Welcome back to the World Education Fund!

Log in to fund education.

Forgot Password? Create an account
Reset password

Enter the email address you use on the World Education Fund system. An email message will be sent to it with instructions for how to proceed with changing your password.

Reset password

If {email} is an email in the World Education Fund system, its password has been reset and an email has been sent to that address with instructions for how to proceed.

profile picture

100% of your donations go directly to Arafa.

Arafa is a student from Tanzania who is fully funded for this school year! Fund another student here.

$80 raised
$0 to go
Arafa Adam
My name is ARAFA YUSUPH ADAM, I live in Igeleke Iringa. In our family we have 6 children with 3 brothers and 3 sisters. The experience I experienced earlier in life was the death of both of my parents that led me to live at an orphanage center which helped in all of my primary education. The lesson I learned in the experience is that no matter what happens in the world good people still exist that are willing to help people who are in need. The moment I felt especially proud of myself was the day I was selected to join the TSFTZ family which has helped me a lot till now. The happiest memorable moment in my life is to help people who are in need of my expertise. I want to become a special teacher that helps people who have disabilities like deaf people. I am going to achieve my dream all by studying very hard and also by volunteering at a special school. The school fund is like family to me now since it has been there for me since form one. When I achieve my dream, I am going to help my fellow brothers and sisters and also am going to help the community to understand how to communicate with people who have disabilities. I would change the negative thinking that people have stuck with since ages that the deaf people cannot do anything in the community and prevent people from looking down on us.

Birthday: 2002

Gender: Female

Favorite Books: Qur-An

I Want to Be: Teacher

Hobbies: Reading books and cooking

Family: 3 brothers, 2 sisters, 1 grandfather, 1 grandmother

O-Level School: Ummu Salama Secondary School

A-Level School: Lugalo High School

University: Archbishop Mihayo University College of Tabora

Funding for third year (80) 2024:
Tuition, Exams, Uniform   $80

TOTAL   $80
Funding for second year (80) 2023: $80
Funding for Form 6 2021: $150
Funding for Form 5 2020: $150
Funding for Form 4 2019: $250
Funding for Form 3 2018: $375
Funding for Form 2 2017: $380
Arafa's Journal
392 Entries
hello family
Today I want to share with you about the history of computer development.
Here’s a quick sweep through the major milestones in computer history:

- *Pre‑digital (‑1800s)* – Mechanical calculators like the abacus and Pascal’s adding machine showed that computation could be automated. Charles Babbage’s “Analytical Engine” (1837) is considered the first design for a programmable computer, though it was never built.

- *Early electronic computers (1940‑1950s)* – ENIAC (1945) and Colombe (1943) used vacuum tubes to perform calculations thousands of times faster than mechanical devices. The von Neumann architecture (mid‑1940s) introduced the stored‑program concept, where both data and instructions live in the same memory.

- *Transistors & mainframes (late 1950s‑1960s)* – Replacing bulky tubes with transistors made computers smaller, faster, and more reliable. IBM’s 7000 series and later the System/360 brought mainframe computing to businesses and governments.

- *Integrated circuits & minicomputers (1960s‑1970s)* – Chips that packed many transistors onto a single silicon wafer enabled the rise of minicomputers like the DEC PDP‑11, which were affordable enough for universities and research labs.

- *Microprocessors & personal computers (1970s‑1980s)* – Intel’s 4004 (1971) was the first commercial microprocessor. This led to kits such as the Altair 8800 and fully assembled machines like the Apple II, Commodore 64, and IBM PC, putting computing into homes and small offices.

- *Graphical user interfaces & networking (1980s‑1990s)* – Xerox PARC’s GUI, popularized by the Macintosh and later Windows, made computers intuitive. Meanwhile, ARPANET evolved into the Internet, turning isolated machines into a global network.

- *Mobile & cloud era (2000s‑present)* – Smartphones and tablets brought powerful processors into pockets. Cloud platforms (AWS, Azure, Google Cloud) shifted much of the heavy lifting to massive data centers, while open‑source software and AI accelerators (GPUs, TPUs) are reshaping what computers can do.
Hi everyone
Its my hope that you are all doing well I am doing well too.
I would like to share with you something about POVERTY
Povery is a Condition where people's basic needs for food, clothing, and shelter are not being met. Poverty is generally of two types: (1) Absolute poverty is synonymous with destitution and occurs when people cannot obtain adequate resources (measured in terms of calories or nutrition) to support a minimum level of physical health. Absolute poverty means about the same everywhere, and can be eradicated as demonstrated by some countries. (2) Relative poverty occurs when people do not enjoy a certain minimum level of living standards as determined by a government (and enjoyed by the bulk of the population) that vary from country to country, sometimes within the same country.

Best regards
Arafa
read more entries or add a new one >>