Most graduates of the prestigious Massachusetts Institute
of Technology (MIT) in Boston have their choice of six-figure-salary jobs after
graduation.
But for one graduate, a different calling has meant he's
sacrificed a comfortable life and taken a big risk to follow his dream: to open
Africa's first STEM (Science Technology Engineering Mathematics) school in
Nigeria.
Nigerian-American Obinna Ukwuani, who grew up in
Washington D.C., went back to Nigeria for eighth and ninth grades as his family
felt it was important for him to know his roots. He had a revelation when he
returned during his freshman year at MIT.
"I met up with my peers, the friends and classmates
I'd met during my time there and it was shocking to see how far behind me they
were. It was a very real experience for me," says Ukwuani. The edge, he
realized, was due to his schooling in the United States. The imbalance he
recognized, he says, "was an injustice."
"In the U.S., if you work hard, you'll be fine in
this life. So I had that moment where I knew I wanted to improve things in
Nigeria."
Robotics boot camp:
Ukwuani's sudden realization eventually led to the launch
of a robotics summer school in Lagos for high school students from 2012 to
2014. The Exposure Robotics Academy taught 113 boys and girls from 17 states
around Nigeria how to code and build robots.
The five-week residential program hired MIT students to
mentor Nigerian high school students in a program sponsored by Shell Oil.
Recently, a documentary based on the program, "Naija
Beta", won "Best Documentary Film" at the Roxbury International
Film Festival. He's hoping on repeating the experience with a new STEM school.
Taking risks:
It's early days but initial investment for the school, to
be called Makers Academy, is happening, and Ukwuani's sleepless nights are
starting to pay off.
"I really believe in what I'm doing," he says.
After writing a business plan, Ukwuani spent five months
shopping it around before four investors came forward, each offering a $50,000
investment.
"It's a long-term model. It could be a decade before
they get their money back," he says.
Makers Academy:
Ukwuani believes Nigeria's biggest issue presently is
that the country doesn't produce anything. "We import everything, and it
comes back to education. We're not doing a good job," he says. He's hoping
to change that. When the school opens in Abuja (he projects this will happen in
2018 or 2019), Ukwuani is aiming for 600 students living on the Makers Academy
campus.
Similar to himself, the students will possess a certain
proficiency in mathematics and an aptitude for building things.
"I was taking things apart when I was 10 years old.
If you had purchased a remote control car, I would rip it apart and put it back
together," recalls Ukwuani.
The current economic situation in Nigeria could be a
benefit, he says. The recession is forcing people to bring kids studying abroad
back to Nigeria. "Now more than ever we need more options -- and we don't
have them." Hopefully Makers Academy will be the first of many for
Nigeria's youth.
Courtesy: CNN.
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