The passage Micro enterprise credit for street youth is helpful since you can use these answer guides to understand more about the kinds of questions you may get in the actual IELTS Reading section of the Examination.
Table of Contents
Micro Enterprise Credit for Street Youth
"I am from a large, poor family and for many years we have done without breakfast. Ever since I joined the Street Kids International program I have been able to buy my family sugar and buns for breakfast. I have also bought myself decent second-hand clothes and shoes."
Doreen Soko
'We’ve had business experience. Now I'm confident to expand what we've been doing.
I've learnt cash management, and the way of keeping money so we save for re-investment. Now business is a part of our lives. As well, we didn't know each other before - now we've made new friends.'
Fan Kaoma
Participants in the Youth Skills Enterprise Initiative Program, Zambia
Introduction
Although small-scale business training and credit programs have become more common throughout the world, relatively little attention has been paid to the need to direct such opportunities to young people. Even less attention has been paid to children living on the street or in difficult circumstances.
Over the past nine years, Street Kids International (S.K.I.) has been working with partner organisations in Africa, Latin America and India to support the economic lives of street children, the purpose of this paper is to share some of the lessons S.K.I. and our partners have learned.
Background
Typically, children do not end up on the streets due to a single cause, but to a combination of factors: a dearth of adequately funded schools, the demand for income at home, family breakdown and violence. The street may be attractive to children as a place to find adventurous play and money. However, it is also a place where some children are exposed, with little or no protection, to exploitative employment, urban crime, and abuse.
Children who work on the streets are generally involved in unskilled, labour-intensive tasks which require long hours, such as shining shoes, carrying goods, guarding or washing cars, and informal trading. Some may also earn income through begging, or through theft and other illegal activities. At the same time, there are street children who take pride in supporting themselves and their families and who often enjoy their work. Many children may see entrepreneurship because it allows them a degree of independence, is less exploitative than many forms of paid employment, and is flexible enough to allow them to participate in other activities such as education and domestic tasks.
Street Business Partnerships
S.K.I. has worked with partner organisations in Latin America, Africa and India to develop innovative opportunities for street children to earn income.
• The S.K.I. Bicycle Courier Service first started in the Sudan. Participants in this enterprise were supplied with bicycles, which they used to deliver parcels and messages, and which they were required to pay for gradually from their wages. A similar program was taken up in Bangalore, India.
• Another successful project, The Shoe Shine Collective, was a partnership program with the Y.W.C.A. in the Dominican Republic. In this project, participants were lent money to purchase shoe shine boxes. They were also given a safe place to store their equipment, and facilities for individual savings plans.
• The Youth Skills Enterprise Initiative in Zambia is a joint program with the Red Cross Society and the Y.W.C.A. Street youths are supported to start their own small business through business training, life skills training and access to credit.
Lessons learned
The following lessons have emerged from the programs that S.K.I. and partner organisations have created.
• Being an entrepreneur is not for everyone, nor for every street child. Ideally, potential participants will have been involved in the organization's programs for at least six months, and trust and relationship building will have already been established.
• The involvement of the participants has been essential to the development of relevant programs. When children have had a major role in determining procedures, they are more likely to abide by and enforce them.
• It is critical for all loans to be linked to training programs that include the development of basic business and life skills.
• There are tremendous advantages to involving parents or guardians in the program, where such relationships exist. Home visits allow staff the opportunity to know where the participants live, and to understand more about each individual’s situation.
• Small loans are provided initially for purchasing fixed assets such as bicycles, shoe shine kits and basic building materials for a market stall. As the entrepreneurs gain experience, the enterprises can be gradually expanded and consideration can be given to increasing loan amounts. The loan amounts in S.K.I. programs have generally ranged from US$30-$100.
• All S.K.I. programs have charged interest on the loans, primarily to get the entrepreneurs used to the concept of paying interest on borrowed money. Generally the rates have been modest (lower than bank rates).
Conclusion
There is a need to recognize the importance of access to credit for impoverished young people seeking to fulfil economic needs. The provision of small loans to support the entrepreneurial dreams and ambitions of youth can be an effective means to help them change their lives. However, we believe that credit must be extended in association with other types of support that help participants develop critical life skills as well as productive businesses.
Great thanks to volunteer Tiffany Thuy Do has contributed these explanations and question markings. If you want to make a better world like this, please contact us.
Questions 1-4
Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D.
Write your answers in boxes 1-4 on your answer sheet.
