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The Aga Khan Education Services opened its first school in Kenya in the coastal town of Mombasa in 1918. Today, AKES operates eight schools in the country.
AKDN / Christopher Little
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His Highness the Aga Khan during a visit to the Aga Khan Nursing School, in Nairobi, Kenya, May 1961.
AKDN / Nation Foto
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In 2003, His Highness the Aga Khan opened the Aga Khan Academy in Mombasa, the first of a network of 18 planned Academies offering the highest international standards of pre-primary, primary and secondary education to students across Africa, Central and South Asia and the Middle East.
AKDN / Gary Otte
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An Early Childhood Development teacher works with young students to learn about colours and textures, using low-cost readily available materials at the Aga Khan Academy, Nursery School in Nairobi. The School is an Early Years and Primary Years Programme authorised school offering the best in international education.
AKDN / Zafarani Mansurali
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Through SUCSEED, 25,000 children in informal settlements of Nairobi and impoverished areas of Mombasa are able to go to school. It aimed to contribute towards Kenya achieving Universal Primary Education and equity through a sustainable reduction in the number of out of school children. SUCSEED, which is aligned with Kenya's National Education Sector Plan priorities, was part of the DFID-funded Kenya Essential Education Programme, which aimed to support the Government of Kenya in finding innovative solutions to enduring challenges experienced in the education sector.
AKDN / Lucas Cuervo Moura
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At a ceremony marking the graduation of students from the Aga Khan University in Nairobi on 2 March 2015, His Highness the Aga Khan announced that the University will offer undergraduate degrees in Medicine and Nursing, as well as graduate professional education, as part of an investment in the region totalling over US$ 1.1 billion.
AKDN / Zahur Ramji
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To help deepen the pool of well-trained teachers in East Africa and raise the standard of education in its surrounding communities, the Professional Development Centre at the Aga Khan Academy in Mombasa provides substantial professional learning opportunities to teachers and school administrators from local government and other not-for-profit schools. To date, the PDC programmes have reached nearly 1,700 teachers in the coastal areas of Kenya and, through these teachers, more than 200,000 students.
AKDN / Lucas Cuervo Moura
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His Highness the Aga Khan addresses dignitaries at the Foundation Stone Laying Ceremony for the Aga Khan Academy in Maputo, Mozambique. The school began operations in 2013.
AKDN / Aziz Islamshah
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The Aga Khan Academy in Maputo is the third in the network of Aga Khan Academies. It follows the highly successful model established by the first two Academies in Mombasa and Hyderabad. The Academy opened its Junior School in 2013 and is expanding to include the Senior School and a residential programme.
AKDN / Lucas Cuervo Moura
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The Government of Mozambique has selected the Aga Khan Foundation to introduce the first national Early Childhood Development (ECD) plan in Cabo Delgado, a pilot to scale up ECD services in the country under the "Education for All" initiative. The Foundation's ECD programmes give special attention to protection and safety, good health and nutrition, affectionate and responsive interaction and communication, play, and stimulating environments which enable young children to learn better at home and in formal care. In 2013, in Cabo Delgado, Mozambique, 1,090 young children made the transition into primary school at the right age, a significant achievement as only one-quarter of pre-schools functioned daily prior to AKF's efforts to revitalise pre-school services in the province.
AKDN / Lucas Cuervo Moura
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The earliest Aga Khan Education Services school was built in Zanzibar in 1905. During the colonial era, AKES schools were the first to admit students of all faiths, ethnicities and origins. Today, their commitment to pluralism is still at the heart of the services they offer. Photo: Aga Khan Nursery School, Aga Khan Education Services, Arusha, Tanzania, 1981.
AKDN
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The Aga Khan Education Services have been operating in Tanzania for over a century. Photo: The Aga Khan High School in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, 1981.
AKDN / Christopher Little
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The Aga Khan Education Services (AKES) now operate two schools in Dar es Salaam, and aim to provide quality education that imparts a broad set of skills and knowledge with a commitment to pluralism and ethical conduct.
