The Ministry of Education has announced the nationwide rollout of subject-specific, AI-powered apps for Senior High Schools (SHS), aiming to transform how over 1.4 million students and 68,000 teachers engage with the classroom.
These aren’t just flashy tech add-ons. Built directly on Ghana’s revamped SHS curriculum, the apps are designed to help teachers plan lessons, conduct assessments, and provide learners with personalized, interactive resources — all while reinforcing the country’s ethical values, cultural identity, gender equality, and social inclusion.
In short: Ghana wants its students to succeed in the digital age without losing sight of what makes the country unique.
The apps were co-developed by a coalition of national education bodies — including the Ghana Education Service (GES), the National Council for Curriculum and Assessment (NaCCA), and others — with technical input from Playlab AI and support from T-TEL and the Mastercard Foundation.
“This isn’t about replacing teachers. It’s about giving them superpowers,” the Ministry said in a statement.
The goal? Make teaching more effective, close learning gaps, and give students tools that actually work in the real world — all while supporting teachers who are often overburdened and under-resourced.
It’s also a sign that Ghana is refusing to be left behind in the global push toward education tech. While AI in education has sparked debate in other parts of the world, Ghana is betting that homegrown, curriculum-based AI can be a game-changer — especially when built with local values in mind.
The rollout starts now, but this is just the beginning. A formal review is expected in the coming months, and if it succeeds, the program could pave the way for even more tech-driven solutions in Ghana’s public schools.
Source:TheDotNews