Capability Fund
She Passed Every Exam.
Then Spent Three Years
Doing Nothing.
Because No One Taught Her
What Comes Next.
Adolescent & Youth Empowerment · The Capability Fund
A Certificate in a Drawer. Three Years. No Map.
Fatuma graduated from secondary school in Tabora at seventeen with marks her teachers still talk about. She was the first person in her family to finish Form Four. Her mother cried at the ceremony.
Then nothing happened.
Not because Fatuma was not capable. Not because she did not want to work. But because the gap between a school certificate and an actual income is wider than anyone had told her — and she had no map for it.
The Hidden Reality of a School Certificate
She did not know how to write a CV. She had never used a computer. She did not know what jobs existed in the digital economy, let alone how to apply for one. She had a qualification — and nowhere to take it. For three years, Fatuma stayed home. Her certificate sat in a drawer.
The investment her family had made in her education was producing nothing — not because she had failed, but because the education system had stopped preparing her exactly at the moment the real world began. Then she found the CODEWA Girls Digital Hub.
“The certificate proves you can learn.
The Hub teaches you what to do with what you know.“
Within six months, Fatuma had completed a digital literacy programme, built a basic portfolio, and secured her first freelance design work online. She is now training the next cohort of young women at the Hub. The certificate did not change her life. The capability did.
Six Friction Points Blocking Youth Potential
Across Tanzania, thousands of young people graduate every year with certificates and walk straight into economic invisibility. Not because they are not intelligent — but because a school certificate and real-world capability are two completely different things.
The Skill-Certification Gap
Completing school with grades but lacking the practical, real-world skills that employers and the market actually require.
Digital Silence
No access to computers, smartphones, or the internet — leaving youth disconnected from a global digital economy already moving without them.
Professional Anonymity
Not knowing how to write a CV, present in an interview, or navigate a job search — skills no school subject ever covers.
The Identity Trap
Facing adolescent pressures and identity crises without the psychological resilience tools to stay focused on a long-term goal.
Mentor-Deficit
Transitioning from school to adulthood without a single role model or guide who has made the same journey from the same starting point.
Platform Exclusion
Marginalised girls and youth with disabilities lacking a voice, a network, or a platform to advocate for their own needs and rights.
Five Pillars. One Pipeline to Independence.
The Capability Fund supports CODEWA’s full Adolescent and Youth Empowerment programme — a five-pillar Curriculum of Aspiration that equips vulnerable youth not just for employment, but for a lifetime of leadership.
Belief Before Training: The Internal Infrastructure
Before any technical training begins, we address the internal barriers. Self-awareness, resilience, goal setting, discipline, and positive identity formation. A young person who does not believe they belong in the job market will not apply. We start with the belief.
The Girls Digital Hub: Entry Point to the Global Economy
Through the CODEWA Girls Digital Hub in Tabora, we provide hands-on digital literacy training — computer fundamentals, internet navigation, productivity tools, AI literacy, and responsible digital citizenship. For out-of-school girls and young mothers who have never touched a keyboard, this is the door that no school ever opened.
From Education to Employability: Bridging the Gap
CV writing. Interview preparation. Professional conduct. Career pathway mapping. We translate education into employability — giving young people the practical tools to present themselves, find opportunities, and compete. Because the ability to do a job and the ability to get a job are two different skills, and both can be taught.
Role Models Who Share Their Starting Point
Through structured role model engagement and one-on-one mentorship cycles, we connect young people with professionals who share their background and made it — expanding what they believe is possible for someone like them. This pillar works in direct partnership with the Resilience Circle programme.
Platform for the Marginalised: Advocacy and Civic Power
Communication skills, civic awareness, and youth-led initiatives give marginalised young people — especially girls and youth with disabilities — a platform to advocate for their own needs and lead in their communities after the programme ends. Every graduate becomes a potential role model for the next cohort.
Every Gift. A Specific Capability Built.
