Solid Ground School Students Support Human–Elephant Coexistence in Tanzania
What began as a classroom lesson quickly turned into a powerful act of compassion.
After learning about human–elephant coexistence in Tanzania, students at Solid Ground School were inspired to take action. Their journey started when Felician Chemihanda, Chief Executive Officer of ECOWICE, shared real stories from rural communities living alongside elephants explaining both the challenges families face and how ECOWICE is helping farmers and wildlife coexist through community monitoring, early-warning systems, and environmental education
The students asked thoughtful questions:
Why do elephants enter farms?
How do families protect their crops?
What can children in the U.S. do to help?
That curiosity sparked creativity.
Moved by what they learned, students designed and handcrafted these colorful elephant artworks, each filled with unique patterns and imagination. They then chose to sell their creations to raise funds in support of community-based conservation efforts in Tanzania.

Learning Turned Into Leadership
Through this experience, students:
Gained insight into real-world human–wildlife challenges
Connected classroom learning to global conservation
Expressed empathy through art
Took initiative to support farming families and elephants
Became young changemakers for coexistence
Every elephant tells a story — of learning, caring, and taking responsibility for our shared planet.
Where Their Support Goes
Funds raised through this student-led project help ECOWICE continue:
Community elephant monitoring and early-warning alerts for farmers
Environmental education for children in Tanzania
Practical tools that reduce crop loss while protecting elephant pathways
These efforts help transform conflict into coexistence.
Thank You, Solid Ground School
To the students, teachers, and families: thank you for showing that meaningful change can start in a classroom.
Your creativity is helping build a future where people and wildlife thrive together, one elephant at a time.


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