Leveling the playing field: Using soccer to tackle illiteracy in Haiti

Update: Would you like to sponsor a GOALS literacy learner? Please click here to sponsor a literacy learner. A suggested donation of $45 will provide one week of meals for our literacy class, while $110 will sponsor a student for the entire program, including books, materials and teacher support. Thank you for your support!

Prophet, age 14, shows off the "vowels" ball used in GOALS literacy class. This is the first time Prophet has ever been to school.

GOALS has always believed in the power of soccer to change lives and to inspire young people to achieve more. Now, through a new literacy program, we’re pushing the love of the game further than ever.

Education is at the core of GOALS’ soccer programs, through our health seminars, weekly classes, school tuition support, and directly on the field with educational soccer games. But despite the impact that all of these critical programs make, the fact remains that many Haitian children are unable to attend school. School fees are costly, and therefore unaffordable for poorer families in rural areas.

Parents must often choose between feeding their children or sending them to school.

According to UNICEF, 50% of children enroll in primary school, and just 19.5% enroll in secondary school. Only 52.9% of adults in Haiti are literate. The negative effects of low education are long-term. The World Literacy Foundation says that “higher literacy levels enable people to overcome the barriers of poverty and disease.” Children born to literate mothers have higher survival rates, and not surprisingly, literate adults earn more than those who cannot read and write.

By using soccer as a platform for development, GOALS is able to reach children who are left behind by conventional educational systems, offering a second chance for children who live in underserved communities. That’s why we’re incorporating literacy training into our existing sports and education programs.

For these boys and girls, becoming literate will simply be the first step toward achieving their full potential. After holding several community-wide meetings, we’ve enrolled 25 students into our first literacy course. Most of these children haven’t attended school for several years or more, and few of them have literate parents.

Guerlancie

Guerlancie, for example, is only 11 years old, but has already fallen well behind her peers. After both her parents died, she went to live with her elderly grandmother who can’t afford school fees. Guerlancie can write her name and form a few letters, but she can’t quite form them into words. Even though she can’t yet write, Guerlancie is remarkably well spoken. When asked about her literacy skills, she replied:
"I want to be able to communicate with people. You should be able to read and write so that you can speak up at meetings and be a part of society. It’s good for the village if people can read and write. It will be good for the future of my village."

Our goal is to give Guerlancie and every single child in her community another chance.

Through literacy, GOALS will be able to level the playing field, giving these boys and girls their first opportunities to improve their own lives and, like Guerlancie says, “to be a part of society.”

Help kids in Haiti learn to read and write with GOALS! 
A suggested donation of $45 will provide one week of meals for our literacy learners, while $110 will sponsor a student for the entire program, including books, materials and teacher support.

GOALS coaches using soccer for social impact

In January, GOALS welcomed Coaches Across Continents (CAC) to Leogane. This is the second year of our 3-year partnership with CAC, and it’s only getting better! It was a busy week, with lots of surprises (and dancing!) on the field. The CAC trainers are experts and innovators in the field of sport-for-development (as well as fellow Beyond Sport award winners!), and we’re thrilled to be able to partner with them.

GOALS and CAC share one key philosophy: We believe that every single child can benefit from playing soccer, whether they are kicking a ball for the very first time or they’re a team captain who scores in every match. Every day at GOALS, hundreds of kids are eating better, learning to take care of their health and developing confidence and leadership skills that will last a lifetime, regardless of their talent on the field. At GOALS and with CAC, every child can live stronger, healthier, and smarter through the love of the game.

The CAC program teaches coaches how to use soccer to address issues relevant to the unique local cultural settings in which they work. At GOALS, we focused on gender equality, conflict resolution, sexual health, and other life skills such as critical thinking and problem solving. All of these lessons are packaged in a way that lead coaches to develop confidence in their personal coaching style while developing tactics and strategies for winning on the field and in life.

Each morning, the CAC trainers helped our coaches remember what it’s like to be a kid. At each four-hour training session they were required to work hard and play hard, and they stepped up to meet the challenge – especially when it came to playing hard! There was lots of dancing, a few karate moves, and plenty of laughter. But most importantly, the CAC team taught our coaches a serious lesson with every single football game.

This year, we were proud to have an increased number of women participating. Currently, 4 out of GOALS’ 13 local staff members are women (compared to just 1 out of 14 last year!). Empowering our staff is a critical part of the GOALS model, as it’s our local coaches who are supporting and developing our hundreds of young players every single day.

Want to see more? Head on over to the GOALS Facebook page for more pictures, and check out the Coaches Across Continents Facebook page and Coach Meg's blog post about her time with GOALS for even more behind-the-scenes stories from our adventures!

Be sure to like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter for more updates and photos from our sport-for-development programs on the soccer fields of Leogane, Haiti.

Becoming a Champion: The story of Esteri Joseph

For nearly two years, our Facebook icon has been the grinning face of a skinny little girl from the rural village of Destra, proudly clutching her first ever pair of cleats. This is her story of becoming a GOALS champion...

2010: In the beginning
When GOALS was just beginning in Leogane, Esteri was a shy little girl, underweight but with a big smile. When GOALS came to her remote seaside village in 2010, she had never played football before, and, by all accounts, she wasn’t very good! But GOALS could always count on her love for the game, her kindness, patience and determination. Amongst all the kids, she stood out for her big dreams to become a football player, which motivated her to work hard and come to practice every day. She grew up with GOALS and with football in her life and day after day, she slowly became stronger, healthier, and a better football player.

Before too long, Esteri became one of the best players on her team. She came to soccer practice every day, and participated in all of GOALS’ activities. Her belief in herself and the GOALS program soon paid off.

Esteri in 2010. Scroll down to see what Esteri looks like today!

2014: Four years later
Four years later, Esteri is no longer training with GOALS. Why? Recently, while leading her under-12 girls’ team to a second place victory in a national tournament, Esteri was scouted and recruited by the Haitian Football Federation to represent Leogane at their training camp and school in Port-au-Prince. Along with six other GOALS girls, Esteri now receives a free education and a chance to play football with the national youth girls team, as long as she maintains her commitment to both education and football, and works hard on the field and in the classroom.

