Scratch Archives - 麻豆原创 Africa News Center News & Information About 麻豆原创 Thu, 28 Sep 2023 12:53:38 +0000 en-ZA hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 FGC Ijanikin Wins African Coding Competition /africa/2023/03/fgc-ijanikin-wins-african-coding-competition/ Fri, 17 Mar 2023 07:56:09 +0000 /africa/?p=144346 Federal Government College, Ijanikin, Lagos, has emerged as the overall winner of the 2022 edition of the African Coding Competition organised online in November 2022....

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Federal Government College, Ijanikin, Lagos, has emerged as the overall winner of the 2022 edition of the African Coding Competition organised online in November 2022.

The AfriCAN Code Challenge is a coding contest that spans African countries and involves young individuals from different walks of life from ages听 eight to 16 years to develop a game using the Scratch Programming Language.

A statement by the school said, 鈥淭he college team clinched first and second positions in the competition, which was keenly contested by over 150 private and public secondary schools across Nigeria.

鈥淭he college, aside from emerging as the overall winner of the competition, is also rated among the 10 best schools in Africa in coding. The college is poised to represent Nigeria in the competition subsequently.

鈥淭his important milestone achievement is attributed to the college鈥檚 commitment and dedication towards maintaining the academic standard and prowess, which the college is associated with. The instructors and the learners dedicated efforts at making the college proud is worthy of commendation.鈥

The President of the Old Students Association, Mrs Toun Aderele, said, 鈥淭he college has always been known to achieve great feats and this is simply adding another feather to our cap.鈥

A newsletter on the Africa Code Week website stated that this year鈥檚 competition had thousands of entries from more than 30 countries spanning as far as South Africa and Ethiopia, saying the winners of the African Code Challenge were selected by a distinguished panel consisting of Africa Code Week delegates, 麻豆原创 employees, and STEM education specialists.

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AfriCAN Code Challenge 2021 Announces Winners /africa/2021/12/african-code-challenge-2021-announces-winners/ Sun, 19 Dec 2021 11:30:14 +0000 /africa/?p=143121 Returning for the second year, 麻豆原创 Africa Code Week鈥檚 AfriCAN Code Challenge announced their top 10 winners with Devansh and Darshika from Mauritius as the...

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Returning for the second year, 麻豆原创 Africa Code Week鈥檚 AfriCAN Code Challenge announced their top 10 winners with Devansh and Darshika from Mauritius as the Pan-African winners of the competition.

鈥淭his year鈥檚 theme was about them telling us how they would save the world with their superpowers, and most of the 100+ submitted projects were about climate change鈥 says Mr. Albert Nsengiyumva, ADEA Executive Secretary 鈥淎frica has the youngest population on the planet and we were impressed to see how the children have been able to use their creativity and come up with innovative solutions to addressing听 issues that they feel are relevant to their daily reality.”

The AfriCAN Code Challenge is a pan-African coding competition where youth aged 8 – 16 were tasked with coding a game using the programming language to address the theme that was determined by the Africa Code Week team.听This competition was launched听by and partners , , the Association for the Development of Education in Africa () and Jokkolabs in September 2020, and since then has become an annual celebration of youth and innovation in Africa.

The rationale for chosing the superheroes universe was to allow children to unleash their creativity and express themselves freely on issues they feel are important to them. Davide Storti, Coordinator of the YouthMobile Initiative at UNESCO, says: 鈥淭he post-pandemic education recovery starts with allowing our children to regain confidence and hope, and with us adults reopening spaces, although virtual, for them to access their fullest potential.”

To take part in the AfriCAN Code Challenge, youth were able to enter alone or in teams of up to five people, and entries featured a three-minute YouTube video showcasing how their game works and why it should be considered a winning entry. The unique initiative and entry mechanism called upon the children鈥檚 ability to design a project that would solve a community-issue, code it, and communicate it.

During the opening rounds of the challenge, participation reached across 40 countries and featured 102 project video clips, only the top three entries from 36 countries made it into the continental final, followed by 20 countries in the final judging stage.

