Claire Akatch, United World Colleges scholarship recipient
By
Margaretta wa Gacheru (posted 13 January 2020)
When Claire Okatch
got the news that she was destined to go to Moi Girls Secondary in Eldoret, her
parents had to scramble to find the fees.
“They
managed for a term or two, but I knew how hard they struggled for me,” says
Claire who wasn’t alone among her peers who had difficulty covering school
fees. “Many girls got sent home. To this day, I don’t know why I wasn’t one of
them,” says the girl who got straight A’s all the way through secondary and also
started up the school’s first student fund raising initiative.
“It was
called Raising Up Young Achievers or RUYA,” says Claire who in a year and a
half raised more than a million shillings. “RUYA helped to bring back so many
girls to school,” says Claire who also managed to graduate debt-free.
But how was
she going to continue with her education? “A family friend told us about UWC,
the United World Colleges, which provides scholarships for students between the
ages 14 to 18 to go for an International Baccalaureate,” says Claire who got
her IB in 2012 after studying at the UWC of Singapore.
Explaining
that the IB is somewhat like A levels in the British system, Davinder Sikand says
it’s much tougher. “You take six courses not three, and you have to complete a
special project and a substantial paper to go with it. But once you have the
IB, you can easily get into any of the top universities in the world,” adds Mr
Sikand who is another UWC fund recipient.
Sikand went
to Atlantic College in Wales after which he eventually went to Northwestern
University’s prestigious Kellogg School of Business for an MBA. And Claire went
to New York University in Abu Dhabi after completing her IB in Singapore.
Now she and
Davinder are both volunteers on UWC’s Kenya National Committee which selects
worthy Kenyan youth who need full-funding to go for the IB.
“Currently,
we are accepting applications for slots in 18 schools that have said they are
willing to accept and fund the IB course for one Kenyan youth each,” says Joan
Sikand, who also volunteers on the National Committee.
“But the
deadline for receiving applications is coming up fast. It’s January 20th
in fact. So we would like students to go to our website [www.ke.uwc.org] and
download the application form,” adds Joan who admits the best applicants are
ones who have completed Form 4.
“We have 18
countries with schools affiliated with UWC,” says Claire who notes that most of
them are in Europe and America, but there are also UWC schools in Japan, China,
Thailand, India and Hong Kong as well as Singapore. “There’s even one in
Tanzania, but someone can find out all those details on the website,” she adds.
Not all the
schools supply full-scholarships every year, and not all those who take part in
UWC’s program are funding recipients. “The IB programs are so appealing that
some youth want to participate in UWC’s IB course whose parents can afford to
pay for it,” says Joan. “But they must apply just like everybody else,” she
adds.
UWC didn’t
provide Claire with a scholarship to go on to NYU-Abu Dhabi, “I got one from
the university itself which covered all four years of my undergraduate education,”
she says.
“Students
with an IB to their credit rarely have a problem getting into the top schools,”
says Mr Sikand who first heard about the UWC in ‘The Reader’s Digest’.
“I read a
story about Atlantic College and its Outward Bound program, which I really
wanted to do,” says Sikand who admits it was the OB program that inspired him
to learn more about UWC which was also mentioned in The Digest. Now both he and
his wife are hopeful that many Kenyan kids will apply for the UWC scholarship.
Started
right after World War II when people were giving serious thought to how best to
ensure there would never be a World War III. “A German named Kurt Hahn started
the United World Colleges,” says Claire. “He believed wars were fought largely
because people didn’t understand one another. He felt the greatest need was for
education and for making enlightening opportunities available to young people
who still had open minds (unlike some adults) and who were willing to think
about how to solve problems facing the world,” she adds. Describing UWC as a
“movement” started in the late 1940s, she says it’s been growing ever.
But she
admits funding is becoming a challenge since volunteers like herself have been
succeed in raising public awareness of UWC which has meant that more people are
applying for its scholarships. “The program was initially endowed by Hahn and
his friends. Now it’s funded by a combination of individual donors and the
colleges affiliated with it,” says Claire who graduated from NYU in 2016 and
went straight to work for the university.
But having
majored in public policy and social research with a minor in Mandarin, Claire
also does consultancy work using her knowledge of Chinese to liaise between
Western, local and Chinese corporations.
She may be
going back to graduate school very soon, but not before the January 20th
deadline. And not before 19 worthy Kenyan applicants become members of the UWC
family.
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