Seed: Students for Education Empowerment and Development

Our mission is to nurture empowerment, the feeling that anyone can truly do anything, and in turn inspiring people to create sustained social change in their own communities.

We work to provide scholarships for students in Zambia and Kenya. Read more about our program and how education impacts the lives of SEED students.

At school SEED students learn more than just the basics. Education influences many aspects of their lives such as their Health, Spirituality and Social Conduct.
Learn more about the impact of education.


What We Do:

At SEED we believe in the importance of empowering people and investing in their human potential through education. SEED is a registered charity that provides children in Kenya and Zambia with the opportunity to go to school. Visit our get involved page to learn more about what you can do.

SEED Blog: Get The Latest On Our Upcoming Event's And Projects


October 10th, 2010


Finding a Voice

September 14th, 2010

So far, one of my favourite tasks we’ve done here is our photography project called PhotoVoice. Taking pictures is one of my biggest hobbies, so I’ve definitely identified with the assignment. I love taking pictures; I love both the artistic quality of a good picture and the act of capturing a moment of my life in film so I can extend its memory beyond that moment.
Read more…


COME JOIN US FOR A SEED ART SHOW PARTY!

August 24th, 2010


What we’ve done in Kenya

July 19th, 2010

Here’s a brief snapshot of what Jenny, Alison and I have done in Kenya since my arrival on April 27th: Read more…


Mzungus for MPs

July 19th, 2010

On our last day at Humwend, a SEED-sponsored student pleasantly surprised us with a thought-provoking poem he wrote.  While weak on the rhyming front, his words strongly speak to the inadequacies of the Kenyan government, and shed light on a main cause of the nation’s underdevelopment.  It goes like this:
Read more…


Media Coverage: is it really all bad?

July 16th, 2010

Media coverage of Africa is often skewed toward negative stories: famine, HIV/AIDS, wars, child soldiers, orphans, poverty. And reading back on our blog entries, our coverage is similarly skewed. It’s not a conspiracy to “keep Africa down” or a deliberate effort to focus on the negatives though; it’s just that the ordinary in Africa is like the ordinary everywhere, and hence not so much worth mentioning or writing about. Read more…


It’s Time for Africa

July 16th, 2010

With the South African World Cup now over, there’s less football/soccer on TV but there’s certainly no less in the streets. Football is everywhere, and it’s unlike the sport I know in Canada. Here, kids play it on the dirt roads and in the dusty fields. They play it with whatever “ball” they can find, usually a collection of plastic bags tied together with string. Goal posts are shoes or bottles or sticks or plastic jugs. It’s quite fitting that an African country finally got the chance to host the tournament since it’s obviously a much-loved, much-played sport here. And maybe it’s because I’m not in South Africa but nearby, it seems like the tournament is really about the whole of Africa Read more…


Portraits: Selected Stories from Ng’ombe

July 16th, 2010

Mary and I have had the opportunity to interview many of the guardians of SEED-sponsored students. As everyone has been very open and honest with their answers, the interviews have been a very interesting look at the daily lives of people here in Ng’ombe. Here are a few excerpts from some of the interviews: Read more…


Development Problems in Zambia, Africa

July 14th, 2010

I’ve finished reading a book by economist Jeffrey Sachs called The End of Poverty. The book was entirely interesting and informative, but one part I found most interesting was his description of various economic factors that can contribute to a thriving or failing economy. He’s careful to point out that one of these factors alone does not necessarily determine the rise or fall, but a combination certainly does. Read more…


The Geography of Lawns

July 14th, 2010

In ancient times, all available land would have been used for agriculture, to grow food to sell or eat, and then in the Middle Ages, lawns looked like pasture fields from the Bible. It wasn’t until Tudor and Elizabethan Times that lawns became a social place for walking and gathering. At this time, lawns were made up of meadow plants. Then in the early 1600s during the Jacobean period, the close-cut English lawn became popular, and in the early 1700s, landscaped lawns were created. Read more…