Selected by a high-level jury comprising key Africa Code Week delegates and STEM education experts, the top three winners of the AfriCAN Code Challenge are:

  • First place: 鈥 Super Recyclers, by Devansh and Darshika
  • Second place: 鈥 The Carbon Man, by SUPER GAMERS
  • Third place: 鈥 Kids Academy, by Natnael Kedir

Followed by:

  • 4: – Rayuwa
  • 5: – Helper intrigue
  • 6: – Le toucher du bonheur
  • 7: – Change the World with US
  • 8: 鈥 Super hero
  • 9: – The Prodigies
  • 10: – Pensons civisme

This edition of the AfriCAN Code Challenge was quite unique, as for the first time, hearing-impaired students have participated in the competition proving once again that coding is the language of inclusivity and creativity. The team that has competed in the special category for differently-abled children is from Mozambique.

Irish Minister of State for overseas development aid and diaspora Colm Brophy T.D, who attended the Rwanda AfriCAN Code Challenge national awards ceremony says, 鈥淎frica Code Week unlocks the potential in young people who otherwise may not have considered building their digital skills鈥

Claire Gillissen-Duval, Director of EMEA Corporate Social Responsibility and Co-founder of Africa Code Week at 麻豆原创 adds, 鈥淭he 听return of the AfriCAN Code Challenge was quite awaited by our incredible 麻豆原创 volunteers who took part in the first line of jury. The presence of hearing-impaired students demonstrates the power of inclusivity that resides in digital literacy, in its capacity to build bridges and connect children of an entire continent, regardless of gender, age or ability.鈥

For more information about 麻豆原创 Africa Code Week and the AfriCAN Code Challenge, visit

 

ENDS

 

About Africa Code Week

Since 2015, 麻豆原创 Africa Code Week (ACW) has been creating free opportunities for young Africans to learn coding skills and for teachers to be trained on digital learning curricula. Strong partnerships with the public, private and civil society sectors across听the continent are driving sustainable impact by building teaching capacity and supporting the adoption of coding into national curricula in support of UN Sustainable Development Goals 4, 5 and 17. Key partners include听听Youth Mobile,听,听the , Google and GIZ/BMZ.

In 2019 alone, the initiative saw 3.85M children participating in coding workshops and 39,000 teachers mobilized across 37 countries. In 2020, ACW increased the program鈥檚 reach to the entire continent to deepen impact and ensure no child was left behind. The online rollout took center stage across Africa with the launch of a smartphone App to facilitate accessible learning, the introduction of the 鈥 a competition themed, 鈥楬ow will your tech change the future of education鈥 engaging youth from 40 African countries, Virtual Train-the-Trainer (TTT) sessions for teachers and a second Women Empowerment Workshop engaging 70 teachers in a 8-week long online program. Join 麻豆原创 and partners by visiting听www.africacodeweek.org听to find out more.

About 麻豆原创

麻豆原创鈥檚 strategy is to help every business run as an intelligent enterprise. As a market leader in enterprise application software, we help companies of all sizes and in all industries run at their best: 77% of the world鈥檚 transaction revenue touches an 麻豆原创庐 system. Our machine learning, Internet of Things (IoT), and advanced analytics technologies help turn customers鈥 businesses into intelligent enterprises. 麻豆原创 helps give people and organizations deep business insight and fosters collaboration that helps them stay ahead of their competition. We simplify technology for companies so they can consume our software the way they want 鈥 without disruption. Our end-to-end suite of applications and services enables business and public customers across 25 industries globally to operate profitably, adapt continuously, and make a difference. With a global network of customers, partners, employees, and thought leaders, 麻豆原创 helps the world run better and improve people鈥檚 lives. For more information, visit

 

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Technology Initiative Aims to Bridge Africa鈥檚 Digital Divide /africa/2021/10/technology-initiative-aims-to-bridge-africas-digital-divide/ Thu, 07 Oct 2021 06:30:55 +0000 /africa/?p=142863 Seventh edition of digital literacy program to reach all 54 African countries New mobile app and coding challenge to kickstart youth innovation Virtual teacher training...