In a country where 80% of the population never attends high school, Esteri is on track to achieve an incredible dream. We’re proud of Esteri’s continued success, and even prouder when the Haitian Football Federation directors call us to let us know how well the GOALS girls are doing in their program!

Esteri proves that hard work and a commitment to education can bring success through football. But more than that, she is at the forefront of a growing movement of girls and women’s participation, achievement and empowerment through sports.

Esteri now serves as a role model for other boys and girls both in her village and across the country, bringing hope to the future of girls’ football and hope for the future of her village.

Esteri, on the right, shows off the trophy her team won in a national youth tournament in 2013.

Congratulations, little GOALS champion!

This post was written by GOALS coordinator Emilio Jean Paul and translated into English. 

Be sure to like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter for more updates and photos from our sport-for-development programs on the soccer fields of Leogane, Haiti.

The top 10 moments of GOALS' year

Picking just ten highlights for this list was challenging. After all, every single day, hundreds of kids become a little healthier, stronger, and more confident through GOALS' soccer, nutrition and education programs which change lives in Haiti through soccer every day. A few things that just narrowly missed making the top ten? Two new composting projects, Joelle's week of bookmaking, Connor's karate class and bringing soccer and health lessons to two orphanages. 2013 may have been our best year yet, but it's nothing compared to what we anticipate achieving in 2014!

Let's get to it. Here's our top ten favorite moments of 2013:

10. Hiring two new women!

We started the year with one awesome female coach, and we’re so proud to be ending the year with not one, not two, but THREE fantastic female coaches and role models for our youth. Welcome, coaches Dina and Mildred!

 

9. Winning this GIANT trophy

Of course, we love trophies, but this trophy also won a spot for 7 of our girls to attend the national youth football training academy. Along with the chance to play football for the national team, these girls now receive a free education through the academy.

 

In partnership with a local medical clinic and visiting doctors, 165 girls met privately with nurses to learn about their health, 325 people received medical care through our mobile medical clinics, hundreds of community members were screened for chronic diseases, and 400 kids received deworming medication!

 

7. Alumni beach clean-ups

One of our best measures of success is when our programs continue to grow completely organically. GOALS alumni Vicky has formed his own local soccer team, and we loved seeing him and his team lead community beach clean-up days this year!

 

6. Giving toothbrushes to these two

Our traveling outreach program brought GOALS' unique and fun approach to health, hygiene, and community empowerment to four remote sites this year, including the island of Ile Gonave, where these two girls (and hundreds more!) received health lessons, a day of sports activities designed to empower young women, and of course, toothbrushes!

 

5. This superstar goalie

Meet Olsen, one of our star scholarship students. At the end of the school year, Olsen's school director called to congratulate GOALS. Why? Upon receiving his school's national exam scores, Olsen scored second highest in the entire school. Now that's something to be proud of.

 

4. Football for Hope + Beyond Sport + Beyond Soccer

Winning the 2012 Beyond Sport Best New Project Award and joining the streetfootballworld network opened up new doors for GOALS in 2013, including the chance to represent our work on the international stage alongside thousands of athletes and visionaries at Beyond Sport, Beyond Soccer and the Football for Hope Exchange Program. We're proud to be recognized as one of the leading sport-for-development organizations in the world and we're humbled to have the opportunity to learn from other innovators in the field.

 

3. Coach training with Coaches Across Continents

Coaches Across Continents is an award-winning program that's used all around the world to teach lifeskills, health lessons, gender empowerment and conflict resolution on the pitch. Along with these important lessons, it also teaches some fancy footwork skills and it even taught us a "Gangnam Style" game (remember Gangnam Style?) We're thrilled that the GOALS Haiti / Coaches Across Continents love-fest, er, fantastic partnership, will continue on in 2014 and grow to reach even beyond our coaches and programs in Leogane. Stay tuned!

 

2. Our first mixed gender match!

Mixed gender teams and matches are a great way to empower young women through sport, proving to both players and onlookers alike that girls can do anything! In 2013, we added our second mixed-gender team and held our first mixed gender match in front of hundreds of parents and fans. They loved it! We're looking forward to adding our third mixed-gender team in 2014, and holding plenty more mixed matches!

 

1. Announcing plans to construct a GOALS community center!

If there was one blog post we could wait to hit ”publish” on this year, it was announcing our plans to construct a new community center in the rural village of Destra. Shaping this dream was a 2013 highlight, but we've yet to reach our fundraising goal to make it a reality in 2014. Please consider contributing to this step on the path to recovery for one rural village in Haiti. Your gift will help transform the village of Destra and provide a huge boost for the local economy, and  every dollar donated makes a big difference.

Click here to make a donation.

Thank you for your support and for believing in a better future for Haiti with GOALS. Be sure to follow us on Twitter and like us on Facebook for more updates directly from the field in Haiti. Happy new year!

Special announcement! GOALS welcomes Jolinda Hackett as new Executive Director

Jolinda, Kona and Board President Ken Sommers

Dear friends,
On behalf of the Board of Directors, I am thrilled to announce that Jolinda Hackett will officially join GOALS as Executive Director starting January 1st.

Jolinda has been making a difference on the ground in Haiti for over three years now. Since joining GOALS in January 2012, she has proven to be an exceptional asset. She is fluent in Haitian Creole, extraordinarily impactful, and takes on oversized challenges with a smile. Not only has she weathered hurricanes with us (two, in fact!), but she worked alongside our coaches and players to lead clean-up efforts afterwards as well. (Read more in our 2013 Annual Report here).

As a program manager and then Country Director, Jolinda has been responsible for many of our proudest moments, including winning the Beyond Sport award in London, partnering with Coaches Across Continents for coach training and the Klinik Lasante for health services, and sending some of our most talented girls to the national youth football training academy.

