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Impact Stories

From First Login to First Job: How the Pieces Connect

How TEEI's integrated pipeline — learning, language, mentorship, and employment — helps displaced Ukrainians rebuild careers in new countries.

Professional woman working on laptop in modern office environment
Photo by MART PRODUCTION on Pexels

Most nonprofits run programs. TEEI runs a pipeline.

The difference matters. A program teaches one skill. A pipeline connects stages: learning, language, mentorship, employment. When one stage hands off to the next, outcomes compound.

This is how thousands of displaced Ukrainians are going from first login to first job in new countries. Not through scattered resources, but through an integrated system where everything works together.

Viktoriia reflecting on how the integrated approach changed everything
Viktoriia Z. reflects on the move from displacement to renewed job confidence.

The Problem with Disconnected Help

Imagine you’ve fled a war. You land in Germany with a degree in economics and ten years of experience. You need:

  • New skills that match the local job market
  • Language ability to interview and work
  • Career guidance to navigate an unfamiliar system
  • Connections to actual opportunities

Now imagine getting each of these from a different organization, with different applications, different timelines, no coordination. By the time you’ve figured out the system, months have passed. Savings are gone. You take whatever job you can find—usually far below your qualifications.

This is the default experience. TEEI built something different.

Stage 1: Structured Skills (The Upskilling and Employment Program)

The pipeline starts with learning. Through DataCamp, Ukrainians get free access to professional courses in data analytics, Python, SQL, machine learning, and more.

This isn’t random content. The curriculum targets skills that employers actually hire for. Completion rates matter: students must finish courses to stay enrolled. Progress is tracked. Certificates are issued.

More than 20,000 Ukrainians have enrolled. The program now represents one of the largest cohorts DataCamp has ever run with a nonprofit partner.

But skills alone don’t land jobs. Especially when you can’t speak the local language.

Oksana during a Language Connect practice session
Oksana K. represents the language-practice stage that turns study into usable speech.

Stage 2: Language Fluency (Language Connect for Ukraine)

Technical skills get you considered. Language gets you hired.

Language Connect pairs Ukrainians with volunteer conversation partners for free 1-to-1 video sessions. More than 8,000 learners use the platform. Volunteers come from everywhere—teachers, engineers, retirees, students—offering English, German, French, Spanish, Polish, and more.

The magic isn’t the vocabulary. It’s the practice. Learners work through real scenarios: job interviews, workplace conversations, parent-teacher meetings. They stumble, correct, repeat. Confidence builds.

One learner said it best: “The first time I understood my son’s teacher without translating in my head, I cried.”

Stage 3: Career Mentorship (Mentors for Ukraine)

Skills plus language still isn’t enough. How do you write a CV for a new country? How do you explain a career gap caused by war? What does professionalism look like here vs. there?

Mentors for Ukraine connects Ukrainians with experienced professionals for free 1-to-1 career mentorship. The platform matches mentees with mentors by field, goals, and availability.

Mentors aren’t therapists. They’re navigators. They review CVs, mock interview, explain unwritten workplace rules, make introductions. Some relationships last one session; others become ongoing guidance.

More than 1,000 mentor-mentee pairs have connected through the platform.

Dana speaking about how mentorship shaped her career transition
Dana A. shows how mentorship converts uncertainty into career clarity.

Stage 4: Employment Outcomes

The pipeline’s purpose is employment—not certificates, not session counts, not vanity metrics.

Tracking outcomes is harder than tracking enrollments. Employment happens after people leave the programs. But the signals are strong: mentees reporting new jobs, DataCamp completers citing their certificates in LinkedIn updates, Language Connect learners passing interviews they couldn’t have attempted months before.

The system compounds. Someone who only learned Python might still be job-hunting. Someone who learned Python AND practiced English AND got mentored on CV writing has three levers pulling them forward.

Why Integration Works

Each TEEI program runs on the same Kintell platform: volunteer profiles, scheduling, video calls, mobile apps. Learners don’t start over between stages. Data flows between programs. Someone finishing DataCamp gets nudged toward Language Connect. Someone building language confidence gets introduced to Mentors for Ukraine.

This is infrastructure, not heroics. The platform scales because it’s built to scale.

Corporate partners see it clearly: their employees can mentor, teach languages, or support upskilling—all through one system, with unified impact reporting.

Penny reflecting on the meaning of mentoring through TEEI
Penny M. represents the volunteer layer that keeps the system moving.

The Volunteer Layer

Every stage relies on volunteers:

  • DataCamp provides the courses, but TEEI volunteers help with onboarding and support
  • Language Connect is 100% volunteer-powered—400+ conversation partners
  • Mentors for Ukraine matches 1,000+ volunteer mentors with mentees

Volunteers don’t need credentials. They need fluency (for language) or experience (for mentoring) and willingness to show up. The platform handles scheduling, matching, and logistics.

Most volunteers give 2-4 hours per month. That’s enough. When hundreds of people each give a few hours, thousands of Ukrainians move forward.

For Partners and Donors

The pipeline runs on infrastructure. Your support maintains the platforms, recruits volunteers, and expands outreach to new learners.

Corporate partners integrate skills-based volunteering into CSR programs. Employees mentor, teach languages, or support upskilling while companies get measurable ESG metrics.

Individual donors power the connection layer—the technology and coordination that makes 20,000+ learner relationships work without heavy manual overhead.

Every dollar supports the full journey. Not just one program, but the handoffs between them.

The Outcome

Displaced professionals don’t need charity. They need a path back to the careers they’ve already built.

TEEI’s pipeline provides that path: skills that match real jobs, language practice that builds real confidence, mentorship that navigates real systems.

From first login to first job. That’s what integration makes possible.


TEEI’s integrated programme path has already reached 20,000+ Ukrainians across training, language practice, and mentoring. People who want to support that full route can help fund the infrastructure behind it, contribute time directly as volunteers, or explore corporate partnerships that turn employee expertise into sustained programme capacity.


The Educational Equality Institute (TEEI) is a nonprofit headquartered in Norway with US 501(c)(3) status. Learn more at theeducationalequalityinstitute.org.

Each stage of the pipeline has its own story. The DataCamp partnership covers how 10,000+ Ukrainians gained free data science training and what career outcomes followed. The Language Connect for Ukraine launch explains how the conversation-practice programme was built from scratch. And for mentors considering joining, what it’s like to mentor a Ukrainian professional describes exactly what happens in a typical 45-minute session—no preparation required.

Published by The Educational Equality Institute.

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More from this reporting stream

  1. What It's Like to Mentor a Ukrainian Professional December 7, 2025 / 8 min read
  2. Supporting Ukrainian Learners with DataCamp and TEEI January 18, 2024 / 5 min read
  3. Employment Among Ukrainian Refugees March 22, 2023 / 5 min read

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