Loden Scholarship Scheme PDF Print E-mail
The Gift of Knowledge is the best gift - Buddha
 Seeking Sponsors
Tshering Dema
Mongar Primary School
Age 8, Grade II


Her parents are separated and she currently lives with her mother, grandmother and two siblings. Although her mother is the only working member in the family, she does not have a full time job. Tshering risk being taken out of school if the financial plight worsens. You can help us keep in school with Nu.6000 (approx $150) per year.
Kinley
Kinley Phuntsho

Gyalposhing School
Age13, Grade VII

Kinley has four brothers. His mother died when he was young and his father is a retired soldier. After his mother's death, the family's hopes were placed on the eldest child, his sister, Leki, who suddenly died due to aplastic anaemia, while she was studying in India. Loden financed part of her treatment. Kinley and his brothers are under enormous financial strain to continue education.



































 Some Loden Scholars
Sabita 
Sabita Das
Lungtenphu School



Sabita is ethnically Nepali Bhutanese and her father works in the National Library. A studious girl, Sabita's education is supported by Alan Masson.

Phurba
Phurba W., Bhutan
Wangdicholing School


Phurba's father is epileptic and mother illiterate. He has two siblings and lives in Bumthang. Phurba's education is supported by Susan Bowditch.

Tenzin Pelmo
Tenzin Pelmo
Jakar School


Tenzin's father is a school cook. She has four sisters and is Loden's first beneficiary. Tenzin was supported by Robert Miles for five years.
Child sponsorship was the first project of the Loden Foundation. Loden started as a programme to link potential sponsors with poor children in the Himalayas. Hundreds of village students in the Himalayan countries do not go to school or abandon it prematurely because their families cannot afford a school uniform or few books. Even if they finish primary and secondary schooling, many promising students cannot pursue higher education due to lack of fund or information on where to seek funding. Such incentives as scholarships and prizes, which encourage innovation and research, are very few indeed and not generally known.
A Bhutanese woman Sketch
The Loden Foundation was one of the first organizations to support children at school in Bhutan by providing costs for uniforms, stationeries, sports gear, etc. Although school education in Bhutan is state financed, such extra costs can be often too heavy a burden for rural families whose livelihoods are based on subsistence farming. Since Loden's initiative in 2000, many other organizations have actively started child sponsorship programmes. Thus, Loden is now involved more in other projects but we still find a sponsor for a child or a child beneficiary for a sponsor when people approach us.

Given differing levels of need amongst students, we have, under the advice of school masters, set the amount of annual support at Nu.6000 for primary students and Nu.8000 for secondary school students. We also channel funds from sponsors for students in higher education but the amount can vary according to the needs. 

Our work is two-fold:

1.     We find either a sponsor or a child as requested,
2.     We channel and administer the funds efficiently.

Loden offers some sponsorship from our general funds but most of our students are funded by individual sponsors. We encourage the sponsors and children to build a personal bond, under our supervision, and to write to each other to understand the direct impact of the support.


 
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P.O. Box: 131 |::| Telefax: +975 2 337389 |::| Thimphu: Bhutan
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