Sylvie Mensah lives in two worlds that rarely overlap. By day, she guides privileged families through admissions at the British School of Lomé in Togo. The rest of her time, she runs La Touche, providing education and hope to youth in juvenile detention centers and underserved communities across the same city.
Moving between these extremes—opportunity and abandonment, resources and deprivation—has fundamentally reshaped how Sylvie sees potential in every child. Her work embodies a philosophy rooted in Togolese culture: the child belongs to the community. It’s a perspective that challenges Western assumptions about success, access, and who deserves investment.
In this episode of the Help 100 Schools podcast, we explore what becomes visible when you refuse to see children through a single lens, and what American educators might learn from a culture where collective responsibility isn’t just a value, but a way of life.
What You’ll LearnHow Context Shapes Perception of PotentialWhy the same intelligence looks different in a detention center versus a private school, and what that reveals about opportunity rather than ability.
Cultural Models of Collective ResponsibilityThe Togolese principle that “the child belongs to the community”—how neighbors, strangers, and institutions share accountability for every young person’s success.
Barriers Beyond MoneyWhy language anxiety, cultural fear, and confidence gaps keep families from pursuing opportunities—and how lived experience can bridge those divides.
Education as RehabilitationHow La Touche provides the only formal schooling in Togo’s juvenile detention system, and Sylvie’s vision for making it a national model.
Reciprocal Transformation Through ServiceThe story of a privileged student who volunteered for one month and stayed over a year—and what both sides gained from the exchange.
Key Takeaways for School Leaders- Every child has potential—what varies is awareness, opportunity, and who’s willing to invest in proving it.
- Language and cultural confidence can be bigger enrollment barriers than tuition for international families.
- When communities embrace collective responsibility, safety nets emerge that individual families cannot create alone.
- Cross-cultural service experiences teach values and perspective that no classroom curriculum can replicate.
- Advising families to prioritize education today over other investments plants seeds with generational returns.
La Touche: latouche-tg.org/
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