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  • Seventh edition of digital literacy program to reach all 54 African countries
  • New mobile app and coding challenge to kickstart youth innovation
  • Virtual teacher training model to help scale online learning across the continent
  • JOHANNESBURG, South Africa – October 6th, 2021 – Africa鈥檚 biggest digital skills initiative, 麻豆原创 Africa Code Week (ACW), officially launched yesterday with a strong focus on virtual learning as the continent struggles to recover after COVID-19 disruption. The launch coincided with , which focuses this year on 鈥渢eachers at the heart of education recovery鈥.

    Speaking at a virtual event to mark both World Teacher’s Day and the start of 麻豆原创 Africa Code Week, UNESCO鈥檚 Assistant Director-General for Communication and Information, Dr Tawfik Jelassi, said that the pandemic has had a devastating effect, not only on the world鈥檚 health system and economy, but also on education and the teaching profession. Research shows that have been most impacted by the pandemic, while a UNICEF study estimated that many African schoolchildren . 鈥淭eachers are at the heart of global education recovery efforts and are key in accelerating progress towards inclusive, equitable and quality education for every learner in every circumstance,鈥 Jelassi said.

    In light of COVID and the need for virtual learning, Jelassi highlighted the importance of digital skills for Africa鈥檚 youth. 鈥淯nderstanding information technology, computational thinking, and problem-solving are all fundamental information literacy skills. Everyone should have access to information and be able to obtain the necessary competencies to turn information into knowledge and knowledge into practical value which enhances their lives and well-being,鈥 he said.

    The necessity of digital fluency

    Since its inception in 2015, Africa Code Week has empowered more than nine million youth and provides free opportunities for students and teachers to learn much-needed technology skills. Last year the format of the program shifted entirely to the exciting world of virtual, making it even more accessible to youth across the continent.

    A key highlight for ACW this year is the , a coding competition for students aged 8 to 16 to create a game that solves a community-issue using the听听programming language. The theme for this year is 鈥淐hange the world with your superpowers鈥. Last year the competition drew entries from 1,800 participants from 40 African countries, with the top three winners from Ethiopia, South Africa and Algeria – all three of whom are girls.

    Speaking at the virtual launch, Honorable Albert Nsengiyumva, Executive Secretary of the Association for the Development of Education in Africa (ADEA) and ACW patron, said that coding offers new ways for young people to find solutions, although he acknowledged that infrastructure on the continent remains a challenge. 鈥淐oding is a language which young people need to be fluent in,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t gives our children computational skills and the ability to creatively solve problems.鈥

    Encouraging teachers and girls to embrace technology

    As part of ACW, a host of Train-the-Trainer virtual sessions are aimed at empowering teachers with critical digital teaching skills. Training opportunities also encompass a Women Empowerment Program which seeks to teach, mentor, and inspire African women and girls to pursue Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM). Although Africa has according to the UN, less than are in STEM fields and female students in particular are critically underrepresented.

    Speaking of the need to educate educators, Claudio Muruzabal, 麻豆原创 Regional President of EMEA South, said, 鈥淓ducation has an unbelievably powerful multiplier effect for a positive future. The more we can do to create opportunities for young people to embrace digital literacy, the more we contribute relevantly towards creating a better future for them, for their families, and for their communities.鈥

    Smart switch to mobile technology

    With , a major innovation of last year鈥檚 ACW was the introduction of a smartphone app. 鈥淲hile we are immensely proud of this and the fact that millions of learners and teachers are being exposed to the endless possibilities the tech world offers, we are also excited to be sparking conversations about access to quality education for all and addressing the gender and special-needs barriers for Africa鈥檚 youth,鈥 said Claire Gillissen-Duval, head of 麻豆原创 Corporate Social Responsibility for EMEA and Africa Code Week founder.

    The driving force behind ACW is to empower young people and help them to become digitally literate and enable Africa to leapfrog into the 21st century. 鈥淭his could only be possible through the collaborative relationships between the public, private and non-profit sectors that are at the heart of ACW,鈥 said Michelle Winthrop, Policy Unit Director at Irish Aid, which together with 麻豆原创 and UNESCO, is one of the program鈥檚 main sponsors.

