Dupe Oni is a renowned educator
and stateswoman. She is one of the very few women who have helped shape society
we live in today, using the most powerful tool available: Education. Mrs. Dupe
saw the 21st-century shift in perspective about education and technology as a
tool to socio-economic relevance in the evolving digital space, which opened
opportunities for people in the tech-compliant space, and she’s been at the
forefront of the campaign for digital skills.
She is one of the most
influential female educators who are changing the game through exclusively
brilliant ideas, innovations, and advocacy for interactive academics.
Dupe Oni is providing quality
education to the children through her early learning program. She has been
doing this for the past 23 years and has managed to build a world-class citadel
of learning in the heart of Lekki, in Lagos.
She believed in the idea that
children should be able to shape their future in their own ways. She also
believed that they should be sent to school from an early age to learn and
acquire skills for a better life.
“Study your children while you
can. The greatest gift you can give your child is not your riches, but
revealing to them their own”, she said.
She is the Executive Director of
the popular Standard Bearer School, located on 4,500 square meters of prime
property at the heart of Lekki Phase 1, Off Admiralty way, Lagos.
Standard Bearers School is an
early learning institution where academic and creative talents were given
similar priorities.
Dupe Oni recently spoke to
newsmen on the urgent need to revisit, review and reshape Nigeria’s curriculum
to align with the fast-evolving Industrial Revolution, so as for Nigerian
children to be relevant in the global space vis-à-vis the out-phasing conventional
work pattern that characterizes Nigeria’s curriculum.
What role do you think technology
can play in the future of African children? She was asked.
A year ago I couldn’t answer your
question, but today, I see it clearly.
In Silicon Valley, someone made a
comment. He said coding is the pencil of the future, and technology is the pen.
I had to give it some thought and realize that is actually correct. If you
listen to DAVOS 2019, you will notice the direction and future of work on a
global scale.
When the topic, the future of
work was introduced, the moderator said that in sub-Saharan Africa and in the
poor countries around the world, 75 million jobs cease to exist in the next 10
years. She also said these jobs would be displaced and replaced by 135 million
new jobs, but these new jobs will require new skills.
So this is how I processed
it…there are many people that worked in the car industry 20 to 25 years ago;
they were assembling cars. Their jobs were to fix the tyres, somebody’s job was
to fix the windscreen, somebody else’s job was to fix the wheel; some did the
wiring.
So what happened?
Those jobs gave way to a
different kind of job where technology was brought in. It was cheaper; it was
more efficient and it saved time. But it also required a different kind of
skill; the managers of those robots that now assemble the cars needed to talk
to the robots, they needed to instruct them, and so they need a higher skill
they needed to upgrade to, so as to carry out that digital innovation.
But the people who were
assembling manually lost jobs, the people who can speak to the computer got an
easy job. So, that is the future I see.
Now, back here in Nigeria, we are
in a global market, it's no longer about the African market and it certainly
not the Nigerian market. It’s the world. And when we are preparing children for
jobs, we have to prepare them for jobs that exist on a global scale.
Today we talk about so many
graduates unemployed. They are unemployed because they have a certificate but
they don’t have the required skills. The certificate means nothing because,
what people are looking out for, is the skill that you bring with your
certificate.
And so, Google says they don’t
need graduates anymore, Uber says the same. They all want skills, and what
skill do they want? Skills that can work with technology. So, it's not
everybody that has to be an Engineer in technology, but everybody has to be
able to know enough about technology to work in a technology-driven space. The
future of work is within that space. There’s absolutely nothing that will go on
10 years from today in the world, that will not have technology embedded in it.
The 4th Industrial Revolution is
upon us and we have to prepare our children for it. Now, there’s a young girl I
spoke to, I tried to get her involved in Technovation 2020 because one of the
things I’m doing now to impact children in techy space.
And she said, 'I don’t like
Techy, I don’t know much about technology'. So, I asked her a question, what do
you like to do best in your school? She says, is it the subject that I do well?
And I said my assumption is that
you do everything well, academically. Your father has sent you to a very
expensive private school, right? She said Yes. So, my question is, what do you
like to do? What is it that you will do for free? And so she says, Maths and
Biology’.
I’m confused’...Maths and
Biology, and you don’t like Technology? She insisted, No.
So I realized then, that many
children don’t even have an understanding of the future they are going to live
in. But again, it’s not the children that don’t have the understanding; the
parent, the school, many of us don’t have the understanding of the future that
we are preparing them for.
