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This page is meant to serve as a global public community based human development exchange program support space that provides resources for sustainable human development through shared global experiences through the groups linked to the page.

24/08/2021

This is how an igloo looks like when you build a fire inside. The fire inside melts the inner layer of ice and the cold outside refreezes it, adding a layer of insulation that can warm the igloo up to 60°F on the inside while it's -50°F outside.
An igloo keeps you warm more efficiently than a mammoth fur. This is what has enabled Inuit, the people of the Arctic region, to live in this region for over 5,000 years.

21/04/2018

Why would anyone who claims to care about the world’s poorest children try to shut down their schools? It’s strange and sad, but several British charities, in cahoots with some British unions, are…

Integration of technology in the classroom is inevitable as technology continues to dominate in all industries including...
21/04/2018

Integration of technology in the classroom is inevitable as technology continues to dominate in all industries including healthcare, finance as well as retail to name a few. It is clear however that schools in Africa are lagging behind when it comes to adopting new technologies in the classroom. Educators and learners are faced with hurdles and there is a general lack of support for education technology initiatives.

In the education field, teachers have to use new digital tools and apps in order to efficiently solve key problems at classroom level. This will not only improve teaching but it will also enhance learning.

Technology can make education systems more efficient by helping teachers and administrators streamline routine tasks and improve assessments and data collection. However, it is clear that the more developed and middle-income countries have made significant investments in ICT in education while lower-income countries struggle.

Infrastructure-Africa’s education infrastructure needs refurbishing. This includes providing robust wi-fi to support one-to-one learning is a significant financial challenge. Using tablets or mobile phones as a means to teach can drastically improve and impact the way learning is delivered.

Lack of funding-Like with everything else, funding is important. Implementing technology solutions in the classroom is costly and a budget needs to be put in place in order to introduce these new educational trends and technologies.

Training and development- With the devices and connectivity set and ready, Teachers need to know how to use them effectively. There needs to be appropriate teacher training and development provided and it needs to be long enough for them to grasp the concepts behind teaching with technology, so that they have hands-on experience using the technology,

With all of that in mind, IT News Africa will host the 3rd edition of the Education Innovation Summit on 31 May 2018 at the Hilton, Sandton, South Africa where education policy development representatives, school principals, Academics, University Chancellors, amongst others influencers will share their experiences on overcoming barriers to technology adoption in education.

The summit is designed to bring together innovation leaders and the academic community to accelerate innovative thinking in education. It will further provide discussion topics about cutting-edge education and technology challenges facing the industry today.

Other key topics include:

Change management: administrators and educational technologies- narrowing the divide.
Fostering creativity through introducing design thinking to the educational process.
Practical challenges of digital learning: getting the balance right for future-thinking.
Transforming education: the power of ICT policies.
Navigating the roadblocks to innovation in education.
Transforming Education: The power of ICT Policies.
Reimagining the Role of Technology in Higher Education.
Innovation in Education: what works, what doesn’t, and what to do about it?
ICT Integration in Education – Incorporation for Teaching & Learning Improvement.
Creating an e-learning strategy that works.

Africa’s journey to overcoming educational barriers to technology adoption. Integration of technology in the classroom is inevitable as technology continues

At the dawn of independence, incoming African leaders were quick to prioritize education on their development agendas. A...
21/04/2018

At the dawn of independence, incoming African leaders were quick to prioritize education on their development agendas. Attaining universal primary education, they maintained, would help post-independence Africa lift itself out of abject poverty.

As governments began to build schools and post teachers even to the farthest corners of the continent, with help from religious organizations and other partners, children began to fill the classrooms and basic education was under way.

Africa’s current primary school enrolment rate is above 80% on average, with the continent recording some of the biggest increases in elementary school enrolment globally in the last few decades, according to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), which is tasked with coordinating international cooperation in education, science, culture and communication. More children in Africa are going to school than ever before.

Yet despite the successes in primary school enrolment, inequalities and inefficiencies remain in this critical sector.

According to the African Union (AU), the recent expansion in enrolments “masks huge disparities and system dysfunctionalities and inefficiencies” in education subsectors such as preprimary, technical, vocational and informal education, which are severely underdeveloped.

It is widely accepted that most of Africa’s education and training programs suffer from low-quality teaching and learning, as well as inequalities and exclusion at all levels. Even with a substantial increase in the number of children with access to basic education, a large number still remain out of school.

A newly released report by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), “Income Inequality Trends in sub-Saharan Africa: Divergence, Determinants and Consequences”, identifies the unequal distribution of essential facilities, such as schools, as one the drivers of wide income disparities.

