Creative Learning Project for Children and Youth with Disabilities by Families and Communities 2020-2021

The Khwan Chumchon Foundation launched a project to promote learning and provide opportunities for children, youth with disabilities, and their families to gain greater access to learning and education. This initiative empowered volunteer teachers, who come from diverse professions in the community, including teachers, nurses, and subdistrict health promotion hospital staff, to screen, refer, and support the learning of children and youth with disabilities in their communities. A total of 300 children, youth, and families in Khu Mueang District, Buriram Province, and Rattanaburi District, Surin Province, and over 300 community volunteer teachers, have benefited from this initiative.

Thank you to the Educational Equality Promotion Fund. 

Housing and Educational Institution Renovation Project 2022-2023

Burma Children Medical Fund supports the renovation of three houses for children and youth with disabilities and the improvement of toilets for the Special Education Center in Ku Muang District. The project will benefit 30 people  during 2022-2023. 

Home Improvement and Community Transformation Project 2014-2018

The Community Home Improvement Project aims to provide people with disabilities with homes that are suitable for their lives in the community, emphasizing safety, reducing the burden on caregivers, and enabling people with disabilities to regain their physical abilities while living in renovated homes. Most people with disabilities who have had their homes adjusted are low-income. We worked with community hospitals, subdistrict health promotion hospitals, subdistrict administrative organizations, community volunteers, community technicians, the Faculty of Medicine, the Faculty of Pharmacy, MSU, UDC, and Mahasarakham University between 2014 and 2017. 

Thank you to the Australian Embassy and the Sawasdee Foundation.

Youth Can Do Project 2016-2020

The Community Home Improvement Project aims to provide people with disabilities with homes that are suitable for their lives in the community, emphasizing safety, reducing the burden on caregivers, and enabling people with disabilities to regain their physical abilities while living in renovated homes. Most people with disabilities who have had their homes adjusted are low-income. We worked with community hospitals, subdistrict health promotion hospitals, subdistrict administrative organizations, community volunteers, community technicians, the Faculty of Medicine, the Faculty of Pharmacy, MSU, UDC, and Mahasarakham University between 2014 and 2017. 

Thank you to the Australian Embassy and the Sawasdee Foundation.

Reflections from the project