Tag: Young

  • African Publishing Innovation Fund to Improve Access to Education, Books, and Literacy Skills for 11 Million Young Africans

    African Publishing Innovation Fund to Improve Access to Education, Books, and Literacy Skills for 11 Million Young Africans

    The African Publishing Innovation Fund (APIF) – a grant program co-led by the UAE-based global philanthropic organization Dubai Cares and implemented by the International Publishers Association (IPA) – has chosen five projects across Africa to receive USD 170,000 in funding in 2021. The APIF Committee, chaired by IPA President Bodour Al Qasimi selected the winners from 311 applications received from 26 African countries.

    This is the second iteration of the grants program, which is funded by a four-year, USD 800,000 commitment from Dubai Cares. Due to the closure of schools and transition to online learning in response to COVID-19, the APIF prioritized scalable digital learning innovations to help the millions of African students in under-resourced rural communities. Many of them are beyond the reach of national efforts to transition to remote learning and do not have access to libraries.

    The initiatives to receive grants that will collectively impact 11 million young Africans in five countries are:

    Ghana: As schools shifted online due to COVID-19, girls in rural communities have faced challenges in accessing online learning due to a significant urban-rural digital divide. With online learning reaching only 70% of school-age children, the Learners Girls Foundation will support 400 at-risk Ghanaian girls in Paga, a rural community of 100,000, to continue their education and access educational resources despite technology and internet connectivity challenges.

    Kenya: As African publishers embrace digital content due to schools shifting online, many lack expertise in inclusive publishing practices to meet global accessibility standards. Starting in East Africa’s regional publishing hub of Kenya, with plans to scale to 12 African countries, eKitabu will work with publishers to enrich the remote learning of more than nine million students and teachers with accessible digital learning materials.

    Rwanda: With the closure of schools, community libraries have taken on an even more important role in building critical literacy skills and fostering a reading culture. Save the ChildrenRwanda will train 270 librarians in eight community libraries on the use of technology to strengthen a culture of reading in remote and rural communities while providing digitally accessible reading materials in Kinyarwanda that will keep 1.6 million children reading while unable to attend school.

    Tanzania: Competing government budget demands have led to a significant shortage of community and school libraries in the Zanzibar region of Tanzania. Book Aid International will transform three shipping containers into fully-equipped libraries in Dunga, a rural community of 76,000, where children can enjoy reading, young learners can study for exams, and adults can read and learn new skills.

    Zimbabwe: With schools and rural areas poorly resourced, communities across Zimbabwe lack social infrastructure, such as libraries. Led by Chirikure Chirikure, the country’s most famous poet, this initiative will build a modern community library in Nemashakwe are, Gutu district, that will provide 800 students and youth access to books, a place to study, and programs to attain livelihood skills.

    Bodour Al Qasimi ,
    IPA President

    Commenting on the APIF grant recipients, IPA President Bodour Al Qasimi said: ‘The COVID-19 pandemic has set back the education of millions of learners around the world, but its effects are acutest where the infrastructure cannot support the connectivity required for distance learning. Having received far more applications than we could have imagined, we are all very excited to have found five projects that we believe will deliver significant benefits for a great number of children and young people.’

    Dr. Tariq Al Gurg, Chief Executive Officer at Dubai Cares and Member of its Board of Directors said: ‘While COVID-19’s effect on education has been devastating, it is our responsibility now to look beyond the challenges and find and implement unique solutions that would mitigate the outbreak’s impact and enable children and youth to continue on their path to learning. Reading is an intrinsic element of education, and we are optimistic that the five projects chosen by the Africa Publishing Innovation Fund will successfully facilitate the provision of the necessary resources that will contribute to children’s educational journeys. We wish everyone involved in these projects great success and look forward to seeing the positive outcomes in the form of more and more empowered students and youth.’

    Due to the pandemic, over 250 million children are out of school in Africa. In rural communities, lack of internet connectivity, library facilities, and significant urban-rural digital divides have also left students unable to attend remote learning. Girls, in particular, have been affected more by closures since they are often expected to take on childcare responsibilities and household chores. In addressing these challenges through publishing innovation, APIF is contributing to avoiding a lost generation of youth which lacks critical literacy, livelihood, and life skills.

    Distributed by African Media Agency on behalf of IPA.

  • Meet the five young faces combatting COVID-19

    Meet the five young faces combatting COVID-19

    In April this year, global entrepreneurship platform AdamStart launched an open call for social impact ideas which solve challenges associated with the Coronavirus pandemic.

    In association with young people, online networks and platforms such as OpportunityDesk.org, over 1000 applications were received from over 30 countries. A podcast series in Brazil, a medical facility in Togo and testing kits from numerous countries were amongst those ideas which the competition’s judges assessed.