1. The quotations in the box at the beginning of the article
A. exemplify the effects of S.K.I.
B. explain why S.K.I. was set up.
C. outline the problems of street children.
D. highlight the benefits to society of S.K.I.
Answer: A
Explanation: As per the reading passage,’ Microenterprise credit for street youth,’ these quotations serve to reinforce the impact of the Street Kids International (S.K.I.) organization on the lives of people. These are the quotes from those benefiting from the program.
2. The main purpose of S.K.I. is to
A. draw the attention of governments to the problem of street children.
B. provide schools and social support for street children.
C. encourage the public to give money to street children.
D. give business training and loans to street children,
Answer: D
Explanation: As per the reading passage ,’ Microenterprise credit for street youth,’ business partnerships involve the loan lending to the participants apart from other business assistance for their enterprises.
3. Which of the following is mentioned by the writer as a reason why children end up living on the streets?
A. unemployment
B. war
C. poverty
D. crime
Answer: C
Explanation:
The reading passage ,’ Microenterprise credit for street youth,’ describes how children do not end up on the streets due to a single cause. However, the passage also shares a combination of factors where the demand for income at home is mentioned. Hence, poverty is the biggest reason here.
4. In order to become more independent, street children may
A. reject paid employment.
B. leave their families.
C. set up their own businesses.
D. employ other children.
Answer: C
Explanation: As per the reading passage,’ Microenterprise credit for street youth,’ describes how setting up businesses or entrepreneurship could be a viable solution for independence both financially and emotionally, since it is not as exploitative as other forms of paid employment.
Questions 5-8
Complete the table below
Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from Reading Passage for each answer.
Write your answers in boxes 5-8 on your answer sheet.
Country | Organisations Involved |
Type of Project | Support Provided |
5. _____ Answer: Sudan and India IN EITHER ORDER, BOTH REQUIRED FOR ONE MARK (Find this in the Street Business Partnerships section) |
• S.K.I. | courier service | • provision of 6. _____ Answer: bicycles (In the Street Business Partnerships section, it describes how bicycles were enabled for the courier service business) |
Dominican Republic |
• S.K.I. • Y.W.C.A. |
7. _____ Answer: Shoe Shine// Shoe Shine Collective (In the Street Business Partnerships section, you will find the Y.W.C.A. initiative called the Shoe Shine Collective) |
• loans • storage facilities • savings plans |
Zambia | • S.K.I. • The Red Cross • Y.W.C.A. |
setting up small businesses | • business training • 8. _____ training • access to credit |
Questions 9-12
Do the following statements agree with the claims of the writer in Reading Passage?
In boxes 9-12 on your answer sheet write
YES if the statement agrees with the claims of the writer
NO if the statement contradicts the claims of the writer
NOT GIVEN if it is impossible to say what the writer thinks about this
9. _____ Any street child can set up their own small business if given enough support.
Answer: NO (In the Lessons Learned section’s first point, you will find the qualifying criteria for a street child to set up a small business and how it is not for each and every street child)
10. _____In some cases, the families of street children may need financial support from S.K.I.
Answer: NOT GIVEN (The passage does not explicitly mention anything about financial support being needed by the families of these street children. It focuses on their independence)
11. _____Only one fixed loan should be given to each child.
Answer: NO (It is clearly mentioned how small loans are initially given to street children and then amounts are increased gradually with the expansion of the business)
12. _____The children have to pay back slightly more money than they borrowed.
Answer: YES (The passage mentions how interest is charged on loan amounts to get entrepreneurs used to the concept of paying back money on their amounts that have been borrowed)
Questions 13
Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D.
Write your answer in box 13 on your answer sheet.
The writers conclude that money should only be lent to street children
A. as part of a wider program of aid.
B. for programs that are not too ambitious.
C. when programs are supported by local businesses.
D. if the projects planned are realistic and useful.
Answer: A
Explanation: If you look at the passage in its entirety, especially the initial introduction, the partnerships and the lessons learned, then it is apparent that lending money to street children is part of a bigger program of aid, linking this access to credit to business assistance, training, life skill development, and more.
Answer Table
1. A | 8. life skills |
2. D | 9. NO |
3. C | 10. NOT GIVEN |
4. C | 11. NO |
5. Sudan and India IN EITHER ORDER, BOTH REQUIRED FOR ONE MARK | 12. YES |
6. bicycles | 13. A |
7. Shoe Shine// Shoe Shine Collective |
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