The fund awards scholarships to students attending primary and secondary private schools and provides material donations to small public schools. In the first year of operation $2,890 in scholarships were awarded. Scholarships for 2007-08 exceeded $3,500. The issuance of scholarships in 2008–09, exceeding $5,000, was described by the Peace Corps Micronesia Country Director as "particularly important" for expanding education opportunities because students living outside Micronesia's four state capitals have very limited access to formal education options. A total of 21 scholarships were issued for the 2010–11 school year. South Carolina State Senators
Glenn McConnell and
Robert Ford of
Charleston,
South Carolina drew attention to Habele, when the charity announced $7,500 in scholarships for sixteen elementary and high school students in 2009. Louis J. Rama, a senior consul at the
Federated States of Micronesia Consulate on
Guam, called for the expansion of this and other programs supporting low-income students through tuition assistance. The donor-financed tuition payments awarded by Habele are a form of private vouchers. Unlike public
school vouchers, private vouchers are not funded by the government. The use of private vouchers for low-income students has been described as a tool for facilitating
education reform without becoming immersed in politics. Several of the annual tuition scholarships are named for individual Americans whose life or work Habele cites as having "embodied the best of the longstanding U.S.-Micronesian partnership.". These include a
United States Navy Doctor, a former official with the
Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands, and a former
Peace Corps Volunteer who drowned while rescuing a child in Chuuk. ==Language==