Mixed-gender teams and matches are one way Jolinda has increased GOALS' capacity to empower young women through sport.

I can promise there will be many more exciting announcements to come in the upcoming months thanks to Jolinda's ongoing hard work to deepen our impact. Keep an eye out for news on a new GOALS community education center and an expanded rural outreach program.

As I wrote earlier this year, Jolinda has elevated our programs to a higher level. When I started GOALS in 2010, it was always my dream for the programs to be permanent and sustainable in Haiti,  whether or not I was physically present. Jolinda has been managing all in-country operations since April of this year, and her results speak for themselves.We're incredibly lucky to have her on board, and I am confident that with her leadership, GOALS will continue to provide opportunities for thousands of kids and their families.

While I'll be stepping down as Executive Director, I will continue to serve GOALS as a member of the Board of Directors, and I'm looking forward to working with Jolinda as we take  GOALS to the next level. To learn more about what else I personally have planned coming up, click here.

Please join me in officially congratulating Jolinda and welcoming her to the helm of Team GOALS!

Sincerely,
Kona Shen

Be sure to like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter for more updates and photos from our sport-for-development programs on the soccer fields of Leogane, Haiti.

Help make our holiday dreams come true

In 2010, GOALS began with some very big dreams.
We dreamed that kids who roamed their village barefoot and hungry would have shoes, food and clean water. We dreamed that through access to health information and increased confidence, girls would be able to finish school without getting pregnant. We dreamed that a generation of youth would dream bigger and achieve more through the power of football.

Over the past three years, communities, soccer coaches and youth leaders in Haiti have come together with the support of soccer fans and donors from around the world to continue to achieve these dreams. Our response to these great achievements? Dream even bigger.

Today, we’re proud to announce GOALS’ biggest dream yet.

Coaches, parents, and kids have always asked us for a safe place for their community. A place where kids can study and learn. A place to worship and a place to shelter down during hurricanes, storm surges and flash flooding. A place where doctors can visit patients and a place where teen girls can learn about their health.

After months of planning, that dream is close to being possible in Destra, and we need you to help make it a reality.

In partnership with the Building Goodness Foundation, GOALS will break ground on a new community education center in the rural village of Destra in early 2014.

Destra is particularly remote. With no cars in the village, the nearest paved road is a 30-minute walk. Aside from a small vendor or two, there is no commerce and no jobs, no schools and no churches. Not only will the community education center provide a safe space for GOALS programs and community activities, it will also bring jobs, commerce, and new opportunities to Destra.

Thanks to commitments from GOALS’ Board of Directors, 100% of your donation always goes directly to support our sport, education and health programs in Haiti. Every dollar that you donate will make a huge difference and help make this dream become a reality.

A busy week at GOALS

It seems like every week is always busy at GOALS, but that’s just because our teams are trying to accomplish so many things! This week was no exception. We started off with a day-long outreach program at an orphanage in the neighboring city of Grand Goave.

Coach Emilio and Nadege led a group of about 30 kids in a day of GOALS soccer and education programming, including a community clean-up and recycling lesson, talent show (you can still be a superstar even if you don't play soccer!), hygiene lesson and handwashing practice, and a special adaptation of a Coaches Across Continents game to lead a discussion about childrens' rights and protection, Adebayor for Child Protection.

Trash doesn't belong on our soccer field!

The orphanage staff want to keep offering soccer activities to their kids, so we’ve invited them to a special coach training program and challenged them to a match! We’ve got lots more pics from our orphanage outreach day on our Facebook page here, and you can also read more about GOALS' orphanage outreach on their blog here.

But that was just the beginning of the fun this week! Last month, our sites all had a competition to see who could have the most participants at each of their activities – soccer, education and community service – for the whole month. The prize? Movie day!

This week, Destra won the chance to watch a fun kids’ movie called “L Balon d’Or/The Golden Ball” about a brave little boy from rural Africa who works hard, trains hard, believes in himself, and finds success in life through soccer. 

The kids loved having the opportunity to watch a movie, and even several parents stopped by to see what all the excitement was about. We had a great time!

And, just in case you didn’t already love this update enough, here’s a photo of a future GOALS champion who stopped by to see what we were up to in Destra:

Click here to make a donation. Thank you!

Be sure to like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter for more updates and photos from our sport-for-development programs on the soccer fields of Leogane, Haiti.

Meet Gregolie and Jean Paul

Gregolie

Our 28 Dream Team scholarship kids are back to school! They go to school each morning, attend GOALS’ activities in the afternoon, and are busy planning their first community service group project. It's a lot of responsibility!

Please meet Gregolie Pierre and Jean Paul Vandam, both 18 years old. Gregolie has been on the GOALS Dream Team for three years, and Jean Paul earned a scholarship for the first time this year. It’s very difficult for GOALS staff to choose which among the dozens of applicants will receive a scholarship, but after reading this interview with Gregolie and Jean Paul, you’ll see why these two stand out.

What kind of activities do you do with GOALS? How long have you been participating?
Gregolie: I do a lot with GOALS. We talk about health, we organize and do special activities, we garden, and obviously we play soccer. I have been participating since 2010, so more than 3 years now.
Jean Paul: GOALS offers me a lot to do. I play soccer, participate in community service activities and benefit from English classes. (Note: In fact, one of the reasons Jean Paul earned a scholarship was that he always made a point to sit in the very front row in all of GOALS’ English classes last year!)

What do you like the best about GOALS’ activities?
Gregolie: I like GOALS’ programs because it is not only about sport but also socio-cultural activities. You have the chance to know more about English thanks to our weekly English course, or photography, it is also about education since you can get a scholarship according to your attendance rates and motivation. And also, we meet players and soccer teams from other areas, and we get to meet new faces!
Jean Paul: What I like the most is playing soccer! I am a big fan of that sport and have played it for a long time; since I was a small kid.

How do you imagine your life in a couple years? What kind of job would you like doing?
Gregolie: When I think about my future, I would like to be a lawyer or a journalist after I finish school. And also I would love to be a coach myself – a coach for girls!
Jean Paul: Hopefully everything will be fine, I wish I still could play soccer and also be an agriculture specialist.

