NewGlobe – Tech | Business | Economy https://techeconomy.ng Tech | Business | Economy Mon, 18 Aug 2025 07:18:59 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://techeconomy.ng/wp-content/uploads/2025/06/cropped-256Px-32x32.png NewGlobe – Tech | Business | Economy https://techeconomy.ng 32 32 These Five Organisations are Reaching Africa’s Out-of-School Children through Innovation https://techeconomy.ng/these-five-organisations-are-reaching-africas-out-of-school-children-through-innovation/ https://techeconomy.ng/these-five-organisations-are-reaching-africas-out-of-school-children-through-innovation/#comments Mon, 18 Aug 2025 07:18:59 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=165338 Just days ago, on 12 August, the world marked International Youth Day, a global celebration of young people’s potential and a reminder of the investment needed to secure it.

For Africa, home to the world’s youngest population, the occasion rang with both promise and urgency.

In sub-Saharan Africa alone, more than 98 million young people, according to UNESCO, are either missing out on schooling altogether or trapped in classrooms that offer little beyond rote learning.

The result is a silent but devastating deficit, not of potential but of opportunity. Every untaught lesson and every unopened book chips away at the continent’s capacity to innovate, compete, and grow.

Across the continent, a new generation of home-grown organisations is reimagining how Africa learns.

Their methods are as diverse as the landscapes they serve, from Lagos start-ups deploying gamified mobile learning to Kenyan innovators delivering lessons via basic SMS in areas where internet remains a luxury.

These initiatives do more than patch holes in broken systems.

They are laying the foundations for a different future, one where technology, creativity and local insight combine to give every child a fighting chance.

1. NewGlobe

Leading the pack is NewGlobe, which operates as an evidence-backed partner for public sector education reform.

With presence in Nigeria, Kenya, Liberia, Rwanda and Liberia, NewGlobe, in partnership with different governments, has equipped over 2.3 million children and nearly 35,000 teachers across more than 8,000 schools in Africa.

They also provide teachers with resources to improve teaching and organise training workshops.

This approach has shown tremendous results in Nigerian states like Lagos, Kwara, Jigawa, Edo, Bayelsa and many more.

2. Ubongo

Founded in 2013, the Tanzanian-based non-profit organisation aimed to bridge the gap in access to quality education through multi-platform solutions. Its education platform allows teachers to provide education regardless of the location, ensuring pupils aren’t left out of good education.

They also turn learning into an adventure through their educational comics.

3. Foondamate

By focusing on the direct needs of learners, Foondamate provides high-quality lessons and resources to high school students via popular chat applications like Facebook Messenger and WhatsApp.

Headquartered in South Africa, Foondamate leverages advanced natural language processing and machine learning to help previously excluded students in Africa access quality education and excel among their global peers.

4. Edves

Due to the high cost of establishing and running a standard school, many schools are unable to afford this.

Edves offers an all-in-one school management software that automates administrative tasks, helps to optimise the school’s resources, and provides valuable data insights.

Operating from Nigeria, its software is used by over 1,200 schools across Africa. Edve’s success demonstrates that to transform an education system, you don’t only focus on the individuals but the ecosystem that supports them.

5. Eneza Education:

Located in Kenya, Eneza Education aims to provide affordable and accessible education to underserved students in rural areas.

They offer millions of learners across Africa personalised learning experiences through their mobile phones at a low cost.

Through SMS based delivery, Eneza Education is delivering world-class education to African students regardless of their location, even where there is poor access to the internet.

The future, without a doubt, is digital, but also better collaboration. The work of these organisations shows that transforming Africa’s education system requires a mix of innovation, accessibility, and a deep understanding of local realities.

By leveraging technology to break down endemic barriers to education, they are giving millions of children a chance to learn and building a generation capable of competing on the global stage.

If sustained and scaled, their efforts would set the continent on a better trajectory, ensuring that Africa’s greatest resource, its people, are equipped with the knowledge and skills to build a prosperous and inclusive future.

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A Better Way to Learn: A Case Study of NewGlobe’s Blueprint https://techeconomy.ng/a-better-way-to-learn-a-case-study-of-newglobes-blueprint/ https://techeconomy.ng/a-better-way-to-learn-a-case-study-of-newglobes-blueprint/#respond Tue, 05 Aug 2025 17:59:40 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=164469 In the heart of Yenagoa, Adonye, a young boy, sat quietly at the back of his classroom for two years. His uniform was crisp, his eyes alert.

