Extra classes

extra classes

Many families need financial support to be able to send their children to school. To enable children to get a secondary education, Lankahelp grants a monthly scholarship of currently CHF 30.00 on average to children, juveniles and students at A-level, at universities and for vocational training, in addition to financial contributions from family and relatives. As of Sept. 2020, 153 schoolchildren and students are supported.

School fees – The State pays school fees from primary school up to university level. From primary school up to and including O-Level, the state pays also for school books and school uniforms. All other costs have to be covered by parents and relatives or from other sources. There are primary schools in most villages. Junior Secondary and Senior Secondary School can usually only be attended in regional schools. For the Collegiate Level (A-Level) young people have to leave the village, as colleges are generally only available in larger cities.

Reasons for dropping out of school – Some parents in rural areas send their children to elementary school (up to grade 5), but afterwards they, like their parents, have to work in tea or rubber plantations and contribute to the family’s livelihood. Other reasons are often apparently simpler problems, such as long distances to school and too little income to pay for school materials, sewing school uniforms, buying shoes, socks and ties, as well as bus or three-wheeler costs. As there are often only primary schools in the villages, additional accommodation and food costs have to be paid for children who live in remote areas and have no choice but to stay at school during the week.

Another reason for dropping out of school early is the cost of additional or extra tuition. Teachers in rural areas are often not very well trained, which means that “normal lessons” are often not sufficient for graduation. Many parents cannot afford the necessary additional or extra tuition.

Our visit to scholarship holders in 2023

During the visit of the scholarship holders in Batticaloa, we meet 11 children and their parents. A first grade A-level pupil tells us that he gets up at 4.00 a.m., starts studying, then goes to school and attends tutoring after school. And last but not least, he has to do his homework. He only sleeps 3 – 4 hours a day, the rest of the time he is busy studying.

He also tells us that there are between 20 and 50 children in a normal school class in Baticaloa. When the teachers give extra lessons, there are 500 children, accommodated in an auditorium. It is possible for the class teachers to give their pupils extra tuition. The schoolchildren pay LKR 150 (45 centimes) per hour for tutoring. This means an enormous additional wage for the teachers (up to 1.5 times their salary). But for many children, these costs are too high. This dual function situation urgently needs to be changed so that teachers can do their best to provide the best possible lessons during regular school hours. According to newspaper reports, appropriate steps are being discussed in the Ministry of Education.

a super success for a young woman from the mountains

Sathiyabama, a young woman from the mountains of Sri Lanka, was able to complete her studies with the help of a scholarship from Lankahelp. She was already the best in the whole Monaragala district (out of 2500 students) at the A-levels and was therefore able to start her studies without an aptitude test. Now she (…) Read More