In today's workshop held in Odramacaku Town Board, Arua City, education emerged as the most urgent issue on the community's mind. Through open dialogue and participatory reflection, community members shared candidly how a web of interconnected challenges continues to affect learners and families alike.
Challenges named by the community
But instead of waiting, the community has already taken action. They are farming to support school fees, reporting gaps to the education department, building staff houses, strengthening school committees, sensitizing parents on child labour and drug abuse, guiding youth through sex education, and mobilising families to take education seriously. They even offered land for a vocational training school and committed to supporting school dropouts with skills training.
Community-LedSolutions Already in Motion
Income-generating activities to support education costs
Building staff houses to attract and retain teachers
Parental sensitization and youth awareness campaigns
Strengthening PTAs and school management committees
Offering land for construction of a vocational school
Supporting dropouts and out-of-school youth with skills training
"When communities lead the process, they already hold the solutions — they simply need partners who will walk with them."— Reflection from the Odramacaku Community Workshop
Appeals to PartnersWhat the Community is Asking For
The community also directed clear, specific appeals to government, civil society, and the private sector — not as passive recipients, but as informed co-planners who know exactly what gaps remain to be filled:
Partner Support Requested
- Construction of more classrooms, staff houses, and bridges to schools
- Building the proposed community vocational training school
- Stronger school inspection systems and teacher supervision
- Dedicated support for vulnerable learners at risk of dropping out
- Investment in teacher capacity development and professional support
Today's session showed once again that when communities lead the process, they already hold the solutions. The voices from Odramacaku were not calls for charity — they were detailed, actionable, and grounded in lived experience. What they need now are partners committed to walking alongside them, not in front of them.