Despite showing up every day, he marvelled at the chalk scribble and watched the teacher diligently, but couldn’t read a single word. Not because he wasn’t bright or eager, but because he could not comprehend the teacher’s explanation of the concepts.

Sadly, the system around him wasn’t enabling his potential. Adonye’s story mirrors the experience of millions of children across Nigeria.

While the rest of the world is making giant strides to close the gap between access, literacy and numeracy, Nigeria is in crisis. With over 18 million out-of-school children, the shortfall continues to stifle multidimensional poverty across the states.

This has resounding implications for socioeconomic development. To make matters worse, a 2025 studies show that over 70 percent of Nigerian children aged seven to fourteen may not be able to read a simple sentence.

The challenge causes rippling challenges to both the out-of-school situation and the shocks witnessed in higher levels of the national education programme.

On the part of the parents, they are often demotivated about their ward’s academic performance and stress that poor academic outcomes do not deflect the opportunity cost of their wards helping with chores and family obligations. This leads to high levels of absenteeism.

Teachers are also under immense pressure to complete the syllabus without breaking down the life-changing concepts in the curriculum into comprehensible forms.

Unfortunately, the real emergency lies not only in access but in outcomes. States are making efforts to close the access gap, yet the impact will resonate when consistent structures and support learning systems are complementary, data-driven, measurable and scalable.

For years, the education sector in Nigeria has grappled with significant challenges, including teacher demotivation, the gross deficit in the use of technology in schools, and teacher advancement programmes. This compounds the situation as students struggle with unavailable, nonchalant, and less resourceful teachers to guide them into their future.

Sources say the ratio between primary school teachers is grossly high at one teacher to 100, as against the global standard of 1:25.

This further sabotages close engagement with students who lag behind on profound learning concepts. It can only be bridged with a combination of technology and resourceful teachers.

Amidst the concerning quagmire, there is a ray of hope. Policymakers and education leaders are embracing bold reforms, and a growing number of states are investing in solutions that prioritise measurable learning gains. There is now a real opportunity to turn the tide by building systems that ensure every child learns, not just increase enrolment figures.

A Smarter Approach

One of the most promising developments in the country is the emergence of a new model of public education reform, pioneered in partnership with NewGlobe.

This approach centres on foundational learning, focusing on literacy and numeracy in the early years, and uses data-driven technology, structured pedagogy, and ongoing teacher support to drive transformation from within.

NewGlobe’s model is based on practical implementation. Teachers receive electronic devices with scripted lesson guides aligned to the national curriculum. They are trained and made to grasp the importance of their role in developing a productive and sustainable society.

These tools enable consistency in delivery, particularly in classrooms where teaching quality has historically varied. Teachers also receive daily coaching and feedback, creating a culture of accountability and professional growth.

School leaders and state officials access real-time data dashboards, which track attendance, lesson completion, and pupil progress, helping them make evidence-based decisions on the go.

The method doesn’t attempt to reinvent the wheel; it simply makes the system work as intended. It synergises all levels of the education chain, from the teacher in front of the classroom to the policymakers overseeing the system. And in several Nigerian states, it is already showing measurable results.

Where Change is Happening

Bayelsa State offers one of the most compelling examples of this transformation. Through BayelsaPRIME, the state launched a focused intervention that brought structure and technology into the public school system.

Within nineteen weeks, the number of Primary One pupils unable to read a single word fell by 20 percentage points. Enrolment surged from 25,000 to over 40,000 pupils, driven by renewed public confidence.

Teachers now walk into classrooms with the tools they need to succeed, and learners, like the boy in Yenagoa, are finally thriving.

Now, Adonye is among the many students in Bayelsa who are not only becoming better at their studies but also willing to go to school to learn more. The horizon is vast and limitless for them.

In Lagos, the EKOEXCEL programme has helped the state move from poor performance to national leadership in learning outcomes. Learning deprivation dropped by over a third, and more than one million children are now being taught using a standardised, tech-enabled method. Teachers who once relied solely on improvisation are now equipped with smart devices and clear lesson plans. Pupil performance in national exams has significantly improved, and classroom engagement is stronger than ever.

