NEW YORK, Oct. 24, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — In the heart of a refugee camp in Syria, one teacher stands tall at the head of her classroom – offering a lifeline to children eager to learn despite the unrelenting challenges they face.

    Teacher Rudayfah helps her students rebuild their futures through learning in a refugee camp in Syria, with support from an Education Cannot Wait-funded and UNICEF-led initiative,

    Teacher Rudayfah helps her students rebuild their futures through learning in a refugee camp in Syria, with support from an Education Cannot Wait-funded and UNICEF-led initiative,

    Rudayfah, 40, is more than just an educator. She is a symbol of resilience and hope to her students and their families. Her commitment to her craft, and the girls and boys that enter the walls of her school, is unwavering.

    “I wish to further excel as a teacher and help more children to continue learning,” she says.

    Holistic support from Education Cannot Wait (ECW), the global fund for education in emergencies and protracted crises within the United Nations, is reaching Rudayfah and her students at the UNICEF-run school in the camp. ECW investments – along with funding from EU Humanitarian Aid, the Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office, German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development through the KFW Development Bank, Global Partnership for Education, and Governments of Australia, Italy and the Republic of Korea – have enabled Rudayfah and teachers like her to receive critical training on class management and interactive teaching methods to bring learning to life for their students, despite their circumstances and often limited resources.

    Rudayfah has two demanding roles in her life. She is an educator in a large refugee camp in Syria, and also a mother of eight children.

    In both her professional and personal life, she prioritizes quality education.

    Her children attend the school she teaches at in the refugee camp. During the day, she works with her students, ages 6-12, on lessons ranging from mathematics and Arabic to science. Once the school day is over, she supports her children’s continued learning in the tent their family calls home.

    Rudayfah has worked at the UNICEF-run camp school since 2019, and considers the teaching profession to be her calling in life. Like Rudayfah, the children she teaches have been displaced due to the protracted crisis in their country. Her lessons and teaching style resonate with the students in her class – and even parents have taken note of their children’s positive attitudes and growth.

    “I am approachable to my students and try to deliver information in simple ways. In class, I rely on peer and group learning, and play as effective teaching methods,” say Rudayfah. “I’ve heard from caregivers how my teaching has been effective for their children’s learning.”

    Through ECW-funded initiatives, implemented by UNICEF, Rudayfah has been able to take part in valuable teacher trainings, including on class management and interactive teaching methods. Such trainings has helped her to hone and grow her skills to better support the young learners in her classroom.

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