The Ministries of Secondary Education and Higher Education and the African Institute for Mathematical Sciences (AIMS), in partnership with the MasterCard Foundation, CAMTEL and Google signed a MoU in Yaoundé, Cameroon.
As Africa continues on an unprecedented growth trajectory and innovation plays an increasingly important role in the development and realisation of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG's), mathematics education has been highlighted as a vital catalyst for the rearing of students who are problem-solvers and thought leaders.
"The MTTP will enhance the quality of secondary school mathematics education in both the Francophone and Anglophone education sub-systems in Cameroon," said Jean Ernest Massena Ngalle Bibehe, Minister of Secondary Education. "The programme will ensure that knowledge, skills and confidence are enhanced to improve the quality of the teaching and the learning of mathematics in Cameroon."
The MTTP programme encompasses various activities, including:
"The government has worked in partnership with AIMS, through the Ministries of Higher Education, Secondary Education, External Relation and Finance and Ministry of State Property and Land Tenure for several years. It has continuously demonstrated a strong determination and dedication to provide students in Cameroon with the highest standards of education in the science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) fields," said Thierry Zomahoun, president and CEO of AIMS. "The MTTP programme extends our partnership to contribute in building the pipeline for the scientific, technological and social development of Cameroon."
The MTTP's 'train the trainer approach' will ensure that all the lecturers (approximately 50) at the three HTTCs, including the HTTTC in Kumba, are equipped to effectively train approximately 1 200 pre-service and 1 920 in-service math teachers who are ultimately responsible for over 1.7 million secondary school students across the country. The programme will increase the transition rates between educational levels in science and mathematics, especially for girls.
"We look forward to the impact that the MTTP will have on Cameroon's education system and on building the pipeline of mathematics students who will lead the economic and technological advancement of the country and of Africa in the future," said Prof Jacques Fame Ndongo, Minister of Higher Education.