The visionary response by leading African private education provider ADvTECH in the face of Covid-curfews has ensured the sustainability of its ability to deliver academic excellence at its schools and universities across the continent, including in Kenya.
Last week, with the release of the Kenya Certificate of Primary Education results, it emerged that a staggering 43% of ADvTECH’s Makini School students scored As and A-s.
At its Crawford International School in Kenya, learning continued (and continues) online during curfew, and students performed exceptionally well during their inaugural IGCSE exams administered by the University of Cambridge. Three students got full-house As with one achieving seven A*(performance over 90 percent). On average, 4.2 As were achieved per student. 95 percent of all results fell within the A*-C bracket and 70 percent between A*-B bracket.
“Last year was an exceptionally challenging year for students and educators, but because of the resilience of our community and the robust support received from our Central Academic Team, which ensured learning could continue effectively despite lockdowns, we are well pleased that our students were able to continue their academic journey with minimal interruption,” says Jenny Coetzee, MD at Crawford International School.
Angelica Ouya, Education Director at the Makini Group of Schools, sister school of Crawford, says last week’s KCPE results tell an inspiring story.
“As with all schools, and all educational institutions, the challenges were many and varied. However we were able to ensure that our educators delivered thorough coverage of the entire syllabus, while continuing through e-learning.
“Notably, the collaboration and support system developed between educators, parents and students is a positive development that will remain well past the pandemic,” she says.
Makini had 281 candidates sit the exam in both their Nairobi and Kisumu campuses, while the Ngong campus had 196 students with 103 learners scoring As and A-s. The Kisumu campus, Makini School Kibos, sat for their fourth KCPE. 85 students took the exam, with 42 learners scoring As and A-s.
“We are so proud of our students. They really rose to the occasion and delivered fantastic and steady academic progress despite the challenges they faced as a result of the pandemic,” says Ouya.
Coetzee says the initial shock at the first stages of the pandemic quickly turned into positive action as a result of the strategy introduced by ADvTECH and the strong willingness on the part of educators, parents and students to make things work no matter what.
“Fortunately for our students, we were able to draw on the decades-long experience and technological development at ADvTECH, which saw them rapidly transition 75 000 students across Africa seamlessly to online tuition,” she says.
“Additionally, they recognised the need for additional support and pastoral care above and beyond the continuing of our students’ academic journeys, which went a long way towards assisting those employees, educators, students and parents who required holistic support.”
Coetzee and Ouya says there really is something to be said for not letting a crisis go to waste.
“While times were tough, we are emerging from this experience stronger and better able to deal with future challenges,” says Ouya.
Coetzee says the diversity, flexibility and agility of ADvTECH as a company, as well as of its employees, educators and students, proved to be the secret ingredient to success during this difficult time.
“ADvTECH has a rich diversity of offering which came into play. Not all our operations are schools only, so we were also able to draw on the strength of our Tertiary and Resourcing divisions, on top of the learnings and solutions from the other 140 schools in the group. So because we received learning solutions already developed in our tertiary division, we were able to be extremely resilient in changing to online teaching almost immediately while still offering a great product.”
On the Makini side, they were able to respond in an agile manner, by going online while also introducing an additional optional offering of the Cambridge system with the support of the Crawford School team.
“Our motto at Crawford is Tutum te Rebore Reddam, which means We will keep you safe by our strength. This truly played out during the pandemic and to this day, because we have two mighty schools that may been destroyed by Covid restrictions. However, because of the intellectual capital of the group, and the fortitude of our students, parents and educators, what could have been another tick on Covid’s tally of destruction has left us more empowered and ready to face the future than ever before. And instead of closing our doors, our school expanded, adding an additional 9 classrooms during this time to absorb the growth within the school, making us ready to ensure sustainable academic excellence for coming generations,” says Coetzee.