Daily Dispatch

Millions of Africans rely on TV education

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Five-year-old Kenyan student Miguel Munene sits between his parents, holding their hands as he watches cartoon characters teaching him to pronounce “fish”.

The television has replaced Munene’s teachers and classmates after the government shut schools indefinite­ly in March to curb the spread of the novel coronaviru­s.

They are closed until at least January.

Many children don’t have the option to learn online — the United Nations children’s agency Unicef says at least half of Sub-Saharan Africa’s schoolchil­dren do not have internet access.

So some, like Munene, watch a cartoon made by Tanzanian non-profit organisati­on Ubongo, which offers TV and radio content for free to African broadcaste­rs. “Other programmes are just for fun, but Ubongo is helping,” Miguel’s mother Celestine Wanjiru said. “He can now differenti­ate a lot of shapes and colours, in English and Swahili.”

In March, programmes by Ubongo — the Kiswahili word for brain — were broadcast to an area covering about 12 million households in nine countries, said Iman Lipumba, Ubongo’s head of communicat­ions. That rose to 17 million in 20 countries by August.

“The Covid-19 pandemic has really forced us to rapidly grow,” Lipumba said.

A group of artists, innovators and educators set up Ubongo TV in Tanzania in 2014.

It has received around $4 million in grants since, and earned $700,000 from YouTube, product sales, character licensing, and co-production of programmes.

For Munene and other schoolchil­dren, programmes like Ubongo’s are their only option to learn for now.

Kenya’s education ministry says schools can only reopen when the number of Covid-19 cases drops substantia­lly.

Kenya has had more than 36,000 confirmed cases and more than 620 deaths, health ministry data showed.

But television cannot completely replace teaching. “We are hoping that they open soon,” Nyaga said. —

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