What do you like the least about GOALS activities?
Gregolie: I don’t like being hurt sometimes during practice. And also I don’t like losing a match, I want to be a champion and win all the time!

How has participating in sports improved your life?
Gregolie: I love sports! It develops my muscles and makes me be healthier.
Jean Paul: Sport always is a benefit for everyone who takes the time for it. It allows me to grow better, to keep my body healthier and get less sick.

Congratulations to Gregolie  and Jean Paul for earning a scholarship this year with GOALS! Good luck at school and on the field!

If you’d like to help make sure that Gregolie, Jean Paul and other promising young students are able to complete their education, consider making a donation.

  • $350 supports a student with tuition, books and uniforms for a year
  • $100 provides educational materials for an entire soccer team
  • $65 buys a bicycle so students living in rural areas can get to school
  • $25 feeds an entire soccer team for a week

Click here to make a donation. Thank you!

Learn more about why GOALS supports education and meet more of our outstanding student athletes in this video from Jovan.

A video detailing the reason for the GOALS 2012 Winter Ed Campaign and the plan of action. For further information about the campaign and to donate check out http://www.crowdrise.com/goalsedfund2013 To learn more about GOALS Haiti visit www.GoalsHaiti.org To meet our Dream Team Members Check out www.nationaldreamteam.wordpress.com For a more in-depth look at some of the challenges our kids face check out our next video at http://vimeo.com/54660218 Our final link is a message from the founder and director of GOALS detailing exactly what the Winter Ed campaign will allow us to provde the communities we serve http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=96_kjMBoeEI *The music in the video is Timoun Yo Graciously provided by a great Haitian Musician Belo, if you enjoyed the music it and more can be found at http://www.amazon.com/Référence-Explicit/dp/B001EBW24G/ref=ntt_mus_dp_dpt_1

Be sure to like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter for more updates and photos from our sport-for-development programs on the soccer fields of Leogane, Haiti.

GOALS' scholarship students go back to school

It’s back to school time here in Leogane!This year marks our biggest group of scholarship recipients yet, thanks to support from the Child Survival Fund, and volunteer Jovan Julien. 28 brilliant minds and 28 promises to study and work hard to succeed – skills they’ve already learned on the soccer field.

Each one of our scholarship students has proven themselves to be a strong young leader in their community, attending GOALS’ soccer, community service and education classes nearly every single day. Many of them have served as team captains or volunteered at GOALS special events and all of them are dedicated to making their communities a better place to live. This year, some of our scholarship students are going back to school for the first time in three years.

Eighteen year old Andre, for example, has fallen behind his peers in school, but earned a scholarship based on his extraordinary attendance at GOALS English classes, where he often stays late to ask for extra help. He says “I feel bad every time I see my classmates.  They ask me why they don’t see me at school anymore. It breaks my heart and I feel ashamed to tell them the problem.”

Others, like Raymond, attend school when they can, but can’t afford to attend full time. “Sometimes, the school director sends me back home because I have no money to pay for it. I can be a month without going to school because of the lack of money.”  Parents such as Raymond’s often choose between paying for food or paying for school.

With nearly all of our soccer players living in similar poverty, choosing the best of the best to receive a scholarship is a difficult task, and students know that they need to work hard to show that they deserve their scholarship.  Being a part of the Dream Team is not only a great opportunity for these kids, but also a great responsibility to maintain their eligibility.

Last week, GOALS staff met with our new group of scholarship students, the Dream Team class of 2013-2014.

At their meeting, the kids took time to hold elections for Dream Team President and Vice-president. We’re proud to share that Elcie, a long-term GOALS participant is this year's president. Obviously our efforts at building leadership and empowering young women have trickled down to this incredible group of young people!

A GOALS scholarship includes tuition, books, uniforms, and a promise to study hard and give back to the program.

At the meeting, the kids also received their school books, another big responsibility. Many kids in Haiti have to share their books or don’t have the opportunity to use school books at all.

These kids know that with a GOALS Dream Team scholarship, they’ll be able to go further and achieve more – in school, in soccer, and in life.

So here they are! Please meet the 2013-2014 GOALS Dream Team, wearing their new shirts, taking it very seriously and proudly posing. GOALS wishes you all good luck for upcoming the school year!

If you’d like to help make sure that these promising young students are able to complete their education, consider making a donation.

  • $350 supports a student with tuition, books and uniforms for a year
  • $100 provides educational materials for an entire soccer team
  • $65 buys a bicycle so students living in rural areas can get to school
  • $25 feeds an entire soccer team for a week

Click here to make a donation. Learn more about why GOALS supports education and meet some of our outstanding student athletes in this video from Jovan.

A video detailing the reason for the GOALS 2012 Winter Ed Campaign and the plan of action. For further information about the campaign and to donate check out http://www.crowdrise.com/goalsedfund2013 To learn more about GOALS Haiti visit www.GoalsHaiti.org To meet our Dream Team Members Check out www.nationaldreamteam.wordpress.com For a more in-depth look at some of the challenges our kids face check out our next video at http://vimeo.com/54660218 Our final link is a message from the founder and director of GOALS detailing exactly what the Winter Ed campaign will allow us to provde the communities we serve http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=96_kjMBoeEI *The music in the video is Timoun Yo Graciously provided by a great Haitian Musician Belo, if you enjoyed the music it and more can be found at http://www.amazon.com/Référence-Explicit/dp/B001EBW24G/ref=ntt_mus_dp_dpt_1

Be sure to like us on Facebook or follow us on Twitter for more updates and photos from the field.

2013 Annual Report

Every day at our sites in Léogane, Haiti, we have hundreds of happy, healthy kids excelling as leaders on the soccer field, in the classroom, and in their communities. They debate what leadership means to them, their communities’ biggest needs, and the importance of gender equality. They scarf down big, hot plates of food and wear crisp soccer uniforms with an enormous amount of pride.