Parents should spend their money
wisely in getting the best and required education for their children to prepare
them for the future that requires Artificial Intelligence
We think of technology as ICT;
oh, they can use the computer; they are proficient at it, they can type, they
can use Microsoft, excel, but that’s not what it’s all about. what kind of jobs
will be available in the workspace tomorrow that they are going to be in? What
skill is available for those jobs, or are required for those jobs? we need to
teach those skills today, because if not, when they get into their future, like
the student I just told you about, they will suddenly find themselves unemployable,
after all the money their parents have spent on them.
Andela recently laid off some of
its staff, and people were wondering why. But the reality was that Andella no
longer wants to take fresh people with the basic skills and train them. What
Andela now needs are people with intermediate and managerial skills.
They need an upscale of what they
we're looking out for before. So, if a child is studying ICT, I don’t know what
the curriculum is like in the Nigerian system, but that child, not only that he
will have to come out with the languages (14, 16 languages in the coding
space), but they also need to have some certain skillset in leadership,
communication, public speaking, critical thinking, and particularly,
problem-solving.
Because when they bring them to
the table, they don’t want to tell them what to do. They want them to just come
in and proffer solutions to problems.
When we went to Silicon Valley,
they put 12 teams of girls in a room, and they said, ‘we’re going to teach you
about A.I (Artificial Intelligence) and as an educator, I panicked.
I have 5 girls in this room; they
are between 10 and 11 years old. Are they going to get this? I even had to say
a little prayer. But they took them on a 15-minute lecture on exactly what they
wanted and expectations, and they show them the process.
Then they let them go and said
okay, we are going to mix you up. We don’t want you to work with your teams,
you will be too comfortable. So 12 teams of 5 girls were established so that
each girl was at a table with another girl from another country. Bearing in
mind that in that group there will be about 4 or 5 that were in English
Speaking, the rest of them did not speak English.
And they did the mix-up, give
them the materials to work with and they were left alone to collaborate with
one another. And that was all. These girls created a set of Artificial
Intelligence that can sort out things by category. They did it.
What I later realized is, it’s
not about teaching, it’s about showing. It's about letting them discover for
themselves.
Those are the skills that the
future needs from them. Adaptability is something that they want. But when a
child is used to being told what to do, how does this child adapt in the
future?
They have to start learning how
to adapt, they have to start having respect for one another. Many children will
say to you; I don’t need help I can do it by myself. No. nobody wants that kind
of person in employment. They want people who can sit down, who can bring ideas
to the table. At the end of the day, the superior idea would emerge.
So when you talk about preparing
the Nigerian children for the future, the future is actually here. What we
fear, what we expect is already here. We are living in the 21st century, and so
the future is now.
So everything, we need to do it
now. The is a desperate need to change the mindset of our children.
Our children spend too much time
doing irrelevant things. Private sector pampered kids. The public sector
doesn’t have enough exposure, resources are not available.
I got an invitation to attend a
symposium, Agbamisin, and I don’t know why I picked myself up and went, but it
was one of the best things that happened to me because Agbamisin was a
symposium held by a foundation and it was for secondary school children in the
public school system. I got there and I thought, ‘well, I’m here’ I’m sure
there are some new things I’m supposed to learn here.
And so it turns out that it was
the finals of a competition where these children were given the task of finding
solutions to problems, within their communities, exactly the same thing
Technovation offered to us.
But this time, it wasn’t an App,
but the solution was to build a prototype. When these children started
presenting, my mind was blown. Their English wasn’t as perfect as the private
school child will come and present, but their ideas were brilliant. And I was
amazed.
And I realized that talent lies
everywhere in Nigeria, and perhaps our biggest mistake was separating the two
school systems. And that we have to bring back, because, Private school
children will learn from the energy and the drive from the focus of the child
who knows that he is driven because he wants to drive himself out of his
current state into a better place.
The public school child will
equally learn something from the private school child, who is looking at how he
has to behave and what society expects from him as an achiever in his future.
Separating them has denied them
of that quality of learning that is intrinsic, but needs to take place.
It's not good enough that our
children are going out in cars and are having a good time, there are lessons to
be learned on the road of life, and in the street of life. If we can’t take
them through the streets, we should allow them to have some contact in schools
with children from that category and in doing that, they will get wise.
Do you know that Nigeria is one
of the very few countries that have a strong private school system?
But the countries that are doing
mighty things, they are doing it on the strength of their public school system.
Finland doesn’t have a private school system, yet they are number one.
Malaysia, Singapore, Japan, China; they don’t have. But the shift has moved
from America.
America has a lot of Private
schools but they have seen the mistakes now, which is why Chatty schools are
merging in America, which is like a way to bridge it. I know that we have to
work together. We have to bring our children together for a better Nigeria. We
have to create an environment where learning comes first and social status
takes the back seat.




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