In Edo State, within eleven weeks, it witnessed three times the rate of numeracy improvement and doubled the gains in literacy. Over 16,000 teachers were trained in modern teaching techniques, including the use of digital tools. Teacher attendance and lesson delivery were also closely monitored and supported. According to the Global Partnership for Education, student enrolment increased from 230,000 in 2018 to over 384,000 in 2024, while the repetition rate was reduced by 50 percent.

Kwara’s KwaraLEARN initiative has restored momentum in a system previously struggling with low morale and irregular attendance. Within two years, the number of children unable to read or do basic maths was halved, and enrolment rose by more than 60,000.

School absenteeism has dropped dramatically, and teachers are more motivated, thanks to ongoing support and visible leadership engagement. Both teachers and students are prioritised without undue scrutiny, but with empathy.

NewGlobe, NGF Lead National Dialogue on Foundational Learning (3)
L-R: Representative for the Commissioner for Education, Bayelsa State, Faith Ogara, Director Planning Research and Statistics, Ministry of Education, Bayelsa State; Commissioner for Education, Enugu State, Hon. Prof. Ndubueze Mbah; Commissioner for Education, Lagos State, Hon. Jamiu Tolani Alli-Balogun; Commissioner for Education, Kwara State, Dr. Lawal Olalekan Olohungbebe; and Representative for the Commissioner for Education, Kano State, Executive Chairman, SUBEB, Kano State, Yusuf Kabir, at the 2025 State-Level Workshop for Foundation Learning and Out-of-School Children held in Abuja, on Thursday, July 31st.

In Jigawa, the recently launched JigawaUNITE programme is already setting the stage for long-term impact. With a bold plan to reach all 2,324 public primary schools, the state is building a system that uses technology and coaching to ensure that even children in the most remote areas have access to quality learning. The early results are promising, with teacher engagement improving and classroom delivery becoming more consistent.

Looking to the Future

Impressively, state governors and other stakeholders have gone beyond merely expressing concern. On Thursday, 31st July 2025, the Nigerian Governors’ Forum, in collaboration with NewGlobe, hosted a State-Level Peer Review Workshop on Out-of-School Children and Foundational Learning.

This landmark event was more than a forum; it represented a turning point. It offered state leaders a platform to reflect on what is working, share lessons, and commit to scaling impactful reforms.

The workshop focused on strengthening evidence-based reform by creating space for real peer learning among states and technical partners. The supervising permanent secretaries also attended to ensure that value is cascaded to teachers.

As Nigeria continues its efforts to reduce the number of out-of-school children and improve learning outcomes, this gathering was an opportunity to accelerate progress. It was also a signal that foundational learning was no longer a side conversation but a national priority.

In a speech delivered by NGF Education Advisor, Leo The Great, Governor AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq of Kwara State stressed that improving access alone was not enough. “Access does not equal learning. Many children sit in classrooms but leave unable to read, write, or do basic arithmetic. The priority is not more schools, but ensuring every child is truly learning. In 2025, we should have daily visibility into every public school.”

He cited success in states like Kwara, Edo, Bayelsa, Lagos, and Jigawa. He added, “Structured pedagogy is working. In such schools, teacher feedback has increased by over 200 percent. That’s real behaviour change.”

Also, speaking at the event, UBEC Executive Secretary Aisha Garba called for unified action. She said, “We are here to work for one client, the Nigerian child.”

She urged stakeholders to “align with our agenda, not run parallel systems,” adding that “access remains our biggest challenge,” and the intervention fund must “respond to real needs, not just check boxes for classrooms.”

NewGlobe’s Vice President for Policy and Partnerships, Ifeyinwa Ugochukwu, reinforced the urgency of the moment. “If we do not act quickly and deliberately, we will be too late for millions of children,” she warned. Describing the situation as “a system-wide emergency”, she added, “The evidence is clear: with the right tools, training, and data, foundational learning outcomes can be transformed at scale. We’re supporting states to build resilient, future-ready education systems that deliver measurable results because Nigeria’s children deserve nothing less than a system that works for every learner.”

“Across Nigeria, we now have concrete evidence that foundational learning outcomes can be dramatically improved within a single term. In Lagos State, after just seven weeks of implementation, students achieved three times the rate of literacy improvement and doubled their progress in numeracy compared to peers in non-participating schools,” she said.

