Pluralistic community
Renowned curriculum
Merit-based admissions
Endless opportunities
Why Donate?
Financial support from our donors gives exceptional students a world-class education, whatever their background. But transforming the life of one child and their family is just the start. Our first alumni have already graduated from top universities and are putting their talents, ethics and experience to work for communities around the world.
By supporting the Aga Khan Academies, you become part of something bigger than a school. Sharing the values of its parent institution, the AKDN, the Academies give opportunities to the less fortunate, regardless of their faith or origin. You will be helping to:
- Catalyse human-centred sustainable development across countries, supporting nations in building a resilient civil society.
- Raise children to be ethical and educated leaders with local roots and an international outlook.
- Create employment – with x staff, mainly local, currently working at four academies.
- Train teachers and school leaders to provide the best possible learning experiences for children in regions around each school. So far x participants have completed professional Development Centre courses.
Through the Annual Scholarship Fund, your donation will change the life of a child – and eventually, their community.
Over the coming decades, a network of Academies will open across three continents, bringing an AKA education to 14,000 children at a time and training hundreds more teachers. Please join this transformational project and make a real difference to society.
Many children across Africa and Asia struggle to finance an education that would enable them to achieve their full potential. But in the last few years, our donors have allowed numerous children to access a top education and a residential experience which has given them opportunities they could never have expected.
Maxwin Ojwang is one such student. Maxwin was one of 82 students in his class at Maweni Primary School on the North Coast near Kongowea market, Mombasa. His father had recently lost his job and his teachers feared that he would drop out of school. He lived with his brothers in two rooms in part of a house shared by several families in the Kongowea slum. He was amongst the first eight girls and boys selected in 2009 under the Talent Identification Programme, funded by donations. Six and a half years later at his graduation ceremony, he received the Aga Khan Academy Award of Excellence. He earned a full Mastercard Scholarship to study engineering at the University of Toronto and has since graduated. He is committed to returning to Kenya to help bring improvements to his home community and country.
Maxwin’s Senior School principal says of him: “Coming from modest means and part of our Talent Identification Programme, Maxwin’s humble and unassuming style makes him approachable and an inspiration to all, making us believe that one can overcome life’s obstacles. In many ways, this young man has been the maker of his own destiny. A dedicated researcher and scientist, this student completed his extended essay in world studies, looking at the relationship between agricultural productivity and household income in his local community.”
To donate, please visit the “donate now” section to learn how you can donate depending on your country of residence.
If you have any questions or need any help with your donation, please contact us @ (email address)