During the COVID-19 pandemic, Palo Blanco School’s light is shining ever more brightly! The school is providing relief packages of food, tracts, and educational materials to the 170 families of students who attend Palo Blanco. The school is also providing emotional support as teachers make regular contact with their families and students via WhatsApp.
School director Jan and academic director Miriam meet weekly with the six other Kids Alive school directors to plan, share best practices, and discuss spiritual and emotional care. The Kids Alive DR counseling staff have produced videos to guide parents in engaging with their children, keeping daily routines, and addressing issues such as stress and anxiety. The medical staff have also produced videos and flyers on COVID-19 prevention, use of personal protective equipment, and how to care for sick family members.
We are grateful to visitor Kathleen, who is sewing masks for the staff and children. The country remains under curfew, with mandatory use of masks and with restrictions on movement.

As a new student to Kids Alive’s Source of Hope School, 10-year-old Susana’s schooling experience is very different from her fellow students who had joined before the pandemic. While all the other students had started school in a classroom, Susana’s experience began with distance learning. It involved the 4th grader's parents going to her school weekly to pick up her study packet and drop off her schoolwork.

El Zapote (red marker) is 50 miles from Guatemala City (Courtesy Google Maps)
Susana is from El Zapote, where Source of Hope School provides education to at-risk children. Though only 50 miles from Guatemala’s capital, Guatemala City, El Zapote is in the mountains and hence described as “remote” and “isolated.” It is also why Kids Alive provides much-needed education to children like Susana in this area.On its surface, life in El Zapote seems normal, but in fact all is not well here. While its isolation protected El Zapote’s community from a severe incidence of COVID-19, it did not shield it from the economic downturn that followed on the heels of the pandemic. Already poor, the closing of and restrictions on businesses and other institutions added to the local people’s hardships.
School closures impacted students like Susana, who lives with her mother, siblings, and grandparents in a modest house made of concrete with a corrugated tin roof. “Learning from home is hard because I cannot ask my teachers for help, and a lot of the time, my mom cannot help either,” says Susana. But she also sees God working in her life and the lives of those around her. “I thank God that my family is healthy and that I can learn.”
Recently, Source of Hope reopened its doors to students. For two hours a week, each grade is allowed to come and study with their teachers. While this is still a far cry from a “normal” school day before COVID, we are thankful that we can make progress toward broader face-to-face and in-person contact!
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SCHOOLS
Kids Alive is responding to the COVID-19 pandemic by ensuring that our students stay on track and engaged in their education, even during these challenging times. We’re doing this through adapting lessons for distance learning, using online options, providing photocopied study resources delivered by our staff, facilitating telephone consultations with teachers, and organizing WhatsApp groups for parents to keep in touch and stay informed about their kids’ work. Our counselors are monitoring students and sending short videos to the families on how to handle stress and how to keep children active.
Many of our children come from families where there is now no income, and the children are at risk of hunger, malnutrition, and or getting food from unsafe sources. So we’re using the budgets normally allocated for school meals to help feed families of our kids and community members with basic non-perishable foods and, in some cases, cooked meals. And as we make home visits to our kids with food and educational material deliveries as well as tips on hygiene and disease prevention, we’re making the most of every opportunity to share the Gospel and bring hope!

Santo Domingo East School continues to subsidize children’s nutrition through relief food to 87 families who are part of our school community. The families come to collect food at the site, and those without transportation receive deliveries at home.
Our teachers have adapted to the COVID-19 world. They now connect with their students via WhatsApp to send study materials, homework, weekly devotions, and words of support and encouragement. School directors Kami and Romulo meet weekly with the six other Kids Alive school directors to plan, share successes and best practices, and discuss topics such as sustaining spiritual and emotional care of children and staff.
The Kids Alive DR counseling staff have produced videos to guide parents in engaging with their children, keeping daily routines, and addressing issues such as stress and anxiety. The medical staff has also produced videos and flyers on COVID-19 prevention, use of personal protective equipment, and how to care for a sick person. The country remains under curfew, with mandatory mask-use and restricted travel.
Kids Alive International es una organización sin fines de lucro registrada como 501 (c) 3. Todas las donaciones en los Estados Unidos son deducibles de impuestos en su totalidad o en parte.
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Kids Alive Internacional
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