Fab Inc News

Management

Fab Inc. and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation launch AI for Education, a programme to harness the power of AI for education in LMICs

Wednesday 25th October, 2023

The long-term goal for this project is to ensure that the supply of AI tools for education in low and middle-income countries (LMICs) are high quality, and available to meet the needs of their students. We want to create a vibrant community of AI in education in LMICs. This challenge is too great for any single organisation. However, by sharing our ideas and building collaboratively, we aim to help shape the development of AI use in education in LMICs.

There are three elements to the programme:

1. Convenings

Events to bring the community together and discuss challenges and solutions. The first of these was held on 3rd October and focussed on AI & Assessments. The event brought together nearly 100 participants from across 17 low-income countries, mostly across sub-Saharan Africa, alongside participants from North America and Europe including educators from government, international and local NGOs, implementers, tech-startup networks, technology developers and large assessment companies – event summary available here.

2. Learning by Doing

Grantees will be given funds to support the piloting and development of their tools.

3. Open Knowledge Platform

This will host materials used in the convening, and will grow to host ideas, guidance, shared knowledge and open-source code and tools to help the education community learn how to sensibly integrate AI into their work helping children learn. It will be a space that helps shape the development of new tools and products, and the integration of AI into existing ones. It will help tech-innovators and educators by lowering the cost of their tools and shaping them to best practice for FLN. We welcome any contributions here – this is a space to share your ideas and learnings.

More details will be shared soon! In the meantime please contact Sirin Tangpornpaiboon if you have any queries.

Sirin.Tangpornpaiboon@fabinc.co.uk

AI & Assessments Event Summary PDF (1.4MB)

Management

EdTech Hub announces the launch of its research portfolio which includes collaboration with Fab Inc

Monday 7th March, 2022

Fab Inc is pleased to announce it is launching a study on the impact of GIS-supported teacher allocation in Sierra Leone as part of a research portfolio from EdTech Hub. The portfolio represents the largest public-private investment in primary research around EdTech evidence in low- and middle-income countries to date.

The nearly GBP 5.5 million-portfolio was commissioned by EdTech Hub to fill the evidence gap decision-makers grapple with when choosing EdTech interventions to support children, teachers, and school communities. Our study, The impact of GIS-supported teacher allocation in Sierra Leone, will specifically focus on how a preference matching model can be used to ensure the best outcomes.

“We are thrilled to be collaborating with Fab Inc as one of the studies in our research portfolio,” says EdTech Hub Executive Director Verna Lalbeharie. “The evidence generated by this study, we hope, will inform key, future education decisions, and influence the design, development and implementation of EdTech solutions for our world’s most vulnerable learners.”  

EdTech Hub initially issued a call for expressions of interest in Summer 2021; 104 proposals were received. The 13 selected studies will take place in and focus on Bangladesh, Ghana, Kenya, Pakistan, Sierra Leone, and Tanzania. The EdTech Hub research portfolio will be conducted over the next two to three years and is supported by the FCDO, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and the World Bank.

Guidance note on Climate-Smart School Construction Planning

Friday 29th October, 2021

Draft for Discussion

If the world is serious about meeting the fourth SDG target – ensuring that all boys and girls complete primary and secondary education – then this will require a huge number of new schools and classrooms to be built over the coming years. However, there is very little discussion on either how these are to be built, who will realistically pay for these, or where they should be located. Alongside this, the world is increasingly grappling with uncertainties surrounding climate change. This note is motivated by the need to take both these facts seriously, and to ensure that the expansion of schooling is planned in a way to maximise learning, while ensuring schools are resilient and climate-smart.

Authored by Maha Kazemi, Alasdair Mackintosh, Ana Ramírez and Ian Sullivan.

Full Paper PDF (739KB)

 

CIES2021
Management

EdTech Hub publishes Fab Inc's working paper on post-Covid-19 data architecture in Sierra Leone

Friday 17th September, 2021

This report learned from the experience of both Ebola and data management efforts to help inform post-Covid-19 recovery including a data architecture for a resilient education data ecosystem in Sierra Leone and elsewhere. This was built on the construction of a combined database containing Annual School Census data at the school level from 2015–2019, and at the district level from 2011–2013.

