Sustainability is often discussed in terms of environmental conservation or financial reserves, but true sustainability is human. It is the ability of a generation to solve its own problems and lead its own growth. For thousands of children and youths who have dropped out of the education system, the “Empty Desk” represents the single greatest threat to this national vision. Why Back to school for children and Youths is the pathway for sustainable development is simple: you cannot build a high-income, knowledge-based economy if a significant portion of the next generation is left behind.
Education is the “software” of Rwanda. It is the toolkit that allows a young person to break the cycle of poverty and adapt to the challenges of the modern world. This blog post explores why re-engaging our youth in the classroom is the only way to ensure Rwanda’s development is built to last for generations.
The Sustainability Crisis: The Economic Cost of Dropout
To understand why returning to school is a sustainability issue, we must look at the long-term cost of the alternative. When a child or youth drops out of school—whether to work in cross-border trade, assist on a family farm, or due to the barriers of disability—they are not just missing lessons; they are losing their future resilience.
1. The Literacy and Innovation Gap
Without a primary and secondary foundation, youths are restricted to the most volatile sectors of the economy—manual labor that is the first to disappear during a market shock or climate event. Sustainable development requires a workforce that can innovate. We need youths who can manage digital cooperatives, design sustainable irrigation systems, and lead community institutions. These skills are forged in the classroom, and without them, the “Green Transition” remains a distant dream.
2. The Health and Social Effects
Sustainability includes the health of the population. Data consistently shows that educated youths have better nutrition, lower rates of teenage pregnancy, and a higher likelihood of ensuring their own children are vaccinated. An educated population places less strain on the national healthcare and social welfare systems, making the nation’s growth more economically stable.
3. Breaking the Generational Poverty Trap
Dropout often leads to early marriage and subsistence living. By bringing a child back to school, we aren’t just helping an individual; we are interrupting a cycle of poverty that could otherwise span decades. Education provides the “cognitive mobility” needed to move from being a recipient of aid to a creator of wealth.
RODI’s Contribution: LIFT Project
At the Rwanda Organization for Development Initiatives (RODI), we believe that every child who returns to a desk is a victory for Rwanda’s future. Our work is designed to address the root causes of dropout and provide a second chance for those whom the system has missed.
We recognize that putting a child back in school requires a holistic approach that addresses the financial, physical, and psychological barriers that kept them away in the first place.
The LIFT Project: A Model of Inclusion (Rusizi District)
Our primary engine for educational reintegration is the Learning and Inclusion for Transformation (LIFT) project. Currently active in Rusizi District, this project is implemented through a powerful consortium alongside our partners ADEPE and UPHLS. This collaborative model ensures that we leave no child behind, regardless of their background or physical ability.
In Rusizi, we are transforming the lives of out-of-school children and youth by providing them with customized pathways back to learning.
- The LIFT Impact: Through the LIFT Project, we have successfully facilitated the educational journey of 1,516 children and youth. This total includes both those who have returned to formal primary and secondary schools and those enrolled in Alternative Learning Pathways (ALP)—an accelerated program designed for older youth who have been out of school for many years and need to catch up quickly to their age group.
This impact is made possible by the unique strengths of our consortium:
- Inclusion: In partnership with UPHLS, we identify children with disabilities who were previously hidden at home, providing them with the assistive devices and specialized support needed to join their peers in class.
- Social Protection: Through ADEPE, we link the most vulnerable families to social safety nets and livelihood support. This ensures that the extreme poverty that forced the child out of school in the first place is addressed, preventing them from dropping out again.
The “Enough” Mindset: The Psychology of Staying in School
Getting a child back to a desk is only half the journey; keeping them there requires a fundamental shift in behavior. At RODI, we know that poverty is often accompanied by a “mindset of defeat” or a feeling of dependency on external aid. To counter this, we integrate a behavioral strategy we call “Enough Thinking.”
We don’t just provide school kits; we make sure to teach beneficiaries that they should adopt a new perspective on their own agency and future potential:
- To the Parents:
We make sure to teach them they should say “Enough” to the short-term logic of child labor. We teach them that they should reject the few francs a child earns today at the market in favor of the long-term prosperity a secondary or vocational degree brings. We make sure to teach them they should view themselves as the “Chief Education Officers” of their homes, taking proactive ownership of their child’s attendance, nutrition, and homework. - To the Youths:
We make sure to teach them they should say “Enough” to the shame of being “too old” or “too far behind.” Many youths in our accelerated learning centers feel embarrassed to return to a classroom after years away. We make sure to teach them they should view their return to school as an act of bravery and a sign of leadership. We teach them that they should believe their intellect is enough to master any subject, regardless of how long they were away. - To the Community:
We make sure to teach them that they should say “Enough” to the stigma surrounding dropout or disability. We teach the community to act as a protective shield, ensuring that every child in the village is in a classroom where they belong. We teach them that “We are enough for each other,” encouraging neighbors to help one another with childcare or materials to keep every student in school.
Why Education is the Ultimate “Sustainable” Tool
When we talk about sustainable development in 2026, we mean Self-Reliance (Kwigira).
- Economic Sustainability: The 1,516 children and youth supported by LIFT are moving from being potential “beneficiaries” of aid to being “contributors” to the economy. They will become the taxpayers, entrepreneurs, and skilled professionals who will drive the Rwandan economy toward the 2050 targets.
- Climate Adaptation: An educated youth population is better equipped to understand and implement the climate-smart techniques needed to protect our environment. Education is the primary vehicle for the “Green Transition,” as it fosters the critical thinking necessary to solve environmental challenges.
- Social Sustainability: By bringing the most marginalized—refugees, the ultra-poor, and the disabled—back to school, we are building a more inclusive and stable society. When everyone has a stake in the nation’s growth through education, the entire country becomes more resilient to social and political shocks.
Conclusion: The Path to 2050 Starts at the Desk
In 2026, the pathway to a sustainable Rwanda is paved with textbooks and life skills, not just tarmac and concrete.
Returning to school is the ultimate “exit strategy” from poverty. It is the transition from being a recipient of help to being a creator of solutions. Through the intensive LIFT interventions we are running in Rusizi today alongside ADEPE and UPHLS, RODI remains committed to the belief that education is the only bridge to a future that lasts.
As our students in Rusizi learn to say “Enough” to their past limitations and “Yes” to their future potential, they are proving that Rwanda’s greatest resource is not what is in the ground, but what is inside the minds of its children. By ensuring every child is in school today, we are ensuring a self-reliant and sustainable Rwanda for tomorrow.