NewGlobe is a trusted, evidence-backed partner for state-led foundational learning reforms in Nigeria, focused on strengthening public education systems from within.

Its science- and data-driven approach combines advanced pedagogy, detailed lesson planning, and real-time data to track progress and guide strategy. By working closely with state governments and stakeholders like UBEC, NewGlobe ensures alignment with national priorities and supports scalable, sustainable reforms across the country.

Minister of State for Education, Prof. Suwaiba Ahmad revealed that only 60% of Universal Basic Education funds have been utilised and highlighted the excessive academic burden on young learners. “Primary school pupils are overloaded with up to 12 subjects. The Federal Government plans to reduce this to seven for Primary 1 to 3 to enhance learning outcomes,” she said.

The event attracted wide-ranging participation from major stakeholders, including Chairman, Northern Governors’ Forum, Governor Inuwa Yahaya of Gombe State (represented); Director General, NGF, Dr. Abdulateef Shittu; Senior Education Adviser, UK Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office, Ian Attfield; Country Director, UNICEF, Ms. Wafaa Saeed Abdelatef; Country Representative, UNESCO, Abdourahamane Diallo; and Country Director, World Bank, Mathew Verghis (represented).

Also in attendance were the Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Education, Abel Olumuyiwa Enitan; Chairman of COSCEN, Dr. Lawal Olohungbebe; Vice Chairman of COSCEN, Hon. Segun Olayiwola; E.S. of the National Commission for Almajiri and Out-of-School Children Education, Dr. Nura Idris Muhammad; representatives from Samsung West Africa, and several Directors from the Federal Ministry of Education. A robust panel session featured Honourable Commissioners of Education from Kwara, Lagos, Bayelsa, Enugu, and Kano States, who shared innovations and policy successes addressing learning poverty at the state level.

What is emerging across these reforming states is a new kind of public education, one built not just on access but on achievement. The momentum is growing. With vision, political will, and the right partnerships, Nigeria has the tools to not only fix its education crisis but to lead a continent-wide learning reset.

For the Bayelsa boy who once couldn’t read, the difference was a classroom that finally delivered. For millions of others, that future is within reach. The challenge now is to ensure every state sees the opportunity and chooses to act, because the real lesson is this: when learning comes first, everything else begins to follow.

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NewGlobe, NGF Lead National Dialogue on Foundational Learning with Nigerian States https://techeconomy.ng/newglobe-ngf-lead-national-dialogue-on-foundational-learning-with-nigerian-states/ https://techeconomy.ng/newglobe-ngf-lead-national-dialogue-on-foundational-learning-with-nigerian-states/#respond Mon, 04 Aug 2025 21:05:25 +0000 https://techeconomy.ng/?p=164421 NewGlobe, Africa’s foremost education technology partner, known for its success in large-scale transformational programs across the country, has reaffirmed its commitment to supporting states on their transformation journey at the basic education level.

This was disclosed by NewGlobe’s Vice President for Policy and Partnerships, Mrs Ifeyinwa Ugochukwu, at the recent 2025 State-Level Workshop for Foundation Learning and Out-of-School Children held in Abuja. The Nigeria Governors’ Forum organised the event in partnership with the NewGlobe.

The workshop was convened against the backdrop of a deepening crisis in Nigeria’s basic education sector, where over 10 million children remain out of school, the highest figure globally, according to UNICEF, and three out of four cannot read and understand a simple passage by age 10, as reported by the World Bank.

Despite increasing enrolments, many pupils leave school without mastering foundational skills. Discussions at the event identified the root causes as systemic: an undervalued teaching workforce, fragmented policy execution, chronic underfunding, and a misplaced emphasis on infrastructure rather than learning outcomes.

NewGlobe’s Vice President for Policy and Partnerships, Ifeyinwa Ugochukwu, reinforced the urgency of the moment. “If we do not act quickly and deliberately, we will be too late for millions of children,” she warned. Describing the situation as “a system-wide emergency,” she added, “The evidence is clear: with the right tools, training, and data, foundational learning outcomes can be transformed at scale. We’re supporting states to build resilient, future-ready education systems that deliver measurable results because Nigeria’s children deserve nothing less than a system that works for every learner.”

Presenting a model for transforming foundational education, NewGlobe highlighted its evidence-backed, data-driven, and technology-enabled solution as a trusted implementation partner to state governments.