Haiti is one of the hardest places in the world to grow up. In a country where secondary school enrollment is just 19% and most families eke out a living on just $2USD a day, our players have big dreams of completing school, building careers, and helping others. They want children to have shoes, attend school, get medicine and drink clean water. They want communities to have electricity, roads, and water pumps.

GOALS also has big dreams. We are committed to laying the groundwork for a solid foundation now so that in the future we can help many more children and families throughout Haiti. We push for excellence from our players and staff members every day to be the strongest leaders they can be. This expectation of effort, commitment, and passion apply to every single person on ‘Team GOALS.’

As a result, our participants’ experiences have steadily improved. Thanks to our in-kind donors, our players have the equipment they need. Your support has provided our players with more food, more match time, and more classroom supplies than ever before. New health partnerships mean that we can now offer free consultations, medication, and community screenings to Léogane families. We are fulfilling our mission to improve quality of life now in order to best empower our players to achieve their ambitions.

Together, we moved mountains this past year. GOALS won the Beyond Sport trophy for “Best New Project," grew the Dream Team Scholarship Program, and fought floods during Hurricane Sandy.

All of these accomplishments are thanks to you, our network of team members that stretches around the world. We are incredibly grateful for your support, in all its forms, and are proud that we have been able to deliver you with such significant results. Since 2010, we have had a direct impact on over 6,300 different people in Haiti and we can’t wait to help even more people in the year ahead.

At the heart of what we do is empower children in need to become healthier and happier. In the upcoming year, during our proudest achievements and toughest challenges, this is what will drive us. Our players and coaches have all the potential in the world to make big things happen. I believe in their dreams, and am inspired by the progress we’ve made together. At the end of the day, there is no better feeling than knowing our participants are growing into the strong young leaders their communities need, and are doing so with hard work, full bellies, and big smiles.

On behalf of everyone at GOALS, mèsi mil fwa – a thousand thanks!

Sincerely yours,
Kona Shen
Founder & Director

View the 2013 Annual Report here

GOALS hits the road in Haiti

This blog post is written by our in-country Haitian program coordinators, Jean Kendy and Emilio. Recently, they conducted GOALS programming in two rural areas, bringing soccer, health education and materials to two villages, and inspiring hundreds of girls and boys. Here’s their story in their own words:

LA GONAVE
La Gonave is a small, dry island full of mountains. In terms of development it is late compared to the rest of the country and suffers a lack of infrastructure and water. Equipment and services are mainly nonexistent. Everything is expensive to buy on the island and much more expensive than in Port-au-Prince. Transportation is a big problem. Petite Anse is an isolated village of the island where GOALS spent 3 days.
Petite Anse has 2 small primary schools but no secondary school, no professional school or university. After finishing their primary studies, the kids can go to a secondary school in another village if their parents have the money to pay for it, but most of them don’t go further than primary school. Most of the population lives from fishing and agriculture but it is not enough to fill their needs.
The trip from Leogane to La Gonave took us about 10 hours on the bus and we also took a boat. The trip was really nice and the population welcomed us. We slept at someone’s house there, because there is no hotel. The community prepared everything so we could have a good program. Everything was wonderful we were very satisfied with the results.
A group of young people and adults, who love soccer and would like to work on sustainable development of their village, contacted GOALS in 2012 to ask us to come to La Gonave to provide support in developing soccer activities and other ways to develop the area. Petite Anse is in real need and some of the leaders of this community know GOALS as an organization using soccer to engage kids because some of the Petite Anse kids know some kids from Leogane. We knew this small village for a very long time and that the community is in real need in terms of educational, sport, social, cultural, and economic activities.
We went there to La Gonave to see how the community works and how they deal with daily issues. We organized soccer matches, did some training about sexual health, distributed clothes, toothbrushes and soccer balls, and also met parents in the village so they can understand what we are doing. They really enjoyed the activities and around 75 teenagers(boys and girls) participated but we also saw some parents who came to assist.
We coordinated the activities and the leaders of the village were in charge of motivating the youth and talking to the parents so that they could know what we wanted to do during our 3 days there. All the activities went so well  and the population was enthusiastic. They said that was the first activities they had in the community during school vacations and they said there will probably not be any other program like this.
The community has already called us to ask when we are coming back to play and organize another seminar about sexual health because many young girls get pregnant too early within the community and because there is no other programs like GOALS in this area.
Emilio leads a health lesson in Anse a Veau, thanks to our friends at Sir Richard's
ANSE A VEAU
Emilio has family living in Anse à Veau, and a lot of friends there. Some friends contacted us because the community of this village also likes soccer. As they know GOALS is specialized in soccer activities for youth, they asked us to bring programs to their community. We went there to help the population which is need of basic infrastructures and services. We wanted to see the problems and find out what GOALS could do there to help. We took a truck from Leogane to Miragoane, then spent three more hours in a truck and when we arrived, we took a motorcycle taxi for about an hour to reach Anse à Veau because it is very remote.
During the 3 days we spent in Anse à Veau, we did so much! We met the people and coaches and kids. We organized soccer activities, games and matches and gave them some soccer balls, but also worked on health: we distributed condoms and toothbrushes and also soccer shirts. Around 50 kids attended the activities and also some adults, and some of the Anse à Veau coaches came to help.
We slept in a nice home of one person of the community. There is a lack of infrastructures but they have at least water. Another organization is helping them to treat water by themselves. We would like to go back and visit them again because they really like soccer. The coach was happy that we motivated the girls to play soccer too and he is keeping the team that we started. They called to tell us that the girls team just won their very first match.
Girls in Anse a Veau learn a Coaches Across Continents health game
Everyone loved that GOALS came to visit. The parents said the kids have no other activity in the area so they would like us to come back so GOALS could contribute to the development of the area.

A special thanks to our partner Coaches Across Continents who taught our staff how to use soccer as a tool for teaching health lessons, building gender equality and practicing conflict resolutions, making our rural outreach programs even more effective, and to our friends at One World Futbol for the indestructible balls we distributed, which are perfect for these remote programs.

