A small kitchen.
A big idea.
In a quiet farming village in Cambodia, three students are learning to build websites, design posters, and create real things with technology — one project at a time.
What is PSC?
A place to show students what they want to know
PSC stands for Practical Skills Community. It is not a traditional school. It is a place where students learn by doing real work — designing, building, and creating things that matter to their community.
PSC is part of Tech Club, an after-school program at WebTech Academy in Tevea Meanchey Village. Students attend public school during the day and come to Tech Club to learn technology skills that they cannot find anywhere else in their village.
"Everybody can join. The skills we learn here are useful in real life."
What students build
Real skills. Real projects.
Websites
Students design and build real websites — including this one.
Apps
Some students are building mobile apps for their community.
Posters & Design
Students create posters and graphics for the school and village.
Our Village
Tevea Meanchey Village
Our village is small and quiet — about 50 to 100 families living in Thpong District, Kampong Speu Province, roughly 1.5 hours from Phnom Penh. Most families here are farmers. Rice fields stretch around the village. Some people travel a short distance to work in factories nearby.
Before Tech Club, there was no place in this village to learn technology. Students who wanted those opportunities had to travel far from home. Now, they can learn right here.
Our Team
The people behind PSC
Teacher Bopha
School Director
Runs the school day-to-day. Teaches English. Co-founder.
Teacher Ory
Tech & IT Lead
Teaches beginner and intermediate students across primary and high school levels.
Teacher Jeff
CamCOE Representative
Founder & Tech Club teacher. American, based in the village. Teaches for free.
Nara
Website Builder
Student. Builds the PSC website.
Leakna
Website Builder
Student. Co-builds the PSC website.
Nary
App Builder
Student. Builds the PSC app.
Why It Matters
Excited. Curious. Ready to share.
When the students of Tech Club joined, they felt two things: excitement and curiosity. They had never had an opportunity like this before — and now they are building something real.
Their hope is simple: that more students will join, and that people around the world will see what young people in a small Cambodian village can create.
"We want to share our work with the world."