Analysis of enrolment and Ebola case data highlighted the ongoing importance of geographical and economic factors in determining education access, over and above the short-term health impacts of such crises. This has also enabled a detailed consideration of the data architecture within Sierra Leone to inform ongoing stakeholder discussions in this area, as well as demonstrating the potential benefits of improved data structures for data analysis, visualisation, and use through a dashboard.

This has been warmly received, with the government looking to take over ownership of the database, display the dashboard publicly, and inform ongoing policy development and implementation. Finally, key principles and step-by-step guides for replicating this work have been provided to support similar efforts in other countries which face comparable challenges to Sierra Leone in terms of both data availability and consistency, and the potential use of this data to support Covid-19 school reopening.

Full Paper PDF (6.5MB)

Sierra Leone Education Story

Thursday 29th July, 2021

On Wednesday 28 July, Dr David Moinina Sengeh, Education Minister of Sierra Leone, presented the Sierra Leone Education Story at the Global Partnership for Education‘s Global Education Summit. The Sierra Leone Education Story was developed by Fab Inc. and based on our work in the country and a recent project to compile many years of Sierra Leone’s school census data into a combined and queryable database for use in research and data-driven planning.

The Story is told in a short video and interactive website which allows you to explore how Sierra Leone has dramatically increased enrolment and government spending on education alongside improving gender parity and radical inclusion over the last decade. This work has also comes with challenges and the website includes an interactive map showing the number of maths teachers, science specialists and classrooms needed at the school level.

One Campaign launch the Lost Potential Tracker underpinned by Fab Inc's data analysis and methods

Monday 26th April, 2021

On Monday 26 April, as part of the Global Action Week For Education (GAWE), the ONE Campaign, the Global Partnership for Education (GPE) and Save the Children will launch the Lost Potential Tracker, an interactive tool that measures the shocking scale of the global learning crisis. 

Lost Potential Tracker

It reveals that more than 393 million children and counting have failed to gain the basic literacy skills at age 10 since world leaders adopted the Sustainable Development Goals in 2015. By employing official World Bank and UNESCO ‘learning poverty’ figures, and UN population data of all 10-year-olds, education experts and the public can now track, in real-time, the increasing number of children who are unable to read and understand a simple story by age 10 since 2015. The Lost Potential Tracker also makes accessible the stories of children affected by the global learning crisis and allows users to step into the shoes of a policymaker and experience first-hand how effective financing can help turn the tide for children.

Without a commitment to effectively fund education for all, we will not only fail to deliver on education promises by 2030 but will also risk losing out on the next generation of doctors, teachers, and leaders.

Alasdair Mackintosh and Paul Atherton from Fab Inc. were hired as consultants and spearheaded the methodology, conducted all data analysis, and wrote the report.

Fab Inc host panel session at CIES 2021

Monday 26th April, 2021

Fab Inc will host a panel session at CIES 2021 on Optimizing Prediction to Strengthen Education Systems. The panel will feature three presentations:

  • Using a Markov chain model to estimate the impact of COVID-19 on the Rwandan education system. Zia Khan, Laterite
  • Using machine learning at a community-level to improve education intervention targeting by predicting non-enrolment of girls in India. Sid Ravinutala, IDinsight
  • Using machine learning at a child-level to predict the children most at risk of not entering or dropping out of education in Sierra Leone. Kevin Pye, Fab Inc

Chair: María José Ogando Portela, Fab Inc, discussant: Dr Caine Rolleston, UCL Institute of Education

 

CIES2021

Majo Ogando's Young Lives Video Abstract

Wednesday 14th April, 2021

In this video abstract for Young Lives, María José Ogando Portela discusses her and Dr Paul Atherton’s paper on First Generation Learners and introduce a dynamic definition – using longitudinal data to identify where children become a first generation learner by reaching a grade not reached by their parents.

Fab Inc blog post for Teacher Taskforce

Monday 22nd March, 2021

Dr Paul Atherton and Alasdair Mackintosh have written a blog post on Enhancing teacher deployment in Sierra Leone: Using spatial analysis to address disparity for International Task Force on Teachers for Education 2030.

