LAGOS, NIGERIA — The promise of education technology (EdTech) in Africa has never been bigger. With slogans like “democratizing education” and “bridging the digital divide,” venture capital firms and development agencies are pouring millions of dollars into startups across the continent. From Nigeria’s booming tech scene to Kenya’s Silicon Savannah, EdTech is hailed as the tool to achieve inclusive education for all.

But beneath the glowing headlines and investor hype lies a troubling question: Who really benefits from this digital revolution?

The Funding Boom and the Equity Gap

Between 2019 and 2023, African EdTech ventures attracted over $200 million in funding, according to data from HolonIQ’s Africa EdTech Landscape. Nigeria alone hosted several multi-million-dollar ventures including uLesson, AltSchool Africa, and Edukoya, each backed by global investors and development agencies touting education access for all.

Yet, the reach of these platforms tells a different story. According to a 2022 UNESCO report on digital learning inequality, over 70% of rural African learners still lack reliable internet access, while disabled learners remain largely excluded from mainstream online learning platforms due to design inaccessibility.

A teacher from rural Akwa Ibom State, who requested anonymity, said her students “hear about online classes but cannot afford smartphones or data.” Even when subsidized access exists, she adds, “less than half of them can use these tools because they were never designed for people in their conditions.”

Donor Funding, Private Gains

International donors and development finance institutions (DFIs) have not been left out. Organizations like the World Bank, USAID, and Mastercard Foundation have collectively invested tens of millions of dollars in EdTech startups, often in partnership with venture capital funds.

However, critics argue that much of this support fuels “impact-washing” where social impact is overstated to attract funding while real beneficiaries see little change.

A 2023 report by University World News revealed that many EdTech companies in Sub-Saharan Africa target urban, English-speaking youth who can already afford devices and data. This business model, while lucrative, sidelines the very populations donors claim to support rural, low-income, and disabled learners.

As one policy expert at the Centre for Digital Education Research put it, “Donor-backed EdTech is becoming a private enterprise game, where impact is measured in downloads, not in lives changed.”

The Accessibility Blind Spot

Nigeria’s 2023 National Policy on Inclusive Education emphasizes digital accessibility for learners with disabilities. Yet, an audit of 15 EdTech platforms conducted by Catalyst Innov Dev Ltd found that only 2 offered basic accessibility features, such as screen reader compatibility or sign language integration.

For visually impaired learners, this exclusion is not abstract, it’s daily reality. “The app I tried to use for online lessons didn’t read the text aloud. It’s like we don’t exist in their world,” says Chioma, a 22-year-old student at the Federal College of Education (Special), Oyo.

Meanwhile, many EdTech ventures continue to celebrate their user growth in glossy pitch decks shared with international donors, without disaggregated data showing who their users actually are.

Data as the New Currency

Beyond exclusion, there’s another silent concern, data monetization. As users sign up for free or subsidized learning, their personal data becomes a valuable asset. Some EdTech startups quietly share data insights with third-party analytics or advertisers, raising ethical questions around consent and privacy.

A 2024 Human Rights Watch report on student data collection found that several African learning platforms collected excessive data, including location and device identifiers, with inadequate safeguards.

Experts warn that this commodification of student data transforms learners, especially vulnerable ones, into unwitting participants in a global data economy.

Voices from the Margins

Grassroots educators and NGOs are pushing back. Groups like Inclusive Tech Africa and Ekitian EdAccess Initiative are calling for a rights-based approach to EdTech, one that prioritizes accessibility, community participation, and offline-first solutions.

“We don’t need another shiny app,” says Samuel Adeyemo, founder of the community-driven project LearnOffline. “We need tools that work for kids under a tree, without power or broadband. That’s what inclusion looks like.”

Rethinking the “EdTech for All” Narrative

The Nigerian EdTech boom mirrors a global paradox: innovation without inclusion. As the line between education and enterprise blurs, it’s time to ask hard questions about accountability, accessibility, and equity.

If EdTech is to be more than a buzzword, it must confront its class bias, redesign its tools for the underserved, and redirect its funding from hype to humanity.

Until then, the digital classroom remains open, but not for everyone.

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Oluwole Omojofodun is the Proposal Review Team Lead and Publisher at GrantsDatabase.org. With a strong background in grant writing, nonprofit development, and funding strategy, Oluwole oversees the review and refinement of proposals submitted through the platform. His work ensures that applicants are equipped with compelling, funder-ready applications. Passionate about accessibility and impact, he also curates and publishes timely grant opportunities to empower changemakers across sectors.

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