Like this update? Get more photos from Haiti and updates from the field by following us on Twitter and liking GOALS on Facebook.

New York, You're Invited to HAITI JE T'AIME on September 7th!

We hope you can join us for an exciting collaborative event on September 7th in New York City! The concert is organized by Konbit Mizik to highlight Haitian musicians and benefit Haiti-based organizations, including GOALS Haiti. The event will include videos featuring beneficiaries, including the great work done by our partners at Le JIT Productions!

The Top 5 Things to Know About Our New CauseVox Campaign

  1. An exceptional team of superstar volunteer fundraisers are hard at work on CauseVox to help educate kids in rural Haiti. Our goal is to change kids' lives by increasing access to education and improving quality of existing programs.
     
  2. The need for education in rural Haiti is extremely high. About half of Haiti's youth population - 2 million children - live in rural communities. However, about 94% of non-profit organizations after Haiti's earthquake focused exclusively on urban areas. Our goal is to reach the kids in Haiti who have no access to other non-profit, government or private services so that our limited resources make the biggest possible difference.
     
  3. Only 53% of adults in Haiti are literate, 50% of children enroll in primary school, and just 20% enroll in secondary school.   According to experts, like the World Literacy Foundation, basic education will improve our kids' quality of life now, and for their future families: A child born to a literate mother is 50% more likely to survive past the age of five, and adults who are functionally literate will earn 10-15% higher wages than their non-literate peers.
     
  4. We're on a roll! Since the incredible Jovan Julien founded our Dream Team Scholarship Program in 2010, we have supported 30 young scholars. In 2012, the Child Survival Fund generously began supporting the entire program, allowing us to keep growing. What does this mean for you? Every penny of individual donations can go straight to the kiddos in Haiti most in need.  Specifically, new donations will help us provide transportation assistance, more classroom materials, our first-ever solar lamps to help students do homework at night, and new educators and community learning spaces.
     
  5. By using soccer as a platform for development, GOALS is able to reach children who are left behind by conventional educational systems. Our approach stems directly from feedback from children, their parents, staff, and community leaders. Nearly a third of our players cannot afford to attend school; for these children, GOALS’ programming provides their only opportunity to engage in professionally-led educational activities.

Soccer x Health = an Amazing Month at GOALS!

Kids and families participated in a community-wide clean up to prepare for the tournament

June was a happening month for GOALS! First, we kicked things off with a signature Hand Washing Tournament in the Leogane community of Belloc. Just like at our annual October event for Global Hand Washing Day, the tournament combined health, hygiene and soccer to create fun ways to learn and play. This tournament was generously sponsored by the Latter Glory Church from Paterson, NJ. For pictures of the three-day co-ed tournament, check out our album!

Destra clinic

Next, our team hit the ground running for another mobile clinic in our most rural daily site, Destra. Destra is a fishing village without electricity, running water, paved roads, schools, or clinics. Access to healthcare is extremely low, and we are lucky to have an incredible partnership with the Klinik Lasante Leogane, funded by the Delaney Bay Fund, that allows us to address this community's needs through mobile health clinics, training seminars, supplies, and more. Thanks to the volunteer medical team staffed by InterVol, the clinic treated 157 people! To see more photos of our mobile health clinic at Destra, check out our album.

Nadege's son, "Tonton," agrees - it was a great month!

Last, but not least, InterVol and the Klinik Lasante Leogane created a first-ever three-day first aid training for our staff members and team captains. This unique opportunity was an invaluable investment in our team to increase their impact as community leaders to help even more kids in need.

Stay in touch all summer long!

As always, we love hearing from you! Check out our Facebook page and Twitter feed for fresh updates, new photos, and fun videos on a daily basis.

Thank you for your support!

GOALS is now on Catchafire!

GOALS Haiti is now partnered with Catchafire! Catchafire's mission is to provide talented individuals with meaningful pro bono experiences in order to build capacity for social good organizations. 

Learn how to get involved

GOALS' first Catchafire partnership was a Bookkeeping Project. This project is now closed - a huge thank you to James for volunteering and making this partnership possible!

Our second opportunity is a Salesforce Database Customization project. To learn more, please check out the project details here.

Words to Live By: GOALS' New Staff Credo

Here at GOALS, we like to say that we are not a traditional aid agency. We don't believe in top-down charity, but we do believe that all of our programs should be driven forward by community engagement, strong local leaders, and players' enthusiasm. 

Last month, our Board of Directors met in Leogane to visit our sites, discuss activities, and review our progress to date. One of the results of this meeting was a new Staff Handbook developed by our talented in-country team. The Handbook is an important new resource for our site coordinators to be the strongest leaders they can be, and for the first time, we formalized our Staff Credo, the beliefs that we believe each of our incredible leaders should embody. 

We wanted to share our Credo here with the wider network of Team GOALS, and as always, we hope you'll  stay in touch with us by visiting our Facebook page for photos and news, following us on Twitter @goalshaiti, and dropping us a line at contact@goalshaiti.org!

Our Board visits Destra

The GOALS Staff Credo

  1. I am passionate about GOALS’ mission to engage youth in football to improve their quality of life and develop their leadership.
     
  2. I believe in the “GOALS Principle”: we don’t do handouts, we do exchanges based on merit to create a new, different kind of development that is powered by community engagement, unity, and hard work.
     
  3. I am a role model for kids, parents, and community members and I will represent GOALS and be the strongest leader I can be every day.
     
  4. I develop myself as a community leader, set goals for myself and my community, and work hard to meet these goals.
     
  5. I communicate truthfully and transparently, and I always act with integrity.
     
  6. I protect, help and empower girls and boys equally.
     
  7. I am always on time, responsible, and professional.
     
  8. I am creative and effective, and make the most of whatever resources or materials are available to me.
     
  9. If there is a problem, I know even if it is not my fault, it may be my responsibility.
     
  10. I go above and beyond to excel at my job and be the best I can be. I will always try to strengthen myself, my community, and GOALS so that we can do better!

