PestalozziWorld provides exceptionally bright children from some of the poorest communities in Africa and Asia with a child-centred education, in their country of origin and produces young adults capable of changing the world.
With the encouragement of their families, they offer these children an opportunity to reach their potential free from extreme poverty, racial inequalities, gender stereotypes, poor education and the pressure to work and earn a living. At the Pestalozzi Villages children (aged 10-18, two girls for each boy and many being refugees) receive an excellent education, a nurturing environment and practical life skills.
PestalozziWorld was established in 1995, by founders Sir Richard and Lady Diana Butler. They were inspired and guided by the work of the 18th-century Swiss education reformer Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi, who devoted his life to helping children orphaned by the Napoleonic Wars. He believed that education should develop the powers of ‘Head’, ‘Heart’ and ‘Hands’. In other words, it helps children by putting equal emphasis on character, practical life skills and cognitive development. Today PestalozziWorld is a family of nonprofit organisations with registered charities in the UK, USA, Switzerland, Zambia, India and Nepal. It also has close ties to Pestalozzi inspired charities in Malawi and Thailand.
The Head, Heart and Hands education model the charity embraces emphasises care and compassion – inspiring their students not only to go far in their chosen careers but also to give back to their communities. With continuous support from the charity, its Alumni are becoming a new generation of teachers, health professionals, entrepreneurs, aid workers and leaders who are equipped with the tools they need to change the world – and volunteer to help or provide financial support to others.
Through Villages in Zambia, India and Nepal, the charity has around 1,376 Alumni, and more than 28,600 children educated in outreach programmes to improve their reading, writing and math skills.