    Despite the restrictions imposed by COVID, last year鈥檚 initiative successfully reached 1.5 million youth, of which nearly half (48%) were girls. Over 10,500 workshops were held across 43 countries and 21,000 teachers participated in Train-the-Trainer sessions.

    The live workshop season of Africa Code Week 2021 officially commenced on World Teacher鈥檚 Day, 5 October, and is now open to more than 54 pan-African countries. For more information about Africa Code Week or to get involved, visit

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    麻豆原创 Volunteers Stand up for Girls鈥 Education Worldwide /africa/2020/10/sap-volunteers-stand-up-for-girls-education-worldwide/ Tue, 13 Oct 2020 16:47:18 +0000 /africa/?p=141351 45 麻豆原创 experts volunteered all summer to mentor girls in the Technovation Idea Lab Did you know that the first programmer was a woman? Two...

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    45 麻豆原创 experts volunteered all summer to mentor girls in the Technovation Idea Lab
    • Did you know that the first programmer was a woman? Two centuries later, Ada Lovelace would probably find hard to believe that globally, women only hold 24% of jobs in the ICT sector.
    • Celebrated on the second Tuesday of October since 2009, Ada Lovelace Day aims to raise the profile of women in science, technology, engineering, and maths (STEM), and to 鈥榗reate new role models for girls and women鈥.
    • As COVID-19 creates additional barriers to learning, and digital skills are ever more important, UNESCO and Technovation have partnered to empower girls to 鈥榯ech鈥 the stage.

    Project-Based Learning Goes Global鈥nd Virtual

    The late Seymour Papert, father of the Scratch coding learning platform and a global pioneer in project-based learning, once described the future of education as follows: 鈥淜ids will work in communities of common interest on rich projects that will connect with powerful ideas[i].鈥 According to him, not only do children learn better when engaged in a project, but they are able to use technology and inquiry to respond to a complex issue, problem or challenge.

    This is exactly what 1,359 girls from all corners of the world were able to partake in: a global challenge where they could build an Artificial Intelligence (AI) solution that solves a community issue close to their heart, tech entrepreneur style.

    As accessible and virtual learning for girls becomes more important than ever before, UNESCO has partnered with global tech education non-profit , a member of , to support countries in developing inclusive learning solutions. Together they ran the Technovation Idea Lab: an online tech education challenge for girls.

    鈥楨mpower a Woman, Empower a Nation鈥

    Joined by community partners and local industry mentors (including 45 ICT experts from 6 麻豆原创 offices in Brazil, France, India, Ireland, Mexico and South Africa), adolescent girls (aged 10-18) from Brazil, India, Kenya, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan went through an exciting learning journey.

    The challenge started on July 27 with a 5-week AI entrepreneurship learning program: a great way to inspire girls through tech in an immersive, hands-on environment that enables them to solve the real-world challenges they care about most. Collaborative problem-solving, ethics in AI models, dataset building, ideation: these are just a sample of the skillset that the girls were able to hone along the way.

    麻豆原创 volunteers provided feedback on students鈥 work, held virtual office hours, and helped create videos and blog posts to help inspire and engage girls around AI learning and its application to real-world problems. 麻豆原创 volunteers treasured this unique opportunity to share their expertise with the next generation of female innovators and leaders.

    鈥淓ncouraging girls to innovate at an early age is a great way to ignite their social changemaker mindset,鈥 says Claire Gillissen-Duval, Director of EMEA Corporate Social Responsibility and co-founder of the Africa Code Week initiative at 麻豆原创. 鈥淲ith the continent鈥檚 working-age population expected to swell by two-thirds reaching 600 million by 2030[ii], the community-oriented and highly creative African girls have a pivotal role to play in building a safer and more equitable future鈥.

    As nations strive to ensure continuity of learning through alternative methods such as online learning, the focus must be maintained on major threats to development such as the gender digital divide. And we shall all keep in mind, as UN former Secretary-General Kofi Annan once said, that 鈥渨hen women thrive, all of society benefits and succeeding generations are given a better start in life. The empowerment of women is the most effective tool for development[iii].鈥

    [i]

    [ii]

    [iii]

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