International Schooling Standard Technology / Science in The Corporate States of America | World Anvil
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International Schooling Standard

As the African Union became more independent and influential, many great thinkers wanted to solve the problem of standardizing education over such a huge continent. Fortunately a team led by educational expert Tanya Olamina and computer maverick Manu Gyepi found a way that soon was adapted and applied to a majority of the world over the course of a century.
Olamina reached out to Gyepi in the early years of the independence of the African Union. Wanting to present something for the first annual African Continent Technological Conference coming in 2036, the two wanted to use the latest research about how children learn in order to develop a natural learning technology that would help children who had to be more independent in more remote areas. Olamina focused on schooling paths that would be based on the students pace and learning strengths over time. Gyepi developed a modification to the solar powered Kindle tablets that Amazon, Incorporated donated throughout the world after Facebook folded and was unable to offer free internet to many of the countries they had previously invested in. Over time, what was once the African Education Standard and Certification Method became the International Schooling Standard, an algorithm-based schooling application dependent less on trained teachers and more on engaging students with motivational incentives and hidden testing throughout lessons.

Utility

The ISS is used to help effectively educate children in a way that engages them and gives them rewards for accomplishing tasks that feel insurmountable. As the student grows up it figures out which learning tactics work best for the student that has grown up with the program.

Manufacturing

The program itself is now developed by L'Ecole Pour Tous based in Senegal. The program is distributed to governments and other organizations who sponsor free education.
Inventor(s)
Tanya Olamina and Manu Gyepi.
Access & Availability
Majority of North America, Africa and Europe. Also smaller populations have access in Asia and South America.
Complexity
Accessible to most anyone over the age of four.

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