Female Education in Cambodia: The Harpswell Foundation
With its wealth of natural beauty, you could be forgiven for thinking Cambodia was the closest Earth has to a paradise. However, beneath such a beautiful exterior, Cambodian women face inequalities every day, with illiteracy rates being 8% higher than those of their male counterparts. However, with the work of the Harpswell Foundation, Women of Cambodia have a powerful ally in the fight for equality.
Harpswell Building a Future in Cambodia
Founded in 2005, the Harpswell Foundation “seeks to bring about positive social change in Southeast Asia through the action and equal participation of women.” Whilst the foundation has a global reach, the majority of its good work comes in the Cambodian capital, Phnom Penh. Harpswell have been responsible for building Cambodia’s first university dormitory for women and subsequently built a second within Phnom Penh in 2009.
Together, these dormitories can accommodate 76 female students from different universities across the city, with each facility coming with both a library and computer room – crucial amenities for student life. These dormitories come in a city where female students struggle to attain accommodation, which places further burden and stress on them. Therefore, it affects their studies. Through improving the infrastructure in place for the women of Cambodia, the work of Harpswell helps create a society in which women can both have freedom of ambition and freedom to learn.
The foundation’s reach does not just stop at improving infrastructure, but also seeks to educate. Women who enrol on Harpswell’s dormitories learn important skills through the foundation’s leadership program. This program enables “international women with university degrees” to stay at the dormitories to help teach, mentor, support and collaborate with residents. Leadership Residents teach weekly core curriculum classes, facilitate critical thinking classes and also help their Cambodian counterparts with preparation for class. Through the experience and wisdom of international graduates, Harpswell helps to teach female students in Cambodia crucial life skills, “ensuring graduates are proficient in English and digital literacy.”
Harpswell: Going Global
The foundation has established a scheme in which two to three exemplary graduates receive scholarships to study in the United States for an entire year. This scholarship scheme enables students to travel to another country, enabling them to take in different cultures and ways of life, all whilst pursuing their education. The scholarship program is of great benefit to Cambodia, too, where more than 50% of scholars return to seek graduate degrees.
Along with its scholarship programme, Harpswell also hosts the ASEAN Women’s Leadership Summit. This summit occurs on an annual basis, bringing together women aged between 25-35 from the ASEAN countries who have enrolled on a five-month “leadership development and professional networking program.” The summit itself lasts for a week, occurring in Penang, Malaysia. Described as “the only gathering of its kind in the region,” the summit offers women a chance to meet and work with like-minded people.
A Foundation for Change
Through both its domestic and international programmes, Harpswell aims to improve the lives of women in Southeast Asia by providing education and giving women a safe space to learn. This support is crucial in helping to achieve equality in a region where women lag behind their male counterparts in literacy rates. In a time of continual conflict and negativity, the story of the Harpswell Foundation is one of promise and prosperity, especially felt by young women in Cambodia, who dream of a bright and successful career.
– Andrew Nicoll
Andrew is based in Suffolk, UK and focuses on Good News and Politics for The Borgen Project.
Photo: Flickr