How can you help?

Do you want to change the world? You're in the right place! Join us at W4 in empowering girls and women for the benefit of everyone! You can donate to our projects around the world, launch your own team fundraiser, (e-)volunteer your skills and/or spread the word about our work!

How does it work?

Choose one or more projects you care about from our portfolio of projects around the world, make a donation and see the life-changing, even life-saving, impact of your giving!

How does it work?

Create your own uber-cool fundraising team to raise funds for (a) project(s) you care about, then invite your friends/colleagues/family to donate and change the world with you! Multiply the good and multiply your impact!

How do gift cards work?

Offer a friend/colleague/loved one a unique, unforgettable gift with a W4 gift card! When you offer a W4 gift card, the recipient of your gift can choose a project to support from among our many girls' & women's empowerment projects around the world. The recipient of your gift card will receive updates throughout the year about the project, as well as W4 "goodies" relating to the project. So offer a W4 gift card today and spread joy & love!

WOWWIRE

The blog

Search

“From that moment on, my life changed” – Katherine Nadela, a graduate of W4’s field partner girls’ education program in the Philippines, shares her success story!

Katherine Nadela

04/17/2012

Katherine is one of the graduates from W4’s field partner program in the Philippines, Children of Asia. She graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Cebu in October 2011. Despite the challenges of competing in a male-dominated field, Katherine not only passed the Philippine Mechanical Engineering board exam in March 2012, she also achieved the 6th highest result, making her the first woman to rank among the top 10 board passers. She shares her success story with us below.

 

College education was just a dream for my family and me. My father works as a building maintenance employee, while my mother is a housewife. My parents struggled daily to support our needs and to also send my older brother, a working scholar, and my older sister, a government scholar, to university.

 

When I graduated from high school, my mother apologized to me, in tears, because my parents could not afford to send me, their third child, to college. However, I was recommended by a neighbor to be one of the beneficiaries of the Children of Asia girls’ education scholarship program. From that moment on, my life changed. I was able to fulfill my dream by enrolling in the Bachelor of Science degree program in Mechanical Engineering at one of the universities here in Cebu, which offers a high quality education for mechanical engineers.

 

During my university years, it was difficult for my parents to provide the money for our daily allowances and projects, but they always made our education their priority. I was fortunate that Children of Asia provided me with the funds to pay for books, school uniforms, school projects, tuition fees and miscellaneous fees, which helped us tremendously.

 

It was not easy for me to compete with my male classmates, especially in our laboratories and workshop practices, which required physical strength to operate machines, such as the lathe and milling machines, while producing precise outputs. While keeping in mind the hardships that my family endured and the support I was receiving through my education scholarship, I did my best to attain excellent grades and to become a top student.
 

During my 5th year in college, I underwent an operation because I had developed an ovarian cyst. Even though I had to take a semester off from my studies, this did not discourage me. When I returned for the last year of my Mechanical Engineering courses, I was determined to give it my best and I succeeded in becoming nationally ranked 6th on the Philippine Licensure Examination for Mechanical Engineers, the only female in the top 10-scoring graduates. I wanted to prove that women can also make it in the male-dominated course. I said to myself, “If men can do it, so can I!”

 

Now, I am planning to find a job here in the Philippines, particularly in Cebu as a design engineer for a shipbuilding and engineering design and detailing company. Once I have gained enough work experience, I will seize the chance to work abroad to help my family and my two younger siblings in realizing their dreams, just as Children of Asia helped me in realizing mine. – Katherine Nadela

 

You can help young women like Katherine obtain a life-changing education and qualifications by donating to girls’ education scholarship programs. Even the most modest donation can make a life-changing difference.

 

© Women’s WorldWide Web 2012

Please check the checkbox above

* Please fill in the required fields

Share this article...

A story to share?

Contact us
Subscribe to the newsletter

Meet the editor-in-chief

Andrea Ashworth

Andrea is an author, journalist and academic. She has studied, taught or held fellowships at Oxford, Yale and Princeton. Andrea has written fiction and non-fiction for numerous publications, including Vogue, Granta, The Times, The TLS and The Guardian. She is the author of the award-winning and internationally bestselling memoir "Once in a House on Fire". Andrea works to raise awareness about domestic violence and to promote literacy and education.