 

CIES2021
Management

Fab Inc and the Education Commission present work on workforce planning at the #EduWorkforceLebanon event

Friday 19th March, 2021

“GIS offers a visual and more nuanced understanding of teacher shortages, and it helps identify local solutions” says Ally Mackintosh.

UNICEF Education launch toolkit for Girl's Education in Emergencies

Monday 1st March, 2021

The writing team included Silvia Guglielmi, Nicola Jones, Susan Nicolai, Paola Pereznieto, Georgia Plank and Nhung Vu (ODI); Ingrid Sanchez-Tapia (UNICEF); and Alasdair Mackintosh (Fab Inc).

Full Paper PDF (5.4MB)

CIES2021
Management

Education Commission publishes Fab Inc's background papers for the Education Workforce Initiative

Tuesday 15th December, 2020

The Education Workforce Initiative (EWI), funded by UK Aid, partnered with Fab Inc. and Sierra Leone’s Teaching Service Commission (TSC) to support strengthening the education workforce. The research and analysis applied a systemic lens across the workforce lifecycle, considering how to improve the supply and demand of teachers across Sierra Leone, but especially in the most disadvantaged areas.

The project worked adaptively and collaboratively with stakeholders across government, teacher unions, and development partners to produce a series of research and policy papers aimed at supporting both government policymaking and development partner activities. These five evidence papers covered key aspects of the education workforce: management; spatial analysis; supply and needs; recruitment and matching; and costed options.

  1. Education Workforce Management in Sierra Leone (PDF 2.1MB)
  2. Education Workforce Spatial Analysis in Sierra Leone (PDF 2.2MB
  3. Education Workforce Supply and Needs in Sierra Leone (PDF 1.8MB)
  4. Education Workforce Recruitment and Matching in Sierra Leone (PDF 1.7MB)
  5. Education Workforce Costed Options Paper (PDF 1.7MB)

Education Commission publishes Education Workforce Initiative Country Report

Monday 23rd November, 2020

Between February 2019 and September 2020, the Education Commission’s Education Workforce Initiative (EWI), funded by UK Aid, partnered with Fab Inc. and Sierra Leone’s Teaching Service Commission (TSC) to support their education workforce reform efforts. The aim of the project was to work with TSC to research, analyse, and propose solutions for improving the supply and demand of teachers in the most disadvantaged areas.

Full Report PDF (2.6MB)

Management
Management

Dr Paul Atherton and María José Ogando Portela's article on first generation learners is published

Tuesday 17th November, 2020

Outsmarting your parents: Being a first-generation learner in developing countries

Abstract: We use data from the Young Lives surveys, in Ethiopia, India, Peru, and Vietnam, to highlight an underappreciated phenomenon—that a substantial proportion of students in developing countries are the first in their families to go to school. We term these students first‐generation learners (FGLs). We both propose a simple “static” definition of FGL status—where a child’s parents have no education attainment—and utilise the panel dynamics of the Young Lives data set to look at a “dynamic” definition—where the child, in any given round of data collection, is enrolled at a level which his or her parents did not reach. We show descriptive statistics on the scale of this problem across the four countries. We find strong, consistent patterns of relative educational deprivation for FGLs. We tentatively explore the pathways through which FGL status may affect outcomes and find possible explanations through an inability to support with homework and lower aspirations. We look at how becoming an FGL affects the probability of being in school using child fixed‐effects estimations and find it increases the vulnerability of children to drop out.

Review of Development Economics, Vol. 24, Issue 4, November 2020 

Education Commission publishes Education Workforce Initiative Flipbook

Friday 13th November, 2020

This flipbook was designed to showcase the discussion and policy papers developed by Fab Inc. (on behalf of the Education Commission), to help the Teaching Service Commission (TSC) strengthen further the education workforce. It is part of the wider Education Workforce Initiative (EWI) and builds on the Transforming the Education Workforce report. Sierra Leone has been a key partner in this initiative. This work builds on a phase one scoping study that focused on options to strengthen the workforce. The aim of the project was to work with the TSC to research, analyse, and propose solutions for increasing the number of qualified, specialised and effective teachers in disadvantaged schools.

Alasdair Mackintosh, Ana Ramírez, Paul Atherton, Victoria Collis, Miriam Mason-Sesay, and Claudius Bart-Williams. (2020)

Flipbook PDF (0.9MB)

Management