Friday, June 29, 2012

Week in Review


Last weekend my cousin Clayton and I searched London high and low for a great blazer.  Unfortunately all we could found were shoulder pads, cropped in the front long in the back (?!) or illfitting blazers.  So I was thrilled when Erin of Elements of Style (one of my favorite blogs) featured her newest project with friend Marie Whitney: Two Penny Blue, fabulous blazers in fabulous colors!  My excitement went to a new level when I saw that for every blazer sold they will donate one uniform to girl in Africa! Needless to say, I am smitten! 

We love the idea of "donating your birthday," but Unik Ernest takes it to another level to raise money for Haiti. 

Sad commentary on the education system in Cambodia

Great steps are being made to teach elders in Kenya the dangers women and girls face, the hope is the changes would encourage girls to stay in school!

Students at St Peter's Catholic College Tuggerah to build homes in Cambodia

Happy Summer Weekend!
xo, Megan and Jess

Friday, June 22, 2012

Week in Review



In honor of Price William's 30th Birthday yesterday, let's celebrate what an amazing philanthropist he is

50% of girls in Malawi are forced into marriage too early, but Thomas Mayo is trying to change that!

The largest school in Haiti is in the process of being built

The Haitian government has promised 320 million gourdes ($7.21 million USD) to hold official examinations in a few weeks

Giving refugee girls a chance across the world

Happy Weekend everyone!

xo, Megan and Jess

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Vote for Altruette!


Altruette is one of our favorite "giving" companies.  I wear my charm bracelet almost every day and love deciding which cause will benefit from the purchase of my next charm! 

We can't wait to tell you about our partnership with Altruette later this summer!  In the meantime, please help Altruette compete for an amazing small business grant. 

Go to: https://www.missionsmallbusiness.com/

Log in on the right side, and then search for Altruette (no need to add in city/state) and vote for us! If they get 250 votes they can compete for a grant. Please share--thank you so much!

xo, Megan and Jess

Monday, June 18, 2012

Celeb-ri-TFE Spotlight on Dan Hern


Celeb-ri-TFE 
(n) 1. someone who has gone out of their way to help Tailored for Education raise money or awareness


This week the Celeb-ri-TFE spotlight is on Dan Hern!  This spring Dan helped us become one of the benefiting charities for BTIG's Commissions for Charity Day.  Thanks to Dan BTIG donated $500 to Tailored for Education, allowing us to provide 21 uniforms!  




Dan Hern, thank you for supporting TFE and helping us raise awareness on BTIG's Commissions for Charity Day!

xo, Megan and Jess

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Happy Father's Day

To all the Dads worldwide that put their children first, love unconditionally and work hard each day all in an effort to give their children a better life!

Wishing you all a Happy Father's Day!

and especially to our Dads who have spent their lives loving us, teaching us, and supporting us in everything we do! We love you!



xo, Megan and Jess

Friday, June 15, 2012

Week in Review


In honor of Griffin's arrival this week I've been thinking a lot about baby gifts that help children in need.  Give is one of our favorite one for one companies; for each baby blanket sold they give one to a child in need! 

High schoolers in Charlotte are helping orphans in Haiti from their own back yard.  They are creating an aquaponics system to grow vegetables and fish, which they hope to implement in the project in Haiti. 

Another group of students holds a gala to raise fund to build schools in Haiti. 

An inspiring story about breaking the barriers to education foster children face.  Sadly, only 3% of foster children in the US go onto higher education and 50% never graduate from college. 

How textile production in developing countries can help alleviate poverty.  At Tailored for Education we are doing our part to continue this "sewing success."  All of the uniforms we provide are made as close to the school as possible!   

xo, Megan and Jess

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

New Adddition to Our Team....

I am so excited to announce the arrival of our newest intern, Griffin Roy

Jess, Dave and Big Brother Jackson welcomed Griffin yesterday morning.  Everyone is healthy, happy and enjoying their newest addition.  Griffin is one lucky boy to have such amazing parents!  Instead of baby gifts Jess has requested donations to
Tailored for Education in Griffin's honor :)

xo, "Aunt" Megan


image via

Friday, June 8, 2012

Week in Review



Toms is at it again!  These new strappy wedges scream summer (if only they weren't so tall)

The sad decision many families have to make when choosing to educate their children

One Kenyan woman fulfills her "crazy dream" of graduating

Interesting piece on poverty and inequality in Latin America

Hilary Clinton does her part to improve maternal health

Wishing you all a wonderful weekend!  We are on baby watch (well Jess is) as we wait to meet the newest member of our TFE family!

xo, Megan and Jess

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Work or School?

We recently came across a story about a little girl in Cambodia, Suan, that perfectly illustrates the one that we continue to hear.  This especially moved us because our newest project underway is in Cambodia, where we have approximately 3,400 uniforms being made.  More on that later; for now, if you have five minutes to spare, it is an excellent article that you can read HERE, or see below.

Work or school?

