Submitted
Re-engaging Learners

Teleschools Digital Education System

Team Leader
Olanrewaju Oke
Solution Overview & Team Lead Details
Our Organization
Uplifting Media and Entertainment Limited
What is the name of your solution?
Teleschools Digital Education System
Provide a one-line summary of your solution.
Teleschools will help displaced or unconnected children access good quality education, via digital classrooms, regardless of their location or economy
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What specific problem are you solving?

1. NIGERIA - UNREGULATED SCHOOLS & OUT OF SCHOOL CHILDREN

Lagos State, which is Nigeria's second most populous state and its economic capital, has about 6.5 million children in primary and secondary schools out of which only about 1 million are catered for by the State's organised public schools service. The other 5.5 million children are served by 17,000 private schools of which only about 5002 are registered and regulated. Roughly only 40% of the children in Lagos State have access to education content and pedagogy, regulated and monitored to guarantee quality standards approved by both local and international education authorities.

Nigeria's Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC) database indicates about 23 million students were registered in primary schools across Nigeria in 2014. Applying a 2.6% annual population growth factor brings that figure to about 26 million students as at the end of 2019. Adjusting the split of regulated to unregulated schools upwards to 50/50 gives about 13 million Nigerian primary school students receiving education of a quality undetermined, unregulated and probably unable to deliver to its recipients any significant advantage to succeed in life.

For Nigerian secondary or high school students, UBEC indicates about 9 million students registered nationwide in 2014. This extrapolates to about 10.2 million students at the end of 2019. Half of that figure, or slightly over 5 million, are secondary school students being tutored in unregulated institutions that may not provide them with a level playing field to compete with their more privileged counterparts.

Education for the poorest of Nigeria’s rural children, who have poor or no access to physical structures set up for learning – i.e. brick and mortar schools - is perhaps the most urgent priority requiring broad-scale collaboration across the ICT ecosystem. Every day that Nigeria’s over 20 million rural children cannot access a regulated and standardised learning platform, to give them a level playing field to compete with their urban peers, is a major disenfranchisement to them. There are also more than 10 million Almajiri children or urban Northern street urchins, condemned to a bleak future of street begging once they graduate from Koranic recital school, which is the only form of education they will ever receive.


2. NIGERIA - DISPLACED CHILDREN DUE TO INSURGENCY & TERRORIST ACTIVITY

Borno State, epicentre of Nigeria's Boko Haram insurgency, has lost over 5000 classrooms in last fifteen years to internally bred terrorist activities. This translates to about 120,000 children denied their right to education and a foundation for a good quality of life. Primary education in Borno State has received a terrible blow, with hundreds of thousands of children out of school for varying periods since the insurgency began over a decade ago.

Most important and urgent is the need to get these children back into school. However, 5000 classrooms translates to about 200 schools. Assuming twenty staff required per school (including 10 multi-subject teachers), the Governor would require over $3 million, to cover salaries for a single year. In five years, he would spend almost $15 million on salaries only.

Assuming Borno State managed to construct 25 cheap, bare plastered wall classrooms for each school for just $10,000, that's another $2 million expended, with no furniture, staff offices, teaching aids or civil amenities provided. Realistically, Borno State would require over $50 million, spread over a 5 year period, to recreate the 5000 classrooms. If you add other States in Northern Nigeria that are facing the same crisis, the number of schoolchildren involved would approach a million and the costs to put them back in school would balloon into hundreds of millions of dollars. The State governments involved simply don't have the money.


3. UKRAINE - 500,000 TO 1 MILLION CHILDREN REFUGEES

Ukrainian refugees admitted into neighbouring countries have topped 2.7 million persons so far.  As of 9th March 2022, Poland had taken in 1,412,502 refugees; Hungary 214,160; Slovakia 165,199; Russia 97,098; Romania 84,671; Moldova 82,762 and Belarus 765. More than 255,000 people have gone to other European countries (BBCNews - UN Data).

In recent weeks, the Ukrainian Education ministry, aided by UNICEF launched an online kindergarten featuring educational and developmental videos for children aged 3-6,to help parents engage their children in educational and developmental activities, and to take their minds off the war as much as possible.

In a few weeks’ time, the number of Ukrainian refugees will cross the three million persons mark and the number of displaced schoolchildren will exceed a million. That's roughly 1,400 primary and secondary (high) schools at full capacity. Neighbouring countries and the EU school systems cannot absorb over1 million Ukrainian school children in the next 3-6 months.

Even if all 27 EU countries were to spread the displaced Ukrainian children around evenly, each country would have to create at least 50 schools to cater for them. They would altogether require about 28,000 teachers or about 1 billion euros in annual teachers' compensation. This assessment doesn't include the curriculum, language and culture transition that would present challenges to the affected children.


4. GLOBAL OUT OF SCHOOL CHILDREN

UNESCO Institute for Statistics estimates that about 258 million children and youth are out of school, according to UIS data for the school year ending in 2018. The total includes 59 million children of primary school age, 62 million of lower secondary school age and 138 million of upper secondary age.

What is your solution?

Teleschools Digital Education system delivers digital education with high quality pedagogy, content and ambience. With Teleschools, every child, regardless of social status or location, has access to high quality education comparable to that offered in mid-tier private schools.

Teleschools takes education at all levels out of the four walls of brick and mortar classrooms to students anywhere and everywhere, through digital media and communication channels across urban and rural communities. 

Teleschools provides a rapidly deployable alternative to the high setup and maintenance costs for brick and mortar schools. It also reduces the need for expensive data access for digital learning. Teleschools provides capability to digitally recreate and manage large numbers of entire schools for a fraction of the traditional model costs, mainly by centralizing the curriculum and pedagogy elements and by creating digital equivalent for the physical classroom interaction.

