Daily Trust

Google to train 200,000 students in Nigeria, others

- From Christiana T. Alabi, Lagos

Google has announced that it is expanding its Digital Skills for Africa programme by engaging local organisati­ons to train 200,000 students in Nigeria, Kenya and South Africa in one year.

CS First, the Google programme created by educators and computer scientists, targets children aged nine to 16 years. It introduces coding and computer science to students in a collaborat­ive and creative club environmen­t.

The CS First club members build projects in Scratch (scratch.mit.edu), a blocksbase­d programmin­g language.

It said the training will be delivered through 26 collaborat­ing organisati­ons across Nigeria, Kenya and South Africa. For areas with limited access to the internet and limited devices, CS First may be delivered through CS Unplugged.

The head of brand and reputation, Sub-saharan Africa, Mojolaoluw­a AderemiMak­inde, said the training programmes seek to improve the children’s confidence in interactin­g with computers and their overall confidence and willingnes­s to try new things.

She said, “With growing internet penetratio­n across Africa, and the increasing trend of kids interactin­g online, Google believes it is important to provide helpful informatio­n to children and parents to enable them to take appropriat­e measures to stay safe online.

“The training takes learnings from Google’s Be Internet Awesome campaign and the content is carefully drafted to provide helpful tips to kids and parents, and informatio­n on useful tools like Google’s Family Link,” she noted.

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