Ayodele Odusola, the lead editor of the report and UNDP’s chief economist, makes the following point: “Quality education is key to social mobility and can thus help reduce poverty, although it may not necessarily reduce [income] inequality.”

To address education inequality, he says, governments must invest heavily in child and youth development through appropriate education and health policies and programmes.

Higher-quality education, he says, improves the distribution of skilled workers, and state authorities can use this increased supply to build a fairer society in which all people, rich or poor, have equal opportunities. As it is now, only the elites benefit from quality education.

“Wealthy leaders in Africa send their children to study in the best universities abroad, such as Harvard. After studies, they come back to rule their countries, while those from poor families who went to public schools would be lucky to get a job even in the public sector,” notes Odusola.

Another challenge facing policy makers and pedagogues is low secondary and tertiary enrolment. Angela Lusigi, one of the authors of the UNDP report, says that while Africa has made significant advances in closing the gap in primary-level enrolments, both secondary and tertiary enrolments lag behind.

Only four out of every 100 children in Africa is expected to enter a graduate and postgraduate institution, compared to 36 out of 100 in Latin America and 14 out of 100 in South and West Asia.

“In fact, only 30 to 50% of secondary-school-aged children are attending school, while only 7 to 23% of tertiary-school-aged youth are enrolled. This varies by sub-region, with the lowest levels being in Central and Eastern Africa and the highest enrolment levels in Southern and North Africa,” Lusigi, who is also the strategic advisor for UNDP Africa, told Africa Renewal.

According to Lusigi, many factors account for the low transition from primary to secondary and tertiary education. The first is limited household incomes, which limit children’s access to education. A lack of government investment to create equal access to education also plays a part.

“The big push that led to much higher primary enrolment in Africa was subsidized schooling financed by both public resources and development assistance,” she said. “This has not yet transitioned to providing free access to secondary- and tertiary-level education.”

Another barrier to advancing from primary to secondary education is the inability of national institutions in Africa to ensure equity across geographical and gender boundaries. Disabled children are particularly disadvantaged.

“Often in Africa, decisions to educate children are made within the context of discriminatory social institutions and cultural norms that may prevent young girls or boys from attending school,” says Lusigi.

Regarding gender equality in education, large gaps exist in access, learning achievement and advanced studies, most often at the expense of girls, although in some regions boys may be the ones at a disadvantage.

UNESCO’s Institute for Statistics reports that more girls than boys remain out of school in sub-Saharan Africa, where a girl can expect to receive only about nine years of schooling while boys can expect 10 years (including some time spent repeating classes).

More girls than boys drop out of school before completing secondary or tertiary education in Africa. Globally, women account for two-thirds of the 750 million adults without basic literacy skills.

Then there is the additional challenge of Africa’s poorly resourced education systems, the difficulties ranging from the lack of basic school infrastructure to poor-quality instruction. According to the Learning Barometer of the Brookings Institution, a US-based think tank, up to 50% of the students in some countries are not learning effectively.

Results from regional assessments by the UN indicate “poor learning outcomes in sub-Saharan Africa, despite upward trend in average learning achievements.” Many children who are currently in school will not learn enough to acquire the basic skills needed to lead successful and productive lives. Some will leave school without a basic grasp of reading and mathematics.

Overcoming

The drivers of inequality in education are many and complex, yet the response to these challenges revolves around simple and sound policies for inclusive growth, the eradication of poverty and exclusion, increased investment in education and human development, and good governance to ensure a fairer distribution of assets.

With an estimated 364 million Africans between the ages of 15 and 35, the continent has the world’s youngest population, which offers an immense opportunity for investing in the next generation of African leaders and entrepreneurs. Countries can start to build and upgrade education facilities and provide safe, non-violent, inclusive and effective learning environments for all.

The AU, keeping in mind that the continent’s population will double in the next 25 years, is seeking through its Continental Education Strategy for Africa 2016–2025 to expand access not just to quality education, but also to education that is relevant to the needs of the continent.

The AU Commission deputy chairperson, Thomas Kwesi Quartey, says governments must address the need for good education and appropriate skills training to stem rising unemployment.

Institutions of higher learning in Africa, he says, need to review and diversify their systems of education and expand the level of skills to make themselves relevant to the demands of the labour market.

“Our institutions are churning out thousands of graduates each year, but these graduates cannot find jobs because the education systems are traditionally focused on preparing graduates for white-collar jobs, with little regard to the demands of the private sector, for innovation or entrepreneurship,” said Quartey during the opening of the European Union–Africa Business Forum in Brussels, Belgium, in June 2017.