Teleschools utilizes Digital TV broadcast technology to achieve widest possible reach, based on high TV ownership in developing and developed regions and across socio-economic groups. It also taps into the unrestricted reach of satellite broadcast signal across wide geographical areas. Multicast digital TV broadcast offers massive economies of scale, to reduce cost of education content delivery per student, based on significant enrolment of schools on a State or Regional basis, multicast TV fixed total cost per broadcast stream and defined coverage area. This reduces cost of the service proportionately per student as the user base increases.

Teleschools employs Mobile Telephony (Voice and text) to achieve teacher to students and also student to student interactivity in order to deliver classroom ambience for students and their teachers. It also uses Satellite based content transfer service to enable teachers disseminate assignments and tutorial material to students.

Teleschools' Advertising-revenue-based financing meaning there will be no recurrent charges to students after they have acquired access equipment for Teleschools’ service.

Its locally assembled low cost access equipment costs significantly less (about one third or less) compared to cost of equipment or smart devices required for Internet based online learning.

Who does your solution serve, and in what ways will the solution impact their lives?

Digital technology provides a leapfrog solution to get quality education across to out of school, unconnected and displaced children in an economically sustainable way that guarantees them a fair chance for a good quality of life. However, there is the challenge of annuity costs associated with Internet access based digital learning as well as the cost of sophisticated equipment required to access such digital learning systems. These are disincentives for the spread of digital education, especially in economically challenged geographies.

Teleschools provides a low cost but high quality, rapid back to school solution for children forced to discontinue onsite, regular schooling due to socio-economic, health, political, military, criminal or otherwise originated adverse activity that has resulted in restriction of movement, limitation of physical interaction and/or displacement locally or internationally.

Teleschools enables children who are victims of backward socio-cultural or religious practices , as well as children affected by communal unrest, violence and even war, to resume and continue their schooling in safe, offsite locations with the comfort of familiar teachers, school curriculum and pedagogy. They are also able to access high quality standardized classroom content comparable with the high fee paying schools.

All this is made available at a fraction of the cost associated with Internet access based digital learning and therefore expands tremendously the reach of Teleschools Digital Education System within extremely economically disadvantaged economies, regions and communities where it is nearly impossible to physically aggregate the necessary components required for good quality education delivery.

How are you and your team well-positioned to deliver this solution?

Teleschools team consists of versatile experienced professionals and global service providers who have been involved with providing technology and telecommunications services and also consumer goods to consumers in developing economies on two continents and one sub-continent - Africa, Asia and the Middle East. This has afforded the team the ability to identify low cost solution models to address needs of populations in economies where infrastructure is underdeveloped, income is suboptimal and there are few to none existing support systems to aid the spread of technology and provide ease of access to modern goods and services.

The team consists mainly of Nigerians, raised and trained in Nigeria, who have worked in different parts of the world across North America, Europe, Asia, Africa and the Middle East, gathering experience and skills in best practices and global success models for delivering world class solutions in developing markets. They are able to bring their experience to bear in designing accessible and affordable solutions to life in sustainable models that can be rapidly expanded across disparate terrains.

The Non-Nigerians in the team have very deep experience and familiarity with Africa, Middle East and European markets where they have provided and continue to provide highly customised and localised services that improve the lives of the consumers they serve.

Teleschools lead and its main visioner, Olanrewaju Oke, had previously led the most successful digital enrollment of the educational sector in the early days of broadband telecommunication expansion in Nigeria in the early 2000s. This was formally and nationally acknowledged by the Nigerian Telecommunications regulator. Also, MTN, the most successful mobile operator in Nigeria and in Africa, is perhaps the single most significant private corporate contributor to the development of education in Nigeria through its CSR activities.

Which dimension of the Challenge does your solution most closely address?
  • Lift administrative burdens on educators and support teacher professional development for schools serving vulnerable student populations
Where our solution team is headquartered or located:
Lagos, Nigeria
Our solution's stage of development:
  • Prototype
How many people does your solution currently serve?
None
Why are you applying to Solve?

The biggest support Teleschools requires now is believers who will facilitate access to the school children who require its services. In the last two years, Teleschools has approached several State (Regional) governments in Nigeria whose school children face issues of restricted movement, displacement and disconnection from their schools due to COVID-19 pandemic and the security issues resulting from the endemic insurgency in the Northern regions. As Teleschools moves to expand its operations to cater to economically disadvantaged Nigerian children and also the displaced Ukrainian children now dispersed across several countries, it will require facilitators who will encourage the stakeholders in the education of these affected children to embrace what may be a significantly unconventional solution emerging from an unlikely part of the world.

Beyond this, Teleschools will require partnership with logistics and project management partners who know how to make the seemingly impossible look like a cakewalk. Putting over a million schoolchildren in disparate locations back in school with thousands of their teachers in similarly disparate locations will not be easy or convenient but there are those gifted to see what the regular eye cannot see and who are able to plan and execute flawlessly, even in the midst of chaos. They are critical partners for Teleschools and what we do.

Finally, international, national and regional policy makers are required as partners, who will take digital learning beyond intervention during crisis periods and make it an integral part of the basic education policy and a complementary learning system alongside onsite, in-classroom learning. As the world advances technologically and services become increasingly mobile and personalised, school systems need to proactively integrate digital learning systems into their operations and promote blended learning as the default system. This would ensure that events which had previously led to prolonged cessation of learning for children across the world would no longer have such debilitating impact as affected children would switch to digital mode and continue their learning regardless.

In which of the following areas do you most need partners or support?
  • Product / Service Distribution (e.g. expanding client base)
Who is the Team Lead for your solution?
Olanrewaju Oke
More About Your Solution
Your Team
Your Business Model & Funding
Solution Team:
Olanrewaju Oke
Olanrewaju Oke