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1. THE WORLD WE ARE TRAINING THEM FOR
Most formal education systems are still built for a pre-digital, industrial-era economy:
Heavy focus on theory, memorization, and exams.
Limited access to computers, reliable internet, and trained teachers.
Curricula that haven’t caught up to AI, cloud computing, data, and cybersecurity.
In places like South Africa, even coding and robotics programs started, then stalled due to lack of direction and teacher training.
That prepares students for jobs that are shrinking or being automated.
2. THE WORLD THAT ACTUALLY EXISTS.
Tech-first economies run on:
Practical skills: Data analytics, product management, cloud, cybersecurity. Those are the roles Nigerian and global employers are hiring for now.
Problem-solving with tools: Students need to use AI, code, and digital platforms to build solutions, not just write about them.
Speed and adaptability: The market changes faster than 4-year degree cycles.
3. What’s changing
The gap is being patched in pockets:
International programs: ITU, Google, and UNICEF are rolling AI & robotics training in Nigeria, Kenya, Ghana, SA, Ivory Coast.
Edtech & boot camps: Organizations like Tech crush have trained 17,000+ youth with project-based, job-relevant skills.
Government projects: Malawi, Tanzania, Uganda are building tech hubs and training teachers for digital classrooms.
But these are still pilots and private initiatives. Only 10-15% of African youth have access to structured digital education aligned with today’s economy. The rest are graduating without foundational digital skills.
4. The core issue
It’s not effort. Students are studying hard. The problem is direction. The system trains for stability and certificates, while the market rewards adaptability and applied tech skills.
Bottom line: Some African students are getting the tools through boot camps, fellowships, and new pilots. Most are still being prepared for a world that no longer exists. Until the formal system catches up, the students who compete globally are usually the ones who reskill outside it.
Tech isn’t the future — it’s already the present. Students who ignore it are already behind.
That’s exactly why the gap we talked about matters so much. Most African students are still being trained for a pre-digital economy built on theory, memorization, and certificates. Meanwhile, the economy that’s hiring right now runs on data analytics, cloud computing, product management, cybersecurity, and AI fluency. The shift already happened. Employers aren’t asking if they should adopt these tools; they’re asking who can use them starting Monday.
So the line is blunt for a reason: if you’re waiting for the system to catch up before you engage with tech, you’re already behind. The present belongs to students who treat digital tools as core skills, not electives, and who prove what they can build, not just what they can recall. The future is already here for them.
The question is whether the rest of the system will catch up before more students gets left out?
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Law & Justice · Joseph Ayo Babalola UniversityCorresponding author
My name is Ajiboye Praise Olamide. I am a law student, studying at Joseph Ayo Babalola University, ikeji arakeji, Osun state. I love making debates and proving points. This website just happens to be a platform where I can make myself clear on some points.