Institutional programmes

Education pilots with stronger design, clearer proof, and better operational visibility.

Liwaza helps NGOs, foundations, and public bodies launch structured cohorts with clear learning design, reportable milestones, and a realistic path from pilot to scale.

This page now matches the finish of Families and Secondary Schools while keeping a more institutional tone.

Scholarship cohortsDonor reportingMinor safeguardingPilot-to-scale delivery
1 framework
Delivery setup
Population, tooling, reporting, and governance.
4 stages
Pilot lifecycle
Discovery, proposal, execution, extension.
M&E
Steering
Milestones useful for donors and programme teams.
Pilot framework

Target population, facilitation, reporting, and guardrails made visible from the first scroll.

What stakeholders need to see

Clear scope, progression milestones, and indicators that are easy to explain upstream.

What Liwaza helps structure

Eligibility, cohorts, facilitation, communications, escalation, and evidence of progress.

Why stronger design matters here

Better visual hierarchy makes the offer more credible for leadership, partners, and donors.

What this page needs to prove

An institutional page should earn trust quickly.

The redesign strengthens visual proof and message clarity around scope, reporting, execution, and safeguarding.

Cohort framing

Who joins, for how long, with which tools, and under what facilitation model.

Useful reporting

Indicators that leadership, donors, and M&E teams can actually use.

Partners

Two main partner types

The same platform can serve foundations and public bodies, with governance adapted to each context.

Donor-ready reporting

NGOs and foundations

  • Scholarship or talent cohorts with reporting that fits donor expectations.
  • Equity and selection criteria co-designed with the programme team.
  • A clear narrative to explain progression, retention, and delivery.
M&E alignment

Public sector and agencies

  • Regional or national pilots using language that fits public-sector processes.
  • Cleaner documentation for approvals, data handling, and escalation.
  • Possible alignment with schools or networks already using Liwaza.

Programme models

Pilot shapes that are easy to understand

A high-quality page should help a partner picture the collaboration model quickly.

Model 1

Scholarship cohorts

Multi-year preparation for a selected cohort with English, test, and application milestones.

1
Model 2

Excellence or equity pipelines

Targeted populations, local facilitation, and progression tracked against clear goals.

2
Model 3

School-network expansion

Delivery through education partners to improve reach, continuity, and support.

3
Model 4

Scale-up

A progressive path from one pilot into recurring or multi-site cohorts.

4
Capabilities

What the platform and team help structure

These cards replace a plain text block and give the offer a more premium, more legible presentation.

Cohort design

Clearer eligibility, duration, delivery model, and programme structure.

Reportable indicators

English milestones, test readiness, engagement, and completion tracking.

Alignment with global pathways

The same backbone used across family and school pathways when relevant.

Visible learning goals

Cohorts do not just participate; they progress against visible milestones.

Safeguarding and data guardrails

More explicit consent, access boundaries, and responsibility lines.

Cohort health monitoring

Lagging engagement, weak signals, and facilitator follow-through are easier to spot.

Reporting

Examples of useful KPI lines

Final metrics are agreed with you, but these examples show the level of reporting clarity we aim for.

Progress toward agreed IELTS or TOEFL band ranges.

SAT or UAT checkpoints: diagnostic, mastery, and full practice cycles.

Active weeks, completion, response times, and coach touchpoints.

Retention, dropout alerts, and overall cohort health.

Implementation

Make prerequisites visible before launch

This keeps the substance of the previous page, but with a clearer and more polished presentation.

Connectivity, devices, and minimum viability clarified before launch.

Communication language, learner messaging, and onboarding flows defined early.

Facilitator roles, escalation paths, and local support made explicit.

Parental consent and safeguards for minors documented upfront.

Next step

Start with a well-framed pilot, then scale with confidence.

  • A first discussion to clarify population, geography, tooling, and governance.
  • A pilot proposal with reporting rhythm and field burden clearly scoped.
  • Possible extension into school networks or recurring annual cohorts.