By Emilia Walter John | Program Coordinator
Over the past two months, MindAfrica has been laying the groundwork for our “Empower 200 Girls in Rivers State with STEM Skills” project, ensuring that when the program scales, it does so with quality, care, and strong community ownership.
As project owners, we understand that sustainable impact begins long before full rollout. This early phase has therefore focused on organizational readiness and relationship-building. We engaged selected schools and community stakeholders through introductory discussions to share the vision of the project, confirm interest, and establish partnerships that place girls’ learning and wellbeing at the center. In parallel, our team advanced curriculum development and identified experienced mentors and facilitators who will support participants throughout the program.
A key milestone during this period was a one-day pilot STEM workshop held at Community Secondary School, Rumuepirikom, in Rivers State. The pilot brought together 35 secondary school girls aged 13–16, many of whom had little or no prior exposure to coding or digital tools. The workshop was designed to be welcoming, practical, and confidence-building—meeting the girls exactly where they were and inviting them into the world of STEM through play, creativity, and hands-on exploration.
Using Scratch and Makey-Makey, participants were introduced to foundational programming concepts such as sequencing, loops, and conditional logic. They learned how to animate characters, design simple interactions, and use physical inputs to control digital projects. As the day progressed, the room came alive with curiosity and collaboration. Girls worked in teams, tested ideas, solved problems together, and grew increasingly confident in expressing themselves through technology.
By the end of the workshop, every participant had built and presented her first Scratch project—from educational quizzes on recycling to imaginative adventure games. Beyond technical skills, the pilot strengthened teamwork, critical thinking, and self-belief. School leadership shared their excitement at seeing students speak about coding with enthusiasm and confidence, affirming the value of creating such learning opportunities.
Next Steps
Building on the success of this pilot, MindAfrica will continue strengthening partnerships, refining delivery, and expanding hands-on STEM learning to reach more girls across Rivers State. Each step forward brings us closer to a future where girls are not just users of technology, but confident creators within it.
Thank You
To everyone who believes in the potential of girls to thrive in STEM—thank you. Your support makes it possible to open doors, spark curiosity, and nurture confidence. As this journey continues, we are encouraged by what has begun and inspired by what lies ahead.
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