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Last time you were here, you were looking to help vulnerable children and families. Your support can save and change lives.

Khet Khet goes through her homework as her mother prepares rice in the kitchen, a wooden platform on stilts attached to the exterior of the little shack they call home.

The view from the kitchen is like everyone else’s in the neighbourhood: rocky, dirt paths littered with rubble, ashes and scraps of plastic, and colourful clothes on makeshift washing lines.

Khet Khet’s absorbed in her school notes. She’s a happy nine-year-old with a big smile.

Despite living in the slum on the outskirts of Mandalay, in central Myanmar, she has high hopes for the future.

She wants to become a teacher after she finishes school, and has boundless enthusiasm for her studies.

It wasn’t always like this, however. A few years ago she watched her eldest sister, Ma Nwe, drop out of school at the age of nine to help their mother at home.

When their father died, Ma Nwe was forced to work at a manufacturing factory at the age of 13 to support the family.

Today she works a 70-hour week, and gets only one day off each month.

For a time Khet Khet saw a similar future for herself.

One in four children in Myanmar don’t finish primary school, and families in slums are more likely to miss out as they’re not officially registered as residents so children cannot attend public schools.

ChildFund Myanmar’s support for monastic schools for vulnerable communities, such as Khet Khet’s, has provided children with a chance to learn basic literacy and numeracy skills, and take back some control of their future.

Since 2012, with the support of the Australian Government through the Australian NGO Cooperation Program (ANCP), ChildFund has implemented education programs and training for parents and teachers, and school management teams, as well as provided teaching aids to schools, established computer rooms, libraries, and classrooms.

Daw Myint, a grade 7 teacher who has been at Khet Khet’s school for five years, says a recent expansion of classrooms has had a positive impact on the learning and teaching experience.

“Two different classes used to be squeezed into one room,” she says. “There were so many students.

“It was noisy and disruptive, and the teachers had to try very hard to keep the students attentive.”

With support from ChildFund, the old dilapidated classroom was transformed into a two-storey building with four rooms.

Daw Myint said it was almost impossible to teach in the old classroom during the colder months.

“The wall-less classroom was open to the wind and rain, and the unpaved floor was cold and the teachers often fell sick,” she says.

“The new building is weather-proof and I don’t have to worry about those kinds of problems any more.”

In 2017 Australians donated more than $247,000 to ChildFund’s Myanmar Education Appeal, which focuses on improving access to primary education.

In addition, these supporters sent personal messages of support to younger students on a range of colourful flashcards, featuring numbers, animals and text in both English and Burmese, to help with basic numeracy and literacy skills.

When a group of Sydney students started sponsoring a child in Uganda, they had no idea the impact they would make. Raphael was one of many children in need following 23 years of war in his homeland. Today he is a grown man and ready to pass on the support he received. His story shows what happens when you help a child in need.

Life was simply so challenging before I was sponsored. I am one of 15 children. My father made just $50 a month to support us so it was very hard for my family to secure school fees for us all. It was compounded by the war we had for 23 years. When I was introduced to ChildFund it was a turning point in my life.

When I was a child we were dispersed from home to live in a camp due to the civil war. Outside it was unsafe but it was also not safe inside the camp as the enemy would sometimes come in and raid for food, to kill or steal children.

I lived with my family in a makeshift home in the camp from the late 1990s until 2006. When we moved to the camp the focus moved from education to security. During this time children were detached from schools. We could not put on lights to study at night time because the enemy would find you.

I was sponsored at 12 years old when I was in grade six. The biggest benefit of being a sponsored child for me was school fees. I didn’t have to worry about school fees anymore. Instead I could concentrate on my studies.

Sponsorship pulled me from nowhere to being able to have a good life in Uganda. It was like a bridge. If that bridge had not been there I would not have been able to get to the other side.

Even as a child I knew that education was most important because if I am educated, all the rest will come. Before my last year of primary school, me and a friend spoke to the ChildFund officer and said we wanted to be transferred to a better school. He assisted us with the application. Our parents didn’t come with us and the school was afraid we wouldn’t be able to pay our fees. We told them, “It’s okay, we are with ChildFund” and it was okay. I turned out to be one of their best students.