A quiet but significant shift is taking place in Ghana’s technology education landscape, with private companies moving beyond corporate programmes to bring artificial intelligence skills directly to children in under-resourced communities, even as the government secures international partnerships to extend the same ambition at scale.
Ghanaian fintech company Hubtel has sponsored a four-week AI training programme run by Brainwave AfricaTech, targeting pupils from schools with no ICT laboratories, teaching them prompt writing, image generation, ethical AI use, and the fundamentals of machine learning. For many of the children, it was their first time using a computer.
Facilitators observed growing confidence among participants as the weeks progressed. Pupils who began with no prior digital experience were, by the end of the programme, able to articulate how AI works, discuss its risks, and demonstrate tools to peers and teachers alike.
Brainwave AfricaTech’s AI Explorers Club, now in its third cohort, trains children aged 8 to 15 in foundational AI. The programme is structured to move learners from the Explorers phase through hands-on project building and eventually into an Innovators stage, where participants develop solutions for their communities. Hubtel’s sponsorship funded access for pupils who would otherwise have had no path into the programme.
Augustine Gyawu Adjei, Head of Engineering at Hubtel, said early exposure had become a necessity rather than a luxury. “We need to start now. We can’t wait,” he said, adding that children needed to learn how to make decisions confidently and distinguish between useful and unnecessary technology.
The initiative lands at a moment when AI education for young Ghanaians has become an active policy priority rather than just a private sector initiative. At the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona this week, Communications Minister Samuel Nartey George secured a commitment from Huawei Technologies to deliver free AI training for 3,000 girls enrolled in the government’s Girls in ICT Programme, with the Huawei Ghana office directed to work with the Ghana Investment Fund for Electronic Communications (GIFEC) to roll out the curriculum this year.
Hubtel itself launched Ghana’s first indigenous AI lab in 2024, a dedicated research and development unit applying machine learning to fraud detection, user engagement, and credit assessment, giving the company a direct commercial stake in building domestic AI capability beyond philanthropy.
Technology experts involved in the Brainwave programme have argued that waiting