Africa is a young continent, with 40% of its population aged 15 or younger as of 2021.1 This “youth bulge” represents both an opportunity and a risk,23 with education able to tip the scale in favor of opportunity. For Africa to foster innovation, employment, and social mobility in its teeming population, it is imperative to focus on inclusive, equitable, relevant, and quality education for all. Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 4, focused on quality education, is considered to be an enabler of the other SDGs.4 Facing the five-year runway to 2030 and the expiration of SDGs, it is critical to accelerate the pace at which education systems foster and support relevant learning and skills development, transforming African education systems.

However, systemic barriers to funding, quality teaching, infrastructure, and access, interlaced with sociocultural and governance issues, create a complex challenge for achieving SDG 4 and transforming African education systems. Disconnects between policy and practice are evident,5 and gender-based discrimination and violence, poverty, rurality, conflict, and disability continue to preclude millions of marginalized children from accessing and completing education. In Malawi, for instance, for the age group between 15 and 17, 85% were deprived of education, making it the metric with the highest level of deprivation.6

Sub-Saharan Africa has a teacher shortage of 15 million, greatly undermining access to quality education.7 Curricular gaps, including a mismatch with labor market demands and a lack of emphasis on relevant skills, severely compromise the quality and relevance of education in Africa.8 For instance, although the Malawian economy relies on agriculture and positioning the country’s agricultural sector as an engine of growth is a major development goal for the country, research reveals glaring gaps in related skills, such as those required for export-oriented agriculture—skills that the education sector should ideally nurture.9

Addressing these challenges demands a fresh, systemic lens, one that reimagines education not just as schooling but as a holistic and ongoing process for the development of a range of skills, adaptability, and equity, in alignment with the realities of today’s world and the demands of tomorrow. This transformational paradigm would center the vision and purpose of education for societies, innovate to improve how learning happens, and align incentives, relationships, and mindsets across the system to achieve a shared vision for education.10

Read the full article about African education systems by Benister Nephitaly and Modupe (Mo) Olateju at Brookings.