UDS has just celebrated a very special day at our Centre in
Kamuli. On Tuesday 18 June our computer training students for the year
2012-2013 attended their graduation ceremony. There were 99 of them in total –
14 of them deaf.
Geoffrey Namukoye, General Manager of our centre, started
the proceedings by urging the graduates to continue their computer training by
investigating the extra courses the centre offers – such as graphics,
programming, maintenance and networking.
UDS Director Rita Epodoi also spoke the gathering. She
thanked the graduates for their desire to pursue computer training. She gave
particular thanks to the deaf students and their tutors. She also drew everyone’s
attention to UDS’ new digital science for O-level programme, and urged the
graduates to join the Computer Alumni Club.
There was a special guest in the form of Ritah, a former
student who trained at UDS in 2010. She is now studying bio-medical science at
Makerere University. She told the graduates that she hadn’t truly appreciated
the value of her computer training at UDS until she began her university
studies. Then she realised how useful her computer knowledge and skills were. She
added that some of her classmates find their studies hard going because they
lack computer skills. Ritah concluded by urging the graduates not to take their
training lightly - it’s something that will help them improve their lives.
Mr Kayabya, our oldest student, receives his certificate |
Another guest was Mr Mugote, a blind man who manages to use
computers despite his disability. He paid tribute to the organizers of the UDS
project, whom he described as “great thinkers”. The community should be lucky
to have these services in place and they should use them, he added.
The ceremony of handing out the certificates was conducted
by the District Education Officer, Joseph Musoke. He congratulated the
students, and told them they should consider themselves lucky to have acquired
such valuable computer knowledge. He thanked UDS for bringing such services to
the community.
It was a big day for UDS, for the graduates and for Kamuli.
There was even a report on the ceremony in Uganda’s national newspaper, the
Daily Monitor, recognition indeed of the importance of the work UDS is doing.
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