World ORT is leading an innovative training project in Ghana to promote computer courses led by women for young girls.
Backed by a UNESCO grant, the Women STEM Trainers program in the coastal town of Elmina will offer the skills and expertise needed for women and girls to get good jobs. The courses at the Girls’ Technology Center for Learning will be led by female students from the local university and aimed at girls between the ages of 9 to 12 in the community.
Children from low-income families who lack access to computers and online learning will be the key beneficiaries. They will receive the skills to thrive through high-quality teaching and training, giving them the best possible chances of employment.
The project is also backed by the Nduom Group and Coconut Grove Hotel, whose philanthropic and operational support ensures the Nduom Community Library’s continued operation.
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Elmina, in the central region of Ghana, has a population of around 35,000. It is marked by widespread poverty with many children not attending school or completing their education, moving instead into income-generating activities such as fishing or salt-mining.
Even with low numbers of secondary-school students, there are not enough classrooms to accommodate all those who do attend, so schools operate in shifts. Students attend either morning or afternoon sessions and are often not taught the full curriculum, coupled with inadequate numbers of teaching staff and a severe lack of educational materials.
The community library opened almost a decade ago and organizes annual spelling, reading and essay competitions for local schools. The free lending library is used by hundreds of children and adults from the town and surrounding villages to access books and magazines, as well as to use five aged desktop computers in poor working condition.
Celeste Angus, director of World ORT’s International Cooperation program, said: “ORT plans to revolutionize the facility by converting the computer room into a dynamic technology centre. It will include a smartboard, projector and other modern teaching materials. The new centre will offer a variety of free computer-based courses every day for children and young adults, with an emphasis on age and skill-level appropriate courses.”
She added that girls, “who typically lack access to such technology, will be given greater opportunities and encouraged to use tablet devices to take after-school and weekend courses in graphic design, game design, coding, video editing and academic subjects, including math and science.”
Professionals from the Elmina community will lead the courses, and university student volunteers will be brought in to aid the younger learners, receiving college credits and internship experiences in return.
The courses will utilize a range of online learning programs, such as E-Learning for Kids, Duolingo and Coding for Kids.
Jewish News Syndicate
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