Project Period: Jan 2022 – Dec 2022
The Albinism Konnect Primary Education Support Programme, implemented by The Noble Hands Zimbabwe Trust with the funding support (USD$30 000.00) from Open Society Initiative of Southern Africa (OSISA) now OSF, demonstrating how targeted, well-managed investments can unlock transformative educational outcomes for highly marginalised children. This donor-funded pilot project responded to a critical and often overlooked barrier to learning for pupils with albinism in Zimbabwe: low vision compounded by poverty and systemic exclusion within mainstream education.
Children with albinism face severe visual impairment, yet most Zimbabwean primary schools lack large-font textbooks, inclusive examination papers, and teacher training on low-vision support. More so due to Covid 19 induced socioeconomic hardships that affected the communities and the world at large which saw marginalised children with disabilities and albinism in particular dropping out of school due to lack of school fees. As a result, many capable learners underperform, repeat grades, or drop out entirely. The Albinism Konnect Programme directly addressed this gap by providing large-font textbooks, sun protection essentials, and school fees support to orphaned and vulnerable pupils with albinism in Grades 3–5, laying a foundation for improved literacy, confidence, and long-term academic success. Despite higher-than-anticipated textbook printing costs due to specialised large-font typesetting, the project prioritised core subjects and maximised impact within available resources. Importantly, the textbooks produced remain durable assets that will continue to benefit future learners through an established retrieval and redistribution system, extending the life and reach of the donor investment beyond the grant period.
These gains were recorded in schools across multiple provinces, including Harare, Manicaland, Gokwe North, and Matabeleland North, highlighting the programme’s relevance across diverse contexts.
Beyond direct learner support, the project generated institutional and policy-level value. Through school engagement and monitoring visits, teachers and school administrators were introduced to practical inclusive education approaches, many for the first time. This has begun to shift attitudes and practices around accommodating learners with albinism and other low-vision conditions. Evidence generated through the programme is now informing a petition before the Parliament of Zimbabwe, advocating for stronger enforcement of the Disability Policy of Zimbabwe (2021). This positions the OSISA-funded pilot as not only a service delivery intervention, but also a catalyst for systemic reform in inclusive education.
The Noble Hands Zimbabwe Trust expresses sincere appreciation to OSISA for investing in an intervention that delivers measurable educational gains while advancing dignity, inclusion, and equity for children with albinism. This partnership has not only changed classroom experiences for vulnerable learners but has also laid groundwork for long-term policy and systems change in Zimbabwe’s education sector.