The model focuses on strengthening public education from within, equipping teachers and school leaders with real-time digital tools, structured lesson guides, continuous coaching, and performance dashboards that ensure instructional quality and accountability.

NewGlobe’s holistic approach aligns with national curricula, promotes teacher confidence, and empowers states to drive measurable learning gains across thousands of classrooms.

State-led programmes in partnership with NewGlobe, including EKOEXCEL in Lagos, KwaraLEARN in Kwara, BayelsaPRIME, in Bayelsa, Edo, and JigawaUNITE, in Jigawa, have already delivered compelling outcomes.

In Bayelsa, literacy improved by 20 percentage points in just nineteen weeks, and enrolment surged from 25,000 to over 40,000 pupils.

In Kwara, foundational literacy and numeracy deficiencies were halved in under two years, with over 60,000 additional pupils enrolled.

Lagos, once lagging in education outcomes, now leads with one of the country’s lowest learning deprivation rates. Independent evaluations confirm that students in NewGlobe-supported schools achieve learning gains up to 53% higher than peers in conventional schools.

NewGlobe, NGF Lead National Dialogue on Foundational Learning
L-R: Commissioner for Education, Ekiti State, Dr Kofoworola Olabimpe Aderiye; Executive Secretary, UBEC, Aisha Garba; Minister for Education, State, Hon. Prof. Suwaiba Said Ahmad; Senior Special Assistant to the President, Regional Development Programs, Dr Mariam Masha; and Vice President, Policy and Partnerships, NewGlobe, Ifeyinwa Ugochukwu, at the 2025 State-Level Workshop for Foundation Learning and Out-of-School Children held in Abuja, on Thursday, July 31st.

Governor AbdulRahman AbdulRazaq, the governor of Kwara State, in a speech delivered by NGF Education Advisor Leo The Great, stressed that improving access alone is not enough. “Access does not equal learning.

Many children sit in classrooms but leave unable to read, write, or do basic arithmetic. The priority is not more schools, but ensuring every child is truly learning. In 2025, we should have daily visibility into every public school.” Citing success in states like Kwara, Edo, Bayelsa, Lagos, and Jigawa, he added, “Structured pedagogy is working. In such schools, teacher feedback has increased by over 200 percent. That’s real behaviour change.”

Also, speaking at the event, Aisha Garba, UBEC executive secretary called for unified action, stating, “We are here to work for one client, the Nigerian child.”

She urged stakeholders to “align with our agenda, not run parallel systems,” adding that “access remains our biggest challenge,” and the intervention fund must “respond to real needs, not just check boxes for classrooms.”

“At NewGlobe, our mission is clear: to bridge foundational learning gaps and help build future-ready education systems that truly serve Nigeria’s children. We are proud of the progress achieved with our current state partners, but the need is national. We are ready to support more states committed to transforming learning outcomes, because the future of our young people depends on the quality of education they receive today,” added Ifeyinwa Ugochukwu.

NewGlobe is a trusted, evidence-backed partner for state-led foundational learning reforms in Nigeria, focused on strengthening public education systems from within.

Its science- and data-driven approach combines advanced pedagogy, detailed lesson planning, and real-time data to track progress and guide strategy.

NewGlobe, NGF Lead National Dialogue on Foundational Learning
L-R: Commissioner for Education, Ekiti State, Dr Kofoworola Olabimpe Aderiye; Executive Secretary, UBEC, Aisha Garba; Minister for Education, State, Hon. Prof. Suwaiba Said Ahmad; Senior Special Assistant to the President, Regional Development Programs, Dr Mariam Masha; and Senior Economist and Co-Lead, HOPE Education programme, World Bank, Shinsaku Nomur, at the 2025 State-Level Workshop for Foundation Learning and Out-of-School Children held in Abuja, on Thursday, July 31st.

By working closely with state governments and stakeholders, such as FGN and UBEC, NewGlobe ensures alignment with national priorities and supports scalable, sustainable reforms across the country.

As Nigeria grapples with the urgent challenge of learning poverty and an ever-growing number of out-of-school children, the workshop reaffirmed that systemic transformation is not only possible, it is already underway.

With political will, NewGlobe’s data-driven solutions, and collaborative implementation, a new era of public education is within reach.

The momentum built at this workshop signals a national commitment to ensure that every Nigerian child is not only in school but truly learning.

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