Highlights from the Field - Karate, Creole & Clinics!

GOALS is always busy, and never more so than when we’re lucky enough to have incredible volunteers visit us in Léogane. Volunteers allow us to take on big projects, reach more children, and maximize our impact to change more lives through soccer. We’re extremely grateful for their contributions here on the ground, and want to highlight some of their recent work:

  • Ben Wiselogle and Melissa Watkinson, who spent a week with us in February, helped tackle a warehouse full of donated equipment as well as launch an intense monitoring and evaluation phase. GOALS is testing all our players on their literacy levels and progress in English class. This feedback will be crucial in determining what we have achieved so far and what we can do better in the upcoming year. Following her trip, Melissa wrote:"...after witnessing the impact that GOALS has on young people and the community, I believe in GOALS' collective ability to engage, empower, strengthen, and educate the Haitian community."
     
  • Connor Ashenbrucker spent two weeks in Léogane leading martial arts workshops, administering evaluations, visiting sites, and helping GOALS with capacity-building projects. The kids loved the karate lessons, and even postponed soccer practice to learn more moves – definitely a first! Connor also led special English lessons for senior staff members – who taught him Creole in return – and did outreach work in the mountains outside of Léogane. See pictures from Connor’s karate workshops here!
     
  • Joelle Julien led an incredible “Mother Tongue” Creole book-making project for our kids in Destra over the course of a busy five days. Dream Team leaders each helped their groups of younger children develop stories, illustrate them by hand, and present them to their peers as skits. These stories – now laminated and bound – will be treasured by our participants for years to come. 
A special girl clinic, with help from the Dream Team

Our Dream Team students, who receive high school scholarships thanks to the Child Survival Fund, have been key in helping these volunteers and leading additional community projects. For International Women’s Day earlier this month, our Dream Team girls helped manage a special after-school health clinic for approximately 100 adolescent girls from Léogane in collaboration with Klinik Lasante Leyogann. For our players who are interested in medicine, taking an active role in leading health outreach is an invaluable way to gain experience in the field as high school students. To see photos of the clinic, check out the album here.

These are just a few of our favorite moments from the past month. Every day has been full of soccer, community service, classes, special projects, and much more. To keep up with our daily updates from the field, don’t forget to visit us on Facebook and Twitter! There you’ll find albums like “Falling Down, but Having Fun” from our Leogane sites, and special opportunities to attend our upcoming event with the Knicks at Madison Square Garden.

As always, thank you for your support, and get in touch anytime by writing us at contact@goalshaiti.org!

GOALS Loves Jolinda! Ode to a #1 Volunteer

Dynamic duo! Jolinda and Emilio doing evaluations at Destra

An important landmark for GOALS passed quietly a couple of weeks ago. Jolinda, who is a full-time in-country volunteer, celebrated her one year “GOALS-iversary.” Jolinda has been a one-of-a-kind addition to our team in Leogane and has made an enormous impact over the past year. She leads on-the-ground activities in Haiti in addition to public outreach efforts, and in a recent staff “visioning session” led by PwC consultants from the UK, she was often cited as one of GOALS’ key assets.

Jolinda is a powerhouse. In the past 6 weeks alone she has:

  • Organized a mobile clinic with United Nations doctors to provide care for over 100 people in Destra
     
  • Created evaluations to measure literacy, progress in English class, and how GOALS has affected players’ self-confidence and well-being

In addition, Jolinda has coordinated volunteer projects, taught her regular English classes, and is now working closely with Klinik Kominotè to organize a special health clinic for adolescent girls on March 7!

Visiting the Citadelle in Cap Haitien!

Highlight's from Jolinda's first year with GOALS! The real timeline is much longer, but here are some of my favorites:

  • January: Jolinda joins GOALS and promptly makes an impact on the ground as Chatuley’s primary English teacher, GOALS’ designated PR guru, and a much-needed extra pair of hands. In addition to all her special projects and responsibilities, she has continued to work closely with Chatuley’s coaches and players, leading English classes there twice weekly.
     
  • April: Jolinda helps mastermind and coordinate GOALS’ second-annual Vin Jwe – Come Play! tournament in Cité Soleil, taking on the particularly challenging task of making sure all 300+ participants get fed. Her PR efforts for the event result in a wave of new attention from the general public and in online magazines.
     
  • July: GOALS is awarded Beyond Sport’s Best New Project Award in London, a grant that Jolinda developed, wrote, and submitted. Jolinda represents GOALS in London and accepts the award on behalf of our team in Haiti, which leads to invaluable partnerships with Coaches Across Continents and PwC.
     
  • August: After GOALS’ communities are battered by Hurricane Isaac, Jolinda serves as a key leader in Leogane, rolling up her sleeves to help clean up family homes in Bossan.
     
  • October: For our third annual Global Hand Washing Day tournament, Jolinda forms a new partnership with the local United Nations mission (Sri Lankan battalion) to promote hygiene and public health through soccer. Later that month, Sri Bat and GOALS team up again as first responders to assist badly flooded communities affected by Hurricane Sandy

In short, GOALS loves Jolinda! She truly is incredible and has elevated our programs in Léogane to a higher level. She has helped magnify our impact, empower our staff, and increase the difference we can make in kids’ lives. On behalf of our staff, our kids, and Team GOALS – mèsi pou gran sevis ou, Jolinda!

Hat Tricks, Juggling, and New Friends

GOALS coaches play a CAC game that teaches children about safe spaces

It’s just one month into 2013, but GOALS is off to a running start! We’ve just spent an incredible two weeks with Coaches Across Continents with our staff in Leogane. Our coordinators and coaches spent mornings in workshops on the Chatuley soccer field, and used afternoons to begin implementing the new activities in their local communities. The partnership, formed under CAC’s “Hat Trick Initiative,” is a component of the winner’s package GOALS was granted in July 2012 for Beyond Sport’s Best New Project Award.

