Connect with us

Click here to join NNU for free and make money while reading news and getting updates daily.

News

Federal Gov’t Introduces AI, Design Thinking, Robotics In Smart Schools

Published

on


The Federal Government has introduced Design Thinking, Coding, Robotics and Artificial Intelligence (DTCRA) in the newly established smart schools across the country.

Executive Secretary of the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC), Dr. Hamid Bobboyi, who made this known, said that the government was determined to equip learners in the smart schools with necessary skills needed to support technological development of Nigeria.

 

He stated this in his opening remarks at a workshop on “Integrating Design Thinking, Coding, Robotics and Artificial Intelligence (DTCRA) into the Smart Schools Programme” which was held at the Digital Resource Centre (DRC) of the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC).

Advertisement

He explained that the introduction of the programmes in the classroom would equip the students with the right skills necessary to inspire critical thinking, creativity, innovation and nurturing problem solvers amongst young learners.

 

He added that the vision of UBEC to integrate DTCRA in smart schools would help the country to nurture globally competitive learners.

 

In his remarks, the National Coordinator of the Digital Resource Centre (DRC), Prof. Bashir Galadanci, said the workshop had brought together seasoned experts drawn from academia, private sector and the Commission to brainstorm on the best ways of integrating the necessary skills in DTCRA into smart schools.

Advertisement

 

UBEC spokesperson, Mr David Apeh, in a statement issued in Abuja on Sunday, recalled that the Commission had recently established 37 smart schools across the country.

 

He noted that smart education was an ambitious programme introduced within the basic education subsector with one smart school in each state of the Federation as well as the Federal Capital Territory (FCT).

 

Advertisement

“Fourteen (14) of these schools have taken off in different parts of the country with learners in these schools being exposed to modern blended methods of teaching and learning, and the use of state-of-the-art technologies in improving learning outcomes,” he stated.



Source link: Leadership

Continue Reading
Advertisement