AKDN / Zahur Ramji
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In Dar es Salaam, the AKU School of Nursing and Midwifery aims to strengthen health systems in Tanzania by upgrading nursing skills, improving the quality of health care and developing new and more professional nursing courses. The programme is tailored to ensure health services are responsive to population needs and uses an innovative curricular approach that enables nurses to obtain professional qualifications while working. To date, 650 nurses have graduated from AKU in Tanzania. Photo: Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BScN) student, Eva Lwoga, interacting with students from Tandale Pimary School, Dar es Salaam, during a community field work project.
AKDN / Gary Otte
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The Aga Khan Foundation (AKF) has been making significant contributions to the Early Childhood Development sector in Tanzania for three decades. AKF has pioneered the provision of high quality, culturally-relevant and holistic early childhood development amongst communities in Zanzibar and Southern Tanzania. (Photo: Mejengo Preschool in Ndanda, Mtwara Region).
AKDN / Lucas Cuervo Moura
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The AKU School of Nursing and Midwifery in Dar es Salaam aims to strengthen health systems in Tanzania by upgrading nursing skills, improving the quality of health care and developing new and more professional nursing courses. To date, 650 nurses have graduated from AKU in Tanzania. In addition, the University trains urgently needed specialist physicians in family medicine, surgery and internal medicine through its four-year, full-time Postgraduate Medical Education programme at the Aga Khan Hospital in Dar es Salaam. Photo: The Aga Khan University’s 12th convocation ceremony, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, February 2017.
AKDN / Hendri Lombard
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Aga Khan Education Service, Uganda operates two nursery schools and two private co-educational day schools that aim to diminish the many obstacles to educational access and opportunity by offering high quality value for money education geared to develop inquisitive learners and the country’s future leaders and job creators. Photo: Aga Khan High School, Kampala.
AKDN / Lucas Cuervo Moura
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The Strengthening Education Systems, East Africa project in Arua, Uganda aimed to improve learning outcomes for boys and girls in pre-primary and primary school and strengthen teacher education and support systems. The five-year project was co-funded by the Government of Canada and Aga Khan Foundation Canada , and was co-implemented in the Yumbe, Koboko and Arua districts of West Nile, Uganda, by the Aga Khan Foundation and the Aga Khan University Institute of Educational Development. Over 165,000 primary students and 4,000 pre-primary students from 150 primary schools and 50 preschools benefitted from this initiative.
AKDN / Lucas Cuervo Moura
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Through its Madrasa Early Childhood Programme the Aga Khan Foundation (AKF) is supporting the creation of locally owned early childhood development centres in Uganda.
AKDN / Lucas Cuervo Moura
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As Chancellor of Aga Khan University, His Highness the Aga Khan presents degrees to the graduands of the ceremony, held in Kampala, Uganda, 26 February 2015. The Aga Khan University School of Nursing and Midwifery in Kampala aims to strengthen health systems in Uganda by upgrading nursing skills, improving the quality of health care and developing new and more professional nursing courses. To date, 725 nurses have graduated from AKU in Uganda. In 2015, the School launched Uganda’s first Post-RM Bachelor of Science in Midwifery degree programme.
AKDN / Zahur Ramji
Related Information
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The Aga Khan Development Network has been active in the field of education in Africa for over a century. The first Aga Khan School was established in Zanzibar in around 1905. Since then, thousands of students have been educated at Aga Khan Schools across various parts of East Africa.
In 2003, the first Aga Khan Academy was established in Mombasa, Kenya, and the third such Academy was established in Maputo, Mozambique a decade later.
The Aga Khan Foundation has been working in partnership with governments, the private sector, civil society, academic institutions, school leaders, teachers, parents, communities and students to develop and scale affordable, innovative solutions that raise the quality and accessibility of public education systems for the most marginalised children worldwide. A strong focus of the Foundation’s work has been its efforts in Early Childhood Development. The pioneering Madrasa Early Childhood Education Programme has benefitted thousands of children since its inception in the 1980s.
Since 2000, the Aga Khan University has been offering tertiary education across East Africa. Starting with its Schools of Nursing and Midwifery in Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda, today the University also includes a medical college, the Institute for Educational Development, the Graduate School of Media and Communications, the East Africa Institute and the Institute for Human Development.