Soccer brings people together and is one of the best ways to tackle tough subjects, develop leadership, and learn life skills. The Coaches Across Continents workshops, led by founder Nick Gates and Harvard soccer players Marie Margolius and Cheta Emba, promoted communication, responsibility, disease prevention, gender equality, and much, much more. 15-20 GOALS coaches participated daily and we also welcomed local Leogane coaches to extend the impact of the workshops beyond GOALS’ sites.

The coaches had an amazing time in the trainings. From learning new skills (“Ronaldo 1! Marta 3!”), to designing their own exercises, to inaugurating CAC’s “Juggle Across Continents” initiative, they had a blast. “De Leogane,” a local professional goalkeeper and one of our very own Bossan coaches, juggled a One World Futbol 585 times on his first try! We know that Team GOALS will be making a BIG contribution to CAC’s goal of reaching 1 million juggles in 2013.

Our coaches contribute to the "Juggling Across Continents" goal of 1 million juggles!

We had high expectations of these seminars, but even so, I was astounded about the changes we saw in our local coaches and coordinators over the course of two weeks. Their confidence, skills and effectiveness grew by leaps and bounds. Coaches Across Continents made a fundamental difference in how our GOALS coaches work with our players and integrate social issues into daily practice.

By the last day, not one of us was ready to let the Coaches Across Continents team go. Our last site visit was to Bossan, where an average 75 children come to the program each day. The site had never looked better: each coach was using CAC exercises to run focused, targeted drills with their teams. Each player was completely engaged: alternately serious, laughing, and pushing themselves to do better.

Moments like these show just how powerful sport can be in the lives of children. Seeing how the players were working together, giving it their all, and flourishing with the strong leadership of their coaches reminded me that having fun and accomplishing big things can go hand-in-hand.

Children at Bossan learn a fun new CAC drill

We are so grateful for our time with Coaches Across Continents. With so much achieved in just two weeks, we’re excited for our next big projects for 2013!

With love from Haiti,
Kona

For more information on Coaches Across Continents, please visit their website. For great photos and videos of their time with us in Haiti, please visit us on our Facebook page and Twitter!

Cheta works with children at Destra

"I Like Chicken!" Special Guest Post from Coaches Across Continents

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The following post was written by Cheta Emba and Marie Magolius, of Coaches Across Continents, about their first week spent here with GOALS Haiti in Leogane, Haiti. Cheta and Marie, along with C.A.C. founder, Nick Gates, are leading a special two-week training for our site coordinators and coaches as a part of their Hat Trick Initiative. GOALS was introduced to CAC through Beyond Sport and we've had a great time using One World Futbol's "virtually indestructible" soccer balls for the seminars!

Check out our Facebook page and Twitter feed for more pictures and news from the field. A big thanks to the CAC team for their post, and for their huge contribution to GOALS' coaches and players!

It’s hard to believe that it has already been a week since the three of us landed here in Leogane, Haiti. Even though just last Saturday we were at home in the US, the sounds of the early morning clatter here at camp and the moto horns blaring on the nearby road seem normal. Our week has been packed with morning sessions with the coaches followed by afternoons playing with the kids at the 4 GOALS Haiti sites.
Every morning here we gather for a brief meeting with 15-20 coaches about the day’s games and what we learned at the session prior. The coaches have really committed to the messages about conflict resolution, gender equity, health and wellness, and skills for life. A lot of it has been an on-field discussion about how GOALS Haiti coaches can make a bigger impact through their roles as mentors and coaches for the kids here in Leogane.
The level of soccer here is competitive. With or without shoes, boys and girls dazzle with their grit and share of flashy moves.
In the first week we’ve taught more than 20 games during which the coaches have learned the difference between coaching soccer and coaching soccer for social impact. The   GOALS coaches play a large role in the kids’ lives, and the games they are learning from Coaches Across Continents are helping to make their influence a hugely positive one. The biggest compliment the CAC team received was passing by the soccer fields and seeing that the GOALS coaches have already chosen on their own to use the games they’ve learned in the morning sessions during their afternoon practices with the kids.
These games do more than just build soccer skill; they teach the kids and coaches life and thinking skills. One coach, Gatuso, told Nick, “You have given me my brain”. Gatuso, along with other coaches, appreciate and enjoy that the games stimulate their problem solving skills, creative and responsible thinking, as well as teach lessons that are much more fun to talk about on the field than in the classroom.
On Friday, the coaches taught the group of Adebayor against HIV games, including Condom Tag, Can You See HIV?, and other games that encourage making smart choices to avoid the virus.
This session had a real impact on the coaches and opened their eyes to the ways in which they can have these types of educational conversations on the field in a fun and safe setting.
Yesterday, we got the chance to sit in on Jolinda’s English class with one of GOALS Haiti girl groups. It was fun being able to ask questions of them and vice versa, singing silly songs, and reviewing past lessons. Our favorite song of all was “I Like Chicken” during which the girls yelled “I LIKE CHICKEN! I LIKE CHICKEN! YES I DO, YES I DO! DO YOU LIKE IT?” over and over again. Don’t be fooled by the lyrics, the tune was super catchy. (See GOALS' videos from the field here!)
In other musical news, the local coaches have added “Barbie Girl” to the long list of nicknames they have for Marie. With Nick and Jolinda’s encouragement they began singing “I’m A Barbie Girl” to Marie during Fridays session. Cheta primarily goes by “Sauce” or “Chantel” while Marie is typically called “Bubbs” or “Rice”….get it? Sauce and Rice?
The accommodations here are very nice, wooden huts, outdoor showers and electricity for parts of the day and Jolinda and Kona are taking good care of us. Except for the spider the size of Nick’s head in Marie and Cheta’s bunk house last night, everything is clean and very pleasant here at camp. The devastation and poverty in Haiti is heartbreaking of course, but the country itself is beautiful, the kids and coaches are awesome, and Nick’s immature jokes and fun games are keeping them all entertained and learning. We will be very sad to leave this place and these people in a week’s time. See you back in the states then!