 23Alice earned her bachelor’s degree in communications from Kepler.
‘Now, I have a job in communications that makes me financially independent.’
Addressing barriers to gender equality in education is central to Kepler’s work
In response, and to promote parity in higher education, Kepler has established women-only areas at the Kiziba camp that can be used to breastfeed, provides stipends to cover childcare costs, and allows new mothers to take leave from their studies rather than dropping out following the birth of a child.
Leonne Laura UwizihiweDiversity, Equity and Inclusion Manager, Kepler
‘When it was hard to study during the COVID-19 pandemic, Kepler paid for childcare for 19 students who were also mothers, 14 of whom went on to graduate with a degree.’
Mupenzi Niyomugabo, 22Mupenzi has also improved his English-language skills at the Kepler Kiziba Campus.
‘I have also used my [COVID-19] quarantine period to learn English, as it is important for entering university.’
Kepler programmes are also digitally inclusive.
Mawezo Harindintwari, 30Former student Mawezo is now an assistant teacher at the Kiziba Campus.
Leonne Laura UwizihiweDiversity, Equity and Inclusion Manager, Kepler
‘A big part of [our work] is to make sure that 90% of students are employed within six months of graduating.’
Success stories like those of Mupenzi, Alice and Mawezo are proof that lifelong learning opportunities, like those offered by Kepler, are fundamental to the social integration, economic empowerment and personal well-being of refugees across the globe.
The right to education is a human right that must be promoted.
And to discover how innovative technologies can be used to provide education to refugees and other marginalized groups, download From Radio to Artificial Intelligence: Review of Innovative Technology in Literacy and Education for Refugees, Migrants and Internally Displaced Persons.
Images courtesy of UIL, Lucian Coman (Poco_bw), Anastasia Collection