• Country: Kenya
  • Date: 2017-12-04

Hi everyone,
When I learnt of the Car from Japan competition, I jumped at the opportunity hoping to make it to the prize. With our children joining high school and college, funds have remained scarce as we struggle to make ends meet. Besides, I am involved in voluntary Community work and I assist many people in their various challenges as a psychological counselor, pastor and teacher. Our focus next year is to begin a Talent and Gifting Identification and Development center in Kakamega County, Kenya to assist young people to find focus and contribute to overall development. Initiatives like Car from Japan are a wonderful resource that can help us enhance our work and achieve our goals faster. We must continue to open the doors of opportunity to more young people, who are powerful allies and can be key advocates for sustainable change. It is with this in mind that the County Transformation Programme (CTP), a Community Based Organization set out to establish an Integrated Vocational Skills and Talent Development Centre, in Kakamega County, Kenya. We intend to offer training for Home Keepers; to train young men in various skills; offer counselling, talent identification and tapping; offer refresher short courses (1 - 3 months) to youth focused at Youth Enrichment / Empowerment; Develop rehabilitation facilities to tackle the drug and alcohol abuse problem; offer Business Coaching and related services to business start-ups and SME’s; Develop small scale cottage industries - Have sample production lines for various products to inculcate aspects of sustainable production and consumption (Honey, Peanut Butter, Sun Flower products, Cane Juice and Jam processing). Our Strategy is to broach and share the idea with other stakeholders; carry out feasibility study to determine the needs of the county; Determine the requisite licences / permits for the business; follow Guiding principles in developing an all round youth for the county and nation with strong pillars (Spiritual, Economic and Social); Seek possible funding sources including; school/college fees; partners to invest in the venture; financial institutions that provide low interest loans; land/location for the venture within the county, Seeking divine direction through prayers and planning on the action steps to take for implementation.
As unemployment continues to affect millions of young people and businesses struggle to find qualified employees, the global community has become increasingly attuned to the need to prepare young people for the world of work. Skills development offers a key to smoothing that transition. Adopted by the United Nations, July 15 marked the second annual World Youth Skills Day.
Understanding the potential of well trained young people to transform our world for the better, we see at least six key reasons to invest in youth skills:
1.We can't reach the Sustainable Development Goals without investing in youth skills. Within the Global Goals, skills development figures as part of Goal 4, around quality education. What that framework doesn't say, but what IYF knows to be true, is that this learning factors into how the world can achieve each objective on the ambitious agenda. In addition to being critical to achieving Goal 1, ending global poverty, youth skills development can have a far-reaching ripple effect, as illustrated by other points in this list.
2.We don't have time to lose. By 2030, the end date for the SDGs, today's 18 year-old will be 32. Our mission is that by that age, a young person is a productive, civically engaged, tax-paying citizen who can support a family, if they have one. We must reach today's young people with the right technical and life skills to unlock opportunity for them and future generations. Our Passport to Success© program focuses on life skills such as self-confidence, responsibility, and respect, and workplace readiness skills including interviewing, time management, and career planning.
3.Fostering youth skills can drive gender equity and ultimately promote gender equality (Goal 5). When IYF looked at what the world's young people are doing, we saw that 178.2 million fewer young women than men have legal work despite being enrolled at every level of education in higher numbers. That is to say nothing of wage gaps, roadblocks to completing education, and representation in leadership. A holistic package that includes offerings such as life skills, reproductive health education, and money management can prepare young women to secure safer, better paying jobs; enjoy greater self-confidence; find financial independence; and become peer leaders in their communities.
4.Investing in young people is good for business. With partner Hilton Worldwide, we've seen a real commitment over time to their team members' life skills development and, through efforts like a high school degree equivalency initiative, their continued education. In addition to the satisfaction and opportunity this kind of skills development affords the young person, for the company, this investment can offer returns in the form of staff retention, superior teamwork, and increased customer satisfaction.
5.Equipping young people with new skills can make communities safer and healthier. Through our Youth:Work Mexico initiative, we proved the value of skills in providing young people, especially young men, with alternatives to gangs and drugs. "When Youth:Work arrived, it was like rescuing the youth of Ciudad Juárez—to get them out of violence, out of vulnerability, out of the streets," says facilitator Cristina in the video Youth Help Youth Get Jobs. Goal 3 of the SDGs speaks to need to ensure the health and well-being "for all at all ages."
6.Trained with the skills that augment their passion and interests, young people are powerful partners in solving problems, creating jobs, and leading change. Through our global initiatives, we have seen the way skills training has equipped entrepreneurs like Deddy in Indonesia to grow thriving businesses that employ other youth. As alumni of YouthActionNet, more than 1,350 innovative young leaders are changing how we access affordable and clean energy (Goal 7), fight gender-based violence (Goal 5), and protect ocean resources (Goal 14), just to name a few. To reach SDG Goal 17, we must tap the critical insights of these skilled change-makers. Thank you for launching this.

Sponsored By

CAR FROM JAPAN
  • CAR FROM JAPAN CO., LTD.
  • Toujiki Building 7F, 3-10-7 Iwamotocho, Chiyoda,
  • Tokyo, JAPAN 101-0032

Business Hours

  • Monday-Friday: 9am-6pm
  • Holiday: Saturday and Sunday, Japanese Holiday

Our Company

CAR FROM JAPAN is a product by CAR FROM JAPAN CO., LTD.

We give you direct and easy access to thousands of used cars from Japan at unbeatable prices.

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