Good People Doing Good Things — Nelly Cheboi

CNN has announced their 2022 Hero of the Year, and I think she is well-deserving of both the CNN award and being given space on Filosofa’s ‘good people’ series.

Nelly Cheboi quit a lucrative software engineering job in Chicago to create computer labs for Kenyan schoolchildren in 2019 and in just three short years has done so much for children in Kenya that she was chosen by online voters as this years Hero!  Per CNN …

Nelly Cheboi grew up in poverty in Mogotio, a rural township in Kenya. “I know the pain of poverty,” said Cheboi, 29. “I never forgot what it was like with my stomach churning because of hunger at night.”

A hard-working student, Cheboi received a full scholarship to Augustana College in Illinois in 2012. She began her studies there with almost no experience with computers, handwriting papers and struggling to transcribe them onto a laptop.

Everything changed in her junior year, though, when Cheboi took a programming course required for her mathematics major.

“When I discovered computer science, I just fell in love with it. I knew that this is something that I wanted to do as my career, and also bring it to my community,” she told CNN.

Many basic computer skills were still a steep learning curve, however. Cheboi remembers having to practice touch-typing for six months before she could pass a coding interview. Touch-typing is a skill that is now a core part of the TechLit curriculum.

“I feel so accomplished seeing kids that are 7 years old touch-typing, knowing that I just learned how to touch-type less than five years ago,” she said.

Once she had begun working in the software industry, Cheboi soon realized the extent of which computers were being thrown away as companies upgraded their technology infrastructure.

“We have kids here (in Kenya) — myself included, back in the day — who don’t even know what a computer is,” she said.

So, in 2018, she began transporting donated computers back to Kenya — in her personal luggage, handling customs fees and taxes herself.

“At one point, I was bringing 44 computers, and I paid more for the luggage than I did for the air ticket,” she said.

A year later, she co-founded TechLit Africa with a fellow software engineer after both quit their jobs. The nonprofit accepts computer donations from companies, universities and individuals.

The hardware is wiped and refurbished before it’s shipped to Kenya. There, it’s distributed to partner schools in rural communities, where students ages 4 to 12 receive daily classes and frequent opportunities to learn from professionals, gaining skills that will help improve their education and better prepare them for future jobs.

“We have people who own a specific skill coming in and are just inspiring the kids (with) music production, video production, coding, personal branding,” Cheboi said. “They can go from doing a remote class with NASA on education to music production.”

The organization currently serves 10 schools; within the next year, Cheboi hopes to be partnered with 100 more.

“My hope is that when the first TechLit kids graduate high school, they’re able to get a job online because they will know how to code, they will know how to do graphic design, they will know how to do marketing,” Cheboi said. “The world is your oyster when you are educated. By bringing the resources, by bringing these skills, we are opening up the world to them.”

As a recipient of the CNN Award, Cheboi will receive $100,000 to expand her work. She and the other top 10 CNN Heroes honored at Sunday’s gala all receive a $10,000 cash award and, for the first time, additional grants, organizational training and support from The Elevate Prize Foundation through a new collaboration with CNN Heroes. Nelly will also be named an Elevate Prize winner, which comes with a $300,000 grant and additional support worth $200,000 for her nonprofit.  Just imagine how many children in Kenya will grow up with a chance in life they might otherwise never have had!

23 thoughts on “Good People Doing Good Things — Nelly Cheboi

    • Thank you so much!!! I greatly appreciate your support! I used to always put my posts up on Twitter, but a couple of weeks ago I left Twitter after Musk decided to let Trump back in, so I no longer post there. I’ve only recently heard of Mastodon … I’ll have to check it out soon. Thanks again!

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        • Let me know what you find out about Mastadon. I’m glad I quit Twitter, but admittedly I sometimes miss the camaraderie. Still, it seems that Musk has gone off the rails now, banning journalists who have written about him, refusing to pay rent, trying to get out of paying severance pay to all the people he fired. I have a feeling Twitter isn’t going to be around much longer. xx

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