Technology drives creativity and quicker, more cost-effective projects. A step change for our industry.
See how we connect innovation to outcomes.
Expert insights on issues that transform business, increase sustainability and improve lives
Here’s a snapshot of what we’re thinking about. Explore these highlights or view the full library to dive deeper into the ideas shaping our work.
Meet some of our passionate problem-solvers, constructive creatives and inspiring innovators
In the Maputo province of Mozambique, rural children often encounter Portuguese for the first time on their first day at school. They may be good talkers in their mother tongue, such as the Xichangana and Xirhonga languages. They may be bright enough to learn the building blocks of reading, just like any other child across the world. They may even chant the sounds and letters back to the teacher in class. But so much is missed in building the basics, to the extent that even many second grade students are unable to read any words at all.
Cambridge Education is technical advisor for an initiative that intervenes at this critical moment by co-producing materials and a curriculum in children’s mother tongue. Students can later use these skills to learn to read in Portuguese, which will serve as the language of instruction for the rest of their school years.
This early stage of learning to read is known as decoding. Effectively, students learn the building blocks of words, such as the sounds produced in a language, and the letters and syllables used to represent those sounds.
For example, teachers introduce letters sequentially, starting with the most common ones. If they began with ABC, it might take too long for students to access letters that actually combine to create meaningful words in their language. So, the first letters they teach are N, A, and K. Children gain rudimentary phonemic awareness and phonics abilities, as well as the concepts of print – i.e. that you read from the top of the page, and from left to right.
Our literacy element is part of a wider education programme run by implementing partner ADPP. This local NGO is the implementation lead for the prime contractor Planet Aid, which is operating within the Food for Knowledge Project (FFK). The programme is funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, under the McGovern-Dole International Food for Education and Child Nutrition Program.
So far, nearly 10,000 children have benefited from the development, production, and distribution of these bilingual learning materials. The project has also trained approximately 300 teachers in the use of the bilingual methods and materials. The results are extremely encouraging. From a baseline of zero, most children can now read letters, syllables and small words and phrases.
The project has a strong sustainability core, as the work is carried out by the Mozambican NGO ADPP. Some 27 reading-coaches live and work in the field, providing constant pedagogical support to schools and teachers. Since our program incorporates new literacy approaches, student-centred strategies, and brand new materials, the role coaches plan in the broader process is remarkably important. A few in-service training days alone would never prove effective in bringing this ‘revolution’ in education the way the persistent, school-based coaching does.
By building school gardens to tackle malnutrition, providing school feeding, and improving sanitation and hygiene through small infrastructure projects, FFK brings a cross-sectoral approach to tackling the obstacles faced by primary children at this critical stage.
Education systems in lower income countries are stronger when they engage and inspire girls to believe in a better future.
International development senior consultant Marc van der Stouwe looks back on the successes and lessons of English in Action.
On 27th January 2022, the UK aid funded SESIL programme scaled up its Community Led Learning initiative to reach up to 360,000 children across Uganda.
Senior education advisor Philip Bebb explains the logistical challenge of distributing 2.7 million school handbooks to all four corners of Sierra Leone.
Charlie Gordon, SESIL’s technical team leader, discusses how the programme’s response to COVID-19 shows that an urgent solution to a crisis can also be a sustainable one.
Our teacher education programme in Ghana explains how it's keeping teachers learning during the COVID-19 pandemic.
GESS has helped more than 295,000 South Sudanese girls get to school through its cash transfer initiative
To celebrate International Day of the Girl Child, our Girls Education South Sudan (GESS) programme launched a trio of pioneering films created by South Sudanese girls at screenings in Juba and New York.
To celebrate International Day of the Girl Child, our Girls Education South Sudan (GESS) programme launched a trio of pioneering films created by South Sudanese girls at screenings in Juba and New York.
A UK aid funded programme is helping communities to adapt by providing technical know-how and financial aid to climate resilience projects and strengthening government financial, planning and governance systems.
The three-year HAF programme provides healthy food and enriching activities to disadvantaged children across England.
By converging best practice with existing plans – rather than starting from scratch or arriving mid-implementation – technical assistance can add real value, inject momentum and maximise return on investment.
An ongoing project has helped 10,000 farmers increase their yields while reversing damage near Berbak National Park, an ecologically-vital oasis of peat swamp forest.
In 2018, the Ministry of Education and Sports (MoES) in Uganda launched the Strengthening Education Systems for Improved Learning (SESIL) programme to improve the quality and equity of measurable learning outcomes at lower primary level.
In rapidly growing Nigeria, one of Africa’s most populous countries, providing a solid education for young people — especially girls — is no easy task.
Around the world, tutors and teachers routinely use the Internet to find useful resources for their own professional development.