    The process was vigorous and several layers of selection ensued. The esteemed judging panel for the competition consisted of:

    • Ishmail Dodoo from the United Nations
    • Kaffy, dancer, entrepreneur and founder of K.A.F.F.Y. Foundation in Nigeria
    • Peter Baxendell, a former director of global food brands in Unilever
    • Frances Trought, an employability and careers expert founder of Everything D&I
    • Will Holt, Dean of Pearson Business School in London
    • Grace Ihejimaziu, founder of OpportunityDesk.org
    • Kathy Eldon, founder of Creative Visions Foundation in Los Angeles

    Adam Bradford, a social entrepreneur and Queens Young Leader from Sheffield, set up AdamStart in 2010, aged just 17, to help young entrepreneurs from around the world scale-up socially responsible and innovative ideas. To date, AdamStart has supported over 8,000 young people, in 130 countries, on their business journey. This year, thecompetition encouraged young people, to tackle coronavirus in their communities, anywhere in the world.

    Adam, who is himself stranded in Benin, West Africa – commented: “We received over 1000 entries to this year’s COVID-19 Innovation Challenge, spanning talent across the entire globe. The energy and creative thinking has been overwhelming, and our judges undertook a rigorous selection process to decide our five winners.”

    Huge congratulations go to the winners who were announced this morning;

    • Juliet Namujju, 23 from Mpiji, Uganda, who launched a sustainable fashion label that transforms the waste crisis in Africa into employment opportunities for disabled tailors. She has invented a line of biodegradable, African-print, face masks with a mouthpiece adaption to help people who rely on lipreading to communicate.
    • Patrick Ssremba, 23, Kampala from Uganda, who runs a start-up that offers mobile medical and dental services to communities in Uganda. During the COVID-19 pandemic, he has adapted to offer digital on-demand medical and dental services to rural communities.
    • Apoorv Shankar, 29 from Bangalore, India, whoinvented Hand-Key, a sliding handheld clamp device to help open doors, push buttons on ATM machines and other high-contact public surfaces without having to touch potentially contaminated surfaces.
    • Osama Bin Noor, 29 from Dhakar, Bangladesh created a programme to connect young people and their ideas to policymakers, ensuring rural areas of Bangladesh get support during COVID-19.
    • Dmytrii Lavrinenko, 27, from Kiev, Ukraine works in the non-profit sector in Kiev and has created an online skills-sharing platform with his friends. It helps those who are disconnected and finding it difficult to gain access to services during the virus outbreak.

    Adam continues: “As an entrepreneur who got my start at age 13 through an innovation challenge at my school, I recognise the importance of the competitions like this in fostering the next generation of inventors, entrepreneurs and philanthropists. These young people have some truly brilliant ideas and can really make a difference to the coronavirus response – and the world – with the right support to unlock funding and scale-up.

    The winners will receive a package of funding, mentorship, an online training programme and a trip to London to visit Pearson College London in January 2021.

    To find out more about AdamStart and the winners, visit www.adamstart.com.

    For more articles, visit OD Blog.

    opportunitydesk.org

  • International Centre for Theoritical Physics (ICTP) Prize 2020 for Young Researchers from Developing Countries

    International Centre for Theoritical Physics (ICTP) Prize 2020 for Young Researchers from Developing Countries

    Deadline: September 30, 2020

    Applications are open for the International Centre for Theoritical Physics (ICTP) Prize 2020. The prize recognizes outstanding and original contributions to physics by young researchers from developing countries.

    Past winners include Ashoke Sen (1989), the Indian theoretical physicist who was awarded the 2012 Fundamental Physics Prize, and former ICTP Director Fernando Quevedo (1998).

    Founded in 1964 by the late Nobel Laureate Abdus Salam, ICTP seeks to accomplish its mandate by providing scientists from developing countries with the continuing education and skills that they need to enjoy long and productive careers. ICTP has been a major force in stemming the scientific brain drain from the developing world.

    Prize

    The prize includes:

    • A sculpture
    • A certificate, and
    • A cash prize.

    Eligibility

    • Anybody can nominate a candidate for the ICTP Prize.
    • Candidates must have obtained their PhD less than 12 years earlier, specifically after December 31, 2008 for the 2020 prize (or after December 31, 2007 for women with one child; after December 31, 2006 for women with two children).
    • Self nominations are acceptable.

    Application

    In order for a candidate to be considered, ICTP needs the following essential information:

    • Candidate’s up-to-date curriculum vitae, including birthplace and date, nationality, education, main positions held including present placement and duties, and major honours and awards.
    • Brief description of scientific achievements and proposed citation;
    • Two letters of recommendation.

    Submit your nomination, along with a signed and dated cover letter, by September 30, 2020 in one of the following ways:

    • Email: send to [email protected] OR
    • Mail to ICTP Prize Director’s Office, ICTP Strada Costiera 11, I-34151 Trieste, Italy.

    For more information, visit ICTP Prize.

    opportunitydesk.org