In a public school in Panama, a group of students watches the teacher write code on a whiteboard. There are no computers in the classroom. No computer lab. The teacher does what they can with what they have: explaining programming concepts without anyone touching a keyboard.
That scene plays out in hundreds of public schools across the country.
Panama's digital divide in numbers
The reality is that not all Panamanian students have the same access to technology:
- Public schools in rural and indigenous areas often have zero functioning computers
- In marginalized urban areas, computer labs exist but equipment is usually outdated or broken with no budget for replacement
- The student-to-computer ratio in public schools is dramatically lower than in private schools
- Many students reach university without having used a computer regularly
It's not a capacity problem. It's an access problem. Public school students are just as capable as anyone else — they simply haven't had the tools.
The bridge: how Crezendo works
Crezendo isn't a school. We're the bridge between the device you no longer use and the student who needs it.
Here's how it works:
1. We receive donated equipment Individuals and companies in Panama and abroad donate laptops, desktops, tablets, phones, monitors, and accessories.
2. We repair and prepare them Our team evaluates each device, repairs what can be repaired, installs educational software, and gets everything ready for immediate use.
3. We channel them where they're needed most Equipment goes to our training centers and, through partnerships with educational organizations, to schools and communities that need them.
4. We train the users We don't just hand over equipment. We teach people how to use it. Workshops on introduction to technology, programming, computer maintenance, web design, office skills.
What happens when a student gets access to a computer
It's not magic. It's opportunity.
When a student who has never programmed sits in front of a code editor for the first time, something shifts. They discover they can create things. Solve problems. That technology isn't something only other people do — it's something they can do.
The results we've seen at Crezendo are consistent:
- Students landing their first tech job after completing a workshop
- Young people starting to earn income as freelancers after learning web development
- Adults improving their job position after training on digital tools
- Entire school communities accessing technology for the first time
Your donation reaches where it's needed
When you donate a device to Crezendo, it doesn't sit in a warehouse. The process is direct:
- The device arrives
- It gets evaluated and repaired (1-2 weeks typically)
- Educational software gets installed
- It's assigned to the next workshop cycle or a partner school
- A student uses it
No unnecessary intermediaries. No bureaucracy. The device goes from your hands to someone who needs it, with a technical preparation step in between.
What you can donate
Anything that can serve an educational purpose:
- Laptops — the most versatile donation
- Desktop computers — ideal for labs
- Tablets and iPads — perfect for younger students
- Monitors — for dual-screen workstations
- Keyboards, mice, cables, chargers — every accessory completes a setup
- Phones — used in repair and mobile development workshops
- Printers — always needed in educational centers
You don't need to be technical
You don't need to know if the device works or not. You don't need to format it. You don't need to bring the charger (though it helps). You just need to contact us.
We evaluate, repair, and prepare. You donate. We build the bridge.
How to donate
In Panama City: We arrange pickup. You provide the address, we provide the transport.
In the interior of the country: Ship to Crezendo's address via courier.
From abroad: Use our Miami address:
Alejandro Sánchez / RE577 15421 SW 26TH TER - RE577 Miami, FL 33185-4866 United States Phone: +1 305 848 1127
Message us on WhatsApp first to coordinate.
The student who needs you
Right now there's a student in a Panamanian public school who has never programmed. Never opened a code editor. Never designed something on a computer. Not because they can't — because they've never had the opportunity.
Your used equipment is that opportunity.
This isn't about charity. It's about giving access to tools that should be basic for everyone. Reach out and let's build the bridge.