Theme sponsored by the David Rattray Trust
guardian.co.uk
Fury glints in Suan's wide, almond eyes.
"You buy from him, why you not buy from me?" she demands, standing rooted to the spot and glaring at the tourist as he moves quickly back to the safety of his vehicle. Opening her mouth wide, like a baby bird, Suan emits a torrent of abuse; she is nine years old and illiterate but can swear in seven languages.
As the tourist drives away she doesn't move, her eyes narrow as he disappears into the dazzling sunshine, and now they glint with tears.
At nine years old Suan works everyday in the shadow of the hulkingly beautiful Angkor Wat ruins, selling bracelets and postcards to the hoards of tourists who descend relentlessly upon the site. Competition here is fierce.
Suan lives with her mother, who is widowed and ill and too poor to send her children to school; she relies upon Suan's earnings to feed Suan and her four younger children. Like Suan she is uneducated and illiterate, she works long hours in a rickety hut behind the majestic Ta Prohm ruins making the jewellery that Suan's diminutive size and angelic face help her to sell. Suan says she would like to be a teacher or a "proper" shopkeeper, but because she doesn't have time for school she doesn't expect her life to be any different to her mother's.
This is Cambodia, but it could be anywhere in the developing world, because Suan and her family are trapped in an all too ubiquitous cycle: they are ensnared in a vicious circle in which poverty obstructs education, creating illiteracy and a lack of skills which, in turn, perpetuate poverty and so on ceaselessly until some external factor disrupts this pattern.
The second of the United Nation's eight Millennium Development Goals is to achieve universal primary education by 2015, however in South Asia alone the UN estimate that there are 16 million children out of school, globally this is close to 70 million. Among those in school many drop out prematurely or fail to achieve basic literacy and numeracy. Girls, like Suan, fare the worst.
In Cambodia, and many other countries, progress has been made in that education is now free, however this is not enough to allow Suan to attend school because she can't afford not to work, let alone compulsory school supplies and the 'gratitude fees' that must be paid to teachers each day.
The potential of education is immense. Nelson Mandela once said that "Education is the most powerful weapon we can use to change the world" and its instrumental role in progressing towards the UN's seven other millennium development goals substantiates his claim. As UNICEF explains, "educating children helps reduce poverty and promotes gender equality"; in school children learn the skills necessary for employment alongside life skills that can help them prevent diseases such as HIV/AIDS and malaria, and in turn, raise healthier children.
Education is especially inextricably linked to achieving gender equality: as UNICEF states, "universal primary education by definition requires gender parity". Educating girls is extremely effective because it has what UNICEF describes as a "multiplier effect"; educated women tend to marry later and have fewer children, these children are, in turn, more likely to survive and to be better nourished and educated.
However Suan's conundrum is currently voiding many advances in education in the developing world; whilst education has potential to be one of the greatest weapons for change in these areas its power is extremely limited if it is inaccessible to those most in need of change. If education is to become as instrumental as it has the potential to be, measures must be implemented to break the vicious circle restricting its reach.
Suan has a friend who has begun to attend school everyday, while her peers continue to flog trinkets in the searing heat; Teou has become a participant in a programme the International Labour Organisation (ILO) is funding to help children across Cambodia return to school. Through practical measures, such as providing school supplies or bicycles to help children commute from isolated areas, this programme is attempting to make education accessible to more children.
The ILO programme has been implemented in various forms in other countries, such as Nepal and Pakistan, and is one of many schemes pursuing the same objective; the World Food Programme, for example, offers "food scholarships" (30 kg of rice, 1 dozen cans of tuna, 5 litres of cooking oil, 7 kg of beans and 1 kg of salt per month) to poor families in the developing world on the condition that they keep their children in school. This scholarship is both an incentive to return children to school and a practical measure, enabling families to survive without their children's wages. In Cambodia 65,000 of these scholarships have been awarded to primary age children.
Elsewhere schemes helping impoverished pupils attend school have often been incredibly simple. In Uganda, for example, an initiative has created affordable, locally produced sanitary towels to allow girls who can't afford expensive imported tampons to attend school all month. This scheme is doubly beneficial because it returns girls to school and provides employment in the local area.
Schemes such as these demonstrate that it is possible to tackle the poverty related obstacles preventing many children in developing countries from attending school, however they are not yet encompassing enough to turn the potential of education into real power.
Whilst Teou attends school everyday, Suan and many other children continue to sell souvenirs in the dusty car parks of Angkor Wat. This scenario is reflected around the world; the UN do not expect to meet their goal of universal primary education by 2015.
Suan scuffs the ground and scowls, scouring the site for her next target. "Work is for adults" she says sulkily, kicking up a dust cloud. A second later she's disappeared, darting away to join the flurry as a group of cyclists disembark across the car park.



Monday, June 4, 2012


Celeb-ri-TFE 
(n) 1. someone who has gone out of their way to help Tailored for Education raise money or awareness

This week we shine our spotlight on Diamond Chiropractic! Dr. Diamond is a local chiropractor who generously donated a school uniform for every two patient referrals during the months of February and March.  Due to this charitable referral program (that we think all doctors should adopt!), we were able to provide nine children with new school uniforms!




Diamond Chiropractic, thank you for supporting TFE and helping us raise awareness!

xo, Jess and Megan