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    Ghana gets SAP Africa Code Week

    Africa Code Week (ACW), which started in 2015 to equip parents, teachers and educators with the coding skills and teaching materials they need to train children and youth in their immediate communities, arrived back in Ghana this week.
    Ghana gets SAP Africa Code Week

    SAP, Dreamoval and the Ghana Education Service in Accra and Kumasi jointly organised the series of Train-The-Trainer (TTT) workshops in Accra and Kumasi. Ghana’s Deputy Minister of Education, Barbara Ayisi Acher attending the launch. The Africa Code Week delegation also met with several Ghanaian dignitaries during the course of this training week, including Ghana Vice President His Excellency Dr. Mahamudu Bamumia. For Vice President Bamumia, who has assured his full support to the initiative, “Africa Code Week is a powerful leverage for the public sector to wide-spread digital literacy on a nation-wide scale.”

    Higher targets

    Ghana also joined in 2015, engaging 730 children and youth in the first year. Last year, the Dreamoval Foundation became the implementing partner for ACW in Ghana: with its support, 590 teachers were trained as part of the Train-the-Trainer sessions and 51 710 children and youth engaged in October 2016, of which 56% were girls.

    Dreamoval will be, once again, the Implementing Partner for Africa Code Week 2017 in Ghana. “We have set ourselves the target of training 800 teachers this week and 150,000 young Ghanaians from October 18- 25,” says Francis Ahene-Affoh, head of business development and marketing at Dreamoval Limited.

    According to Claire Gillissen-Duval, director of EMEA Corporate Social Responsibility at SAP and global lead for Africa Code Week, “The initiative’s effectiveness in empowering the next generation of digital economy workers in Ghana requires knowledgeable instructors who are able to provide mentorship and skills transfer to participating youngsters.”

    PPP needed in digital age

    This year in Ghana, SAP Business One skilled volunteers travelled from all corners of the globe, volunteering their time to roll out this series of TTT workshops. Equally critical to youth empowerment in the digital age are public-private partnerships, as Gillissen-Duval explains, “Africa Code Week relies on a fast-growing network of visionary partners, all eager to collaborate to unlock a new world of opportunities for every boy and girl across the continent. Ghana is a striking example of the far-reaching impact of collaboration and leadership on our ability to meet the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals,” she concludes.

    Ten-year plan

    SAP Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) EMEA started Africa Code Week together with public and private sector partners, with a long-term goal of empowering more than 200 000 teachers and positively affecting the lives of 5 million children and youth within the next 10 years. So far, over half a million young Africans have been introduced to coding across 30 countries.

    Africa Code Week’s key partners (SAP, UNESCO YouthMobile, the Cape Town Science Centre and the Galway Education Centre) have set new ambitious goals for 2017: impact the lives of 500,000 youth across 35 African countries over the course of an 8-day period from 18-25 October. For more information, go to www.africacodeweek.org.

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