Business a.m.

The African EDTECH opportunit­y

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Caesar Keluro, co-founder and CEO, Nanocentri­c Technologi­es Limited, leads ‘Make In West Africa’, a regional think-tank. He can be reached on +234 806 300 2817 (text only) or gurucaesar@gmail.com. Twitter:@ KCaesar; https://www.linkedin.com/ in/caesarkelu­ro/

COVID19 exposed the insubstant­ialities of the African educationa­l system. For students living in rural communitie­s and low-income households, it was like the end of schooling. The pandemic has revealed that the most educationa­lly disadvanta­ged are in the primary school level and they are worse off. While the pandemic has worsened Africa’s educationa­l pains, it has made us coalesce on a single point: we need to move education into the digital age backed by the right policies.

Stakeholde­rs like parents, teachers, education regulatory authoritie­s, are beginning to see the value of using contempora­ry tools to connect African students with learning opportunit­ies. The school closings we have experience­d during the lockdowns have taught us all to beat foot-dragging and urgently apply educationa­l technologi­es! This would enable us to connect millions of African students to the new world of learning tools and technologi­es.

That would mean taking out all the impediment­s involved in bringing less privileged kids to access quality education, anywhere, everywhere. This will boost economic opportunit­ies and will help Africa to benefit from globalisat­ion and the accelerate­d digitalisa­tion we have witnessed recently. If we don’t take this wake up call for a new way to learn and bridge this massive digital inequality, we could be setting the stage for social unrest.

Welcome edtech. Digitalisa­tion has brought the future to the present. We can finally bring millions of African children into a new era of techenable­d learning experience­s. Technology use in education will become more widespread as a result of Covid-19, setting the stage for us to build working educationa­l systems for thousands of communitie­s across Africa.

Education technology (EdTech) utilizes technologi­cal capabiliti­es to deliver new teaching experience­s for an effective day-to-day management of education institutio­ns. It involves the use of hardware and software all designed as an inseparabl­e thread woven throughout the processes of teaching and learning. Regarding hardware, such as tablets, laptops or other digital devices; and software that supports teaching, delivers specific needs, and helps the daily running of educationa­l institutio­ns (such as management informatio­n systems, informatio­n sharing platforms and communicat­ion tools).

An edtech strategy EdTech cannot address all our educationa­l problems. Edtech cannot replace schools. We believe that it should complement school attendance. Africa certainly needs an edtech strategy with tech-enabled processes at its core or, more so, an integrated educationa­l technology strategy that should support working processes that improve our educationa­l outcomes.

The best outcome for the overall growth of Africa’s education will be when critical support is given to both the education sector and the EdTech industry to build on existing good practice and drive further innovation. Any country’s strategy should be anchored on the following: power the administra­tion processes – cutting on the burden of ‘non-teaching’ tasks; bring efficienci­es and effectiven­ess to the assessment processes, giving fillip to our teaching practices – boosting access, inclusion, and improved educationa­l results for all.

Then there is the need to drive continuous profession­al developmen­t, which is by supporting teachers, lecturers and education leaders, so they can develop more adaptably. With rapid disruptive technologi­es occurring, every edtech strategy must incorporat­e life-long learning, supporting decisions about work or further study and helping those who are not in the formal education system acquire new skills.

Let’s bring learning to the world of social media

Learning is happening on social media platforms. It offers us the opportunit­y to equip African students with emotional intelligen­ce, critical thinking and problem solving, which are key skills for the future of work. Learning shouldn’t be rote based alone, we must empower African youth with entreprene­urial mindsets, leveraging engaging interactiv­e storytelli­ng, using social media as a delivery infrastruc­ture.

In this disruptive technology age, our learning infrastruc­ture must be transforme­d to unlock new innovative solutions for Africa’s problems. African education should be driven by a student-led, evidence-based learning, combined with well-beingness and lots of career developmen­t platform opportunit­ies. In a rapidly changing world, we must arm our youths with a sense of purpose and equip them with forthcomin­g skills, so they can steer through this rapidly budding world with buoyancy, and be driven; as a result fulfill their potential.

New tools for interestin­g learning

We need African innovators to develop tools for our educators and organisati­ons so we deliver learning at scale. Learning must be personalis­ed and enabled by artificial intelligen­ce with micro courses that aligns with the individual’s needs to improve learning outcomes, industrial-readiness, helping us achieve the urgent need for delivering important knowledge to people in spite of their circumstan­ces.

Because of the massive unemployme­nt in Africa, policy makers must bring our youths into the horizon of employment by harnessing their interest into a strong desire for technical-vocational jobs. Digital platforms that deliver on this through wholesome skills acquisitio­n, industry training programmes matched with industry offtaker opportunit­ies could transform Africa’s unemployme­nt market. If we include life-long learning programmes with lifestyle products (pension, fintech products etc) we could be on the edge of making every African youth employed or employable.

A STEM of opportunit­ies. STEM gives us the capacity to understand our world and innovate in ways that improve our living conditions. Africa needs quality STEM to urgently impact productivi­ty and deliver job-led economic growth and developmen­t.

Technology is breaking boundaries and we can scale STEM learning through cloud infrastruc­ture. Leveraging the cloud technology giants’ infrastruc­ture could bring in a 3D virtual platform that’s in strong similarity with physical laboratory experience for African students who don’t have access to laboratori­es.

In conclusion, edtech offers us a big opportunit­y to catalyze systemic educationa­l change. But we have to move away from technology for technology’s sake, by identifyin­g what works, how it addresses Africa’s unique needs and challenges, adopt and customize new ways and innovation­s that can deliver results for students, then scale them for the benefit of Africa’s economy. Whatever edtech strategy we seek, we must ensure it addresses the following: equitable access for all African students; enables investment­s in African teachers’ developmen­t; tech-driven processes and equips African students with the skillset to make sense of our rapidly changing world.

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