Where every child's voice rises with the morning sun and finds its way home.
A no-fee public primary in Bodibe Village, walking beside 425 learners aged six to thirteen — with patient teachers, real books, and a wide North West sky.
A no-fee public primary in Bodibe Village, walking beside 425 learners aged six to thirteen — with patient teachers, real books, and a wide North West sky.
Grade 3 storytime in Setswana and English, the way our learners' grandparents read to them at home — only with thirty new friends listening.
Friday afternoon rehearsals in the school hall — three-part harmony from Grade 4 voices, accompanied by the marimba club and a lot of laughter.
Inter-house athletics on the township's red-clay field. No tartan track, but plenty of finishers — and the loudest grandmothers in Ngaka Modiri Molemo District.
Heritage Day at Makgwe means seshweshwe dresses, makarapa hats, izibongo praise poetry — and parents arriving early to claim a chair.
Once a term we leave the classroom — for the Mafikeng Museum, the local clinic, a working dairy, or simply the koppie at the back of Bodibe.
Fifteen educators for 425 learners. The ratio asks a lot, and our teachers give it — staying after the bell, knowing every name, knocking on doors when a child goes quiet.
Our library is one converted classroom and a few thousand donated books — but it is the quietest, busiest room on campus, and most learners have a favourite chair.