Every contribution to the Capability Fund funds a specific, traceable component of the programme — from a single training session to a complete six-month journey from mindset to employment.
| Amount | Gift Name | Pillar | What It Funds |
|---|---|---|---|
| €15 | The First Login | Digital Skills | Covers one week of Girls Digital Hub access for one youth — computer time, internet, and facilitator support included. |
| €25 | The CV Kit | Career Ready | Funds one complete career readiness session — CV writing, interview prep, and a printed professional portfolio for one youth. |
| €75 | The Life Skills Module | Mindset | Funds a complete mindset and resilience workshop for a group of ten young people — facilitator, materials, and journals included. |
| €150 | The Digital Access Package ★ | Digital Skills | Covers one youth’s full three-month Digital Hub training — from first login to certified digital literacy graduate. |
| €50/mo | The Monthly Cohort | All Five Pillars | Sponsors one youth through a full monthly programme cycle — life skills, digital training, mentorship, and career sessions every month. |
| €250 | The Cohort Sponsor | All Five Pillars | Fully sponsors one youth through the complete six-month Curriculum of Aspiration — all five pillars, certification included. |
| €500 | The Hub Session | Digital Hub | Funds one full day of Girls Digital Hub operations — facilitator, power, internet, materials, and equipment for twenty students. |
| Any | Your Own Gift | All Pillars | Every euro closes the gap between a certificate and a capability. |
Who We Serve: No One Left at the Gate
The Capability Fund reaches six distinct groups systematically excluded from existing youth employment and skills programmes in Tanzania. CODEWA’s commitment is that geography, gender, and physical ability are never barriers to access.
School Leavers
Equipping those at the crossroads of education and employment with professional-grade skills and a clear pathway forward.
Marginalised Youth
Direct interventions for adolescents in low-income areas facing systemic economic and social barriers to opportunity.
Out-of-School Girls & Young Mothers
Those who left education early due to pregnancy, family pressure, or poverty — the most underserved segment of Tanzania’s youth.
Future Innovators
Digital enthusiasts with aptitude but no access to the tools, training, or networks needed to develop it into a career.
Youth with Disabilities
Excluded from most mainstream skills programmes — reached through adaptive one-to-one access in every Capability Fund cohort.
First-Generation Pathfinders
Navigating career landscapes with no family precedent, no professional network, and no map — guided for the first time.
Youth with disabilities are included in every cohort through adaptive one-to-one programme access. Geography, gender, and physical ability are never barriers to the Capability Fund.
The Pipeline That Changes Everything
The Capability Fund is not a training programme. It is a pipeline — a structured pathway from documented barrier to sustainable economic independence, with four measurable stages.
Problem Identification
Skill gap, digital silence, and mentor deficit documented for each youth
Targeted Inputs
ICT Hub, life skills curriculum, career coaching, and mentor cycles delivered
Short-Term Outcomes
Certificates, professional portfolios, and measurably higher self-efficacy achieved
Long-Term Impact
Sustainable employment, micro-businesses, and reduced household economic vulnerability
Confident & Career-Ready
Digital literacy and employability training ensure youth are prepared for the modern global job market before they leave the programme.
Voice and Self-Advocacy
Young people find their voice — learning to assert their rights and participate in decision-making processes in their communities.
Graduates Become Role Models
Like Fatuma, graduates return to train the next cohort — breaking the cycle of dependency for the generation behind them.
Community Economic Shift
The investment is in one young person. The return is in an entire household — and the community that watches them succeed.
Outcomes Tracked Across the Programme
These figures are drawn from CODEWA internal monitoring reports and programme tracking since the Adolescent and Youth Empowerment programme launch in Tabora.
Data compiled from CODEWA internal monitoring reports and programme tracking since the Adolescent and Youth Empowerment programme launch.
The Certificate Did Not
Change Her Life.
The Capability Did.
Fatuma’s certificate sat in a drawer for three years. Today she runs training sessions at the Girls Digital Hub for the next cohort of young women coming through.
“The certificate proves you can learn.Fatuma · Girls Digital Hub Graduate, Now Trainer
The Hub teaches you what to do with what you know.“
Right now, hundreds of young people in Tabora are in the same place Fatuma was. Qualified. Capable. Waiting. Not because they lack potential — but because no one has given them the key to the next door.
Give €15 and open one week of Digital Hub access for one youth. Give €150 and take one young woman from her first login to a certified digital graduate. Give €250 and walk one young person through the complete six-month Curriculum of Aspiration — all five pillars, from mindset to employment.
A certificate without capability is a door with no handle. The Capability Fund is the handle.
SDG 8 — Decent WorkPromote sustained, inclusive economic growth and full employment.
SDG 5 — Gender EqualityAchieve gender equality and empower all women and girls.
SDG 4 — Quality EducationEnsure inclusive and equitable quality education for all.