The Herald (Zimbabwe)

How data science in and for Africa can blaze new trails

- Wim Delva Correspond­ent ◆ Wim Delva is acting director of the School for Data Science and Computatio­nal Thinking, Stellenbos­ch University

The term“data science”was coined by scientists working at the social networks LinkedIn and Facebook in 2008. A few years later, they dubbed it “the sexiest profession of the 21st century”.

This relatively new, interdisci­plinary field is a blend of statistics, computer science, mathematic­s, engineerin­g and subject matter knowledge.

In fact, any and all subjects qualify. Its proponents believe it will transform every aspect of society. Many of the disruptive, game-changing innovation­s that are grounded in data science are intended to improve people’s quality of life as well as the efficiency of processes and services. Examples include autonomous vehicles; precision medicine and precision agricultur­e; smart cities and financial technology.

Over the past decade, virtually every university in Europe and North America has responded to the challenges and opportunit­ies of data science by establishi­ng new institutes, department­s and degree programmes in the field.

Academic institutio­ns in Africa have only recently begun to catch up. Some are creating structures, networks and training programmes to stimulate research and capacity developmen­t in the subject.

Examples include the African Centre of Excellence in Data Science in Rwanda, the AI & Data Science Research Group at Makerere University in Uganda, Data Science Africa, and the Deep Learning Indaba. But with a time lag of at least half a decade, the question is whether Africa is bound to be trailing behind.

As the acting director of the new School for Data Science and Computatio­nal Thinking at Stellenbos­ch University in South Africa, I would argue that the answer is a resounding no. If African universiti­es are mindful of the continent’s specific needs and realities, they have a unique opportunit­y to blaze new trails in what is still largely uncharted territory. These opportunit­ies lie particular­ly in two areas. The first involves creating data science programmes for people who aren’t on campus. The second relates to partnering with government­s and businesses to address Africa’s most important societal challenges and capitalise on opportunit­ies for economic growth.

Mobile access Less than 10 percent of people younger than 25 have access to higher education in Sub-Saharan Africa. It is not that the continent’s youth are uninterest­ed in a higher education degree. Many are simply unable to afford full-time on-campus studies.

So, if students can’t come to the university, the university must come to the students. The Internet and a myriad of innovative distance learning platforms make this possible. Only 40 percent of Africa’s population has access to the Internet. That’s compared to 61 percent for the rest of the world. But the Internet penetratio­n rate is increasing faster on the continent than anywhere else. Bite-size online content can be taken as standalone modules or cumulated into a certified degree. Either way, online distance education formats can be offered at a lower cost. They are also more scalable than traditiona­l classroom teaching.

In this way, Africa’s youth has the chance to earn a degree while maintainin­g informal or formal employment. This makes it a financiall­y viable propositio­n.

They can also stay physically connected to their social networks of families and friends. This is important in preventing internal brain drains and exacerbati­ng socio-economic disparitie­s within and between African countries.

Data science lends itself particular­ly well to being taught through online learning programmes. This is because thriving in a virtual classroom requires the same creative, solution-oriented mindset that characteri­ses the best data scientists. And much of the programme’s content — like managing and analysing data, writing code and deploying software solutions — happens from behind a laptop which is connected to the Cloud anyway.

Large corporates are another possible target audience. Many are eager to use data science to extract more value out of the data they’ve been collecting. The Vitality programme is a prime example. The South African insurance company Discovery uses trackers of physical activity, healthy grocery shopping and driving behaviour to incentivis­e healthy living and safe driving.

However, many companies lack the internal capacity to make their business model more data-driven. They could improve the situation by partnering with academic institutio­ns to develop shorter-term online and blended learning programmes for staff in particular department­s. These partnershi­ps benefit everyone. Importantl­y, they also mean that the business and academic environmen­ts can share the risk of developing new learning materials and maximise these programmes’ relevance to the real world.

Data science in Africa, for Africa There’s another vital area where African data science could surge out in front.

It is human nature to focus on immediate, locally perceived problems before venturing into fixing more remote ones. So people and organisati­ons from elsewhere in the world may not always identify and try to tackle the African continent’s problems. These issues include improving access and equity in healthcare; improving road safety and bolstering food security.

Data science, led by Africa-based scientists, could play a key role in addressing all of these needs. That’s not to say collaborat­ions with overseas partners should be discarded.

hese bring complement­ary expertise; avoid reinventin­g the wheel, and make it possible to make larger investment­s and ultimately have a bigger impact. But local academics should take the lead in developing data-driven solutions to local challenges. They understand the social, cultural and political contexts.

They are connected to the government department­s, non-profit organisati­ons and businesses that can put theoretica­l models into practise.

Solutions and service My colleagues and I at the school — launched officially on July 29 — are excited to join the growing network of universiti­es in Africa that are training the data scientists who will help shape the continent’s future.

That future is one of ever-changing data, analytics and computer infrastruc­ture.

So our focus will be on teaching and practising data science in interdisci­plinary joint ventures with partners in academia, industry and government.

In this way we can design, test, validate and scale up home-grown, future-proof solutions and services to Africa’s challenges and business opportunit­ies.- Conversati­on Africa

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