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Integrate AI in schools to stay ahead of curve

chatbot

A woman working with phone and chatbot that helps in education and work. 

Photo credit: Shutterstock

When, in January 2003, Kenya became the first African country to introduce free and compulsory basic education, the world rippled with surprise. Former United States President Bill Clinton even flew to Nairobi to witness this feat.

Here was a game-changing move by an African country that had recognised the need to ensure that no child was left behind—in a continent that for decades had paid lip service to ending illiteracy, disease and ignorance but had barely moved to actualise that goal.

Besides being the first African country to roll out free basic education—an imperative later enshrined in the 2010 Constitution—Kenya is also fast shaping up as a digital hub, both for the East African region and the continent at large. Today, across the digital capitals of the world, Kenya’s potential is widely spoken of, thanks to world-beating innovations such as M-Pesa and the great promise of what has come to be dubbed Silicon Savannah.

But now, with the fast-rising digital tidal wave called artificial intelligence (AI), Kenya and other African countries are facing another acid test. They are up against not just the global race to leverage AI to increase productivity and boost economic growth, they also face the challenge of ensuring that the uptake of AI—right from school level—is done right and fast enough to keep the continent globally competitive

So powerful are these technologies that we can safely bet that those who get it right on integrating AI into their curricula will see a dramatic shift in productivity, with the potential to lift millions out of poverty. The converse is also true: those who dilly-dally on AI will likely be left far behind, much as the Asian Tigers outpaced their African peers to join the league of upper-income economies.

African countries

The smart way for Kenya and other African countries to stay ahead of the curve is to ensure that the children of today are at par with the best anywhere in the world. As has been said many times before, education is the surest socio-economic equaliser.

Indeed, examples abound across the world of how educating just a handful of people from a community can transform its social and economic fortunes. And with global economies migrating to digital platforms, giving children an edge in AI is no longer a luxury.

In China, for instance, AI concepts are already part of the core curriculum. As online videos show, Chinese children tinker with machine learning algorithms, build early-stage robotics and learn how data trains intelligent systems—skills once reserved for postgraduate laboratories.

Meanwhile, in Singapore, public-private partnerships have seen tech firms co-create school modules. Governments fund AI academies, and teachers are being retrained to shift from rote deliverers of content to facilitators of critical AI literacy.

Critical thinking

To our credit, a lot is happening on the curriculum front. Kenya, for instance, is changing the game with competency-based education, as opposed to the rote learning of the past. Instead of memorising facts that AI can recall instantly, students are being taught how to question, evaluate and collaborate with intelligent systems. Critical thinking, ethical reasoning and adaptive creativity are part of the package, too. We must, however, up the game on the technology front.

That said, even as we urge African governments to forge strong alliances with tech giants and startups, the continent must not merely import content from abroad. We must develop locally relevant AI learning platforms, case studies and content that resonate with our realities—farming, healthcare, governance and commerce.

Suffice it to say that as AI permeates every corridor of life—from diagnosing diseases faster than physicians, to drafting legal briefs in seconds and optimising supply chains across continents—education policies in Africa and other developing nations can no longer afford to play catch-up.

The writer is a data science master’s student. [email protected]