payments.
Previously, in order to access the wealth of knowledge in books, one
had to go to a physical library. Now the whole world is our library.
With a mobile phone that is connected to the Internet, we have access to
the world’s information at our fingertips. Using Google search, you can
research any topic and find relevant, factual data. Dictionaries,
encyclopedias and research materials are now all online, updated in
real-time, and changing the way we think about our world. Increasingly,
platforms like YouTube are serving as classrooms, where people can find
instructional aids and develop new skills on virtually any subject.
Technology has taken learning beyond the classroom, and advancement is
no longer limited to curriculums and test scores. The internet has
democratised access to information and created trailblazers from the
most unlikely backgrounds. Innovation, design, function, and solutions
are increasingly coming from African youth armed with a smartphone and
the desire to broaden their horizons.
Take the case of Osine and Anesi Ikhianosime, two amazing Nigerian
kids, who at the age of 9 and 11 respectively, taught themselves how to
write code and built a functional, fast browser for a feature and
low-end phones. In Namibia, 19-year-old Kapenda Ndimuwanakupa who
completed his education in a state-run secondary school in Windhoek, was
able to secure a media internship in Germany by “crowdfunding” to
partly cover his costs using a video that he posted on YouTube.
Technology is allowing teachers to expand their influence beyond the
classroom. With lessons on sites like YouTube as well as using video
conferencing platforms and chat platforms, they can provide lessons to
students and offer guidance, regardless of time and place. Learning, at
whatever age and for whatever purpose, can now be done using real-life,
real-time demonstrations; and mundane lessons can be brought to life
through the use of technology.
Technology will continue to drive the future and Africa has plenty to
gain from its far-reaching applications. Our most pressing challenges
can be solved in radically different ways, a lot quicker and more
cost-effectively with technology advancements like Artificial
Intelligence and Machine Learning. To bring the content to the forefront
of advancement, we must establish education that serves to prepare our
youth for the future; education that harnesses every tool possible to
solve problems.
Embracing innovation can help sub-Saharan Africa to bridge the
education gap that currently exists, as we witness considerable
acceleration in education. And this is already happening as Africans
break barriers through education and technology. Eneza Education, with
its reliance on SMS, is one such example. The private sector program
operating in Ghana, Kenya, Tanzania, and Zimbabwe provides students with
mobile access to lessons and quizzes connected to the national
curriculum
The next billion users of the technology will come from emerging markets
like Africa. This new phase will incorporate age-old principles with
new-age learning and will conquer frontiers to create a continent that
will stand shoulder to shoulder with the rest of the world. Leveraging
the power of technology in education is critical in making this happen.
Last week, we held our third Google for Nigeria event, and it
provided a great opportunity to reflect on how we are working to help
enable this new African reality.
The role of Google search is perhaps the most obvious interaction
that people have with Google in the educational space. But Google search
is just one of many programs and products designed to impact Africa and
Africans. There can be no sustainable way to leverage the power of
technology without skilled users and developers. Google has pledged to
train 10 million Africans by 2021, and 4 million have been trained so
far – two million of whom are Nigerians. We have also successfully
trained 15,000 developers and are committed to training 100,000 in
total.
We now have the tools to make sure no one is left behind. With
technology, we can create our own solutions, transform our reality, and
bring to life what seems impossible; challenging the norm and changing
the Africa narrative.
Juliet Ehimuan is Country Director at Google leading Google’s
business strategy in W/Africa and Next Billion Users initiative in
Africa.
Named Forbes top 20 power women in Africa, featured in the London
Business School Review as one of 30 people changing the world, and also
featured in the BBC Africa Power Women series; Juliet is a thought
leader on digital business strategy and leadership. She is the Founder
of Beyond Limits Africa, leadership and organizational capacity building
initiative. Links to the stories highlighted in this article can be
found online:
@jehimuan. Juliet was also featured as a Guardian Woman.
Technology
is having an increasingly transformational impact on education,
affecting a broad range of areas from how students learn, to how
educators enhance their own skills, enrich classroom environments; as
well as impacting how administrators manage grades, maintain security
and trackPages
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