The First Africa Adult Learning and Education (ALE) Conference, hosted by DVV International in Cape Town, South Africa, was held from 30 to 31 October 2024. It acknowledged the potential of ALE to contribute to community development and to the Just Transition in Africa. The conference, themed Adult Education for a Just Transition: ALE as a Key to Community Development, brought together adult education practitioners from 16 African nations, including Algeria, Benin, Botswana, Cameroon, Chad, Ethiopia, Malawi, Mali, Morocco, Mozambique, Nigeria, South Africa, Tanzania, Tunisia, Togo and Uganda, as well as Germany.
Apart from the keynote address from Ivor Baatjes of the Canon Collins Trust, entitled Adult Education and the Just Transition, the conference also included two other inputs to help stimulate discussions: Community Learning Centres as a Key to Community Development by Imelda Kyaringabira from Uganda, and Agriculture, Climate Change and ALE by Nela Rassaa from Tunisia. These presentations helped provide invaluable insights into some of the experiences and contextual realities of ALE on the African continent.
In this article, we take a look at some of the main findings, with a view to stimulating further discussion on African ALE and to add to the body of work already available nationally, regionally and continent-wide.
Summary of main findings
The conference asked the participants to throw the net wide and list and discuss some of the essential areas for African ALE. This was achieved through various group work and discussions, inspired by the aforementioned presentations and panels. The conference sough to, among others:
- Solicit inputs for the MOJA Digital Platform.
- Explore a longlist of ALE themes; intended to identify multiple ALE themes.
- Interrogate regional preferences and ALE topics.
- Identify a shortlist of some of top African ALE themes.
The MOJA Platform
Participants provided inputs on activities they would like to see MOJA doing in the future, as well as sharing ideas on how they can become more active members of the MOJA community. The exercise yielded the following insights:
- Members offered a wide range of activities that the MOJA Platform can be engaged in.
- There is a general wish for MOJA to become more focussed in its activities.
- Some of the suggestions related to activities that MOJA is already carrying out. This suggests that these activities need to be better publicised (through various channels) so that people are more aware of them.
- Ongoing communication is required on the exact mandate of the MOJA Platform so that members are aware of what exactly falls within this, and what is more difficult to respond to.
The general thematic areas that surfaced included: Content diversification; Advocacy; Adult education support; Continental cooperation and collaboration; Raising awareness; Inclusion of more languages, and Digitisation. The broad range of topics proposed will be further analysed in view of the wish that MOJA should also become more focussed. Communication and engagement are cornerstones of MOJA activities, and while these are ongoing, MOJA needs to keep rethinking how it engages with people so that they are reached through a variety of means.
Participants also showed a strong willingness to be involved on a national and regional level in the activities of MOJA. Strategic engagement is needed to further involve members at the country level, so that they attract others to join the MOJA community.