He noted that if African youths are not adequately prepared for the job market, “Growth in technical fields that support industrialization, manufacturing and development in the value chains will remain stunted.” Inequality’s inclusion among the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG 10: Reduced Inequalities) serves as an important reminder to leaders in Africa to take the issue seriously.

For a start, access to early childhood development programmes, especially for children from disadvantaged backgrounds, can help reduce inequality by ensuring that all children begin formal schooling with strong foundations.

The UNDP, through its new strategic plan (for 2018 through 2021), will work to deliver development solutions for diverse contexts and a range of development priorities, including poverty eradication, jobs and livelihoods, governance and institutional capacity and disaster preparedness and management.

UNITED NATIONS, Apr 17 2018 (IPS) - At the dawn of independence, incoming African leaders were quick to prioritize education on their development agendas. Attaining universal primary education, they maintained, would help post-independence Africa lift itself out of abject poverty.

While education worldwide, especially for girls, has improved, the gap between Africa and the rest of the world is wide ...
21/04/2018

While education worldwide, especially for girls, has improved, the gap between Africa and the rest of the world is wide and the continent doesn’t appear to be catching up.

Jakkie Cilliers & Stellah Kwasifo

In fact, it is falling further behind.

From 1960 to 2015, the gap between the average number of years of education obtained by African adults aged 25 and above and that of the rest of the world increased from two to three years.

Today African adults have, on average, five years of education while the rest of the world has around eight.

Globally the disparities are large.


Adults in North America and Europe have 13 and 11 years, respectively, while those in South Asia have seven years.

Education levels are improving everywhere, but more slowly in Africa than anywhere else. Quality of education aside, countries now take less time to improve average years of education than in the past.

Whereas it took around 17 years to increase average education levels in poor countries by one year in the 1960s and 1970s, it now takes around 11 years.

However, while the rate of progress has generally sped up, Africa is falling further behind and will continue to do so, in part because of rapid population growth.

There are many well-known benefits of education. First, education affects demography through improved health (it reduces mortality) and reduced fertility rates (there are fewer children per female within childbearing age, meaning parents can better look after their children).

In turn, demography affects improved education systems and opportunities in terms of size and characteristics of the school-going age of the population.

Slower growth in pupil numbers allows poorer countries to cope with the requirement for more schools, books, teachers and other facilities.

Second, educational gains lead to improved productivity.

A more literate and skilled workforce is more productive and can be engaged in higher value-add activities.

For example, with grade 12, it may be possible to staff a call centre; with Grades 4 to 6, manual labour is probably the only option.

While education worldwide, especially for girls, has improved, the gap between Africa and the rest of the world is wide and the

The African Development Bank (AfDB) and the African Institute of Mathematics and Sciences (AIMS) have initiated a landma...
21/04/2018

The African Development Bank (AfDB) and the African Institute of Mathematics and Sciences (AIMS) have initiated a landmark relationship aimed at building an industry-led research institution in the league of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

The aim of the partnership programme is to ensure that each of the 54 African countries has an additional 100-250 world-class specialists in mathematical sciences by 2020 to lead research and innovation in various fields. The total cost of the partnership programme is projected at $54.685 million.

Former President of Nigeria, Olusegun Obasanjo, led a delegation of the of AIMS to a meeting with AfDB in Abidjan, where a 10-year partnership proposal was made to build mathematical and scientific capacity in Africa, strengthen industry linkages, and create a competitive industrial and innovative space.

“If we are going to make substantial progress in industrialisation within the next decade, be truly visible in the rapidly unfolding fourth industrial revolution and rise effectively to the challenge of creating decent and sustainable jobs for our youths, the continent must produce well motivated and well trained young innovators,” said Obasanjo.

Meanwhile, the bank’s President Akinwumi Adesina stressed the need for Africa to develop with pride and pledged the AfDB’s commitment to build a partnership with AIMS that would allow the continent to compete with the rest of the world. Read more: Quality research can attract more energy economists in Africa

Adesina said: “We must recognise that the world is moving fast. Consequently, how can Africa position itself in a rapidly changing world so that it doesn’t become disadvantaged? We are a knowledge-driven Bank and think our partnership will help us build quantum knowledge for growth. We are excited about the focus on young people. We also like the regional integration dimension of the work that AIMS does.”

The African Development Bank and the African Institute of Mathematics and Sciences have initiated a landmark relationship aimed at building an industry-led research institution in the league of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

21/01/2018

Figures show 16% rise in those facing housing debt and a doubling of evictions

06/01/2018

Edunnection is a consortium of advisors and experts who help individuals, groups, companies, industr

06/01/2018

Almost or nearly as described, but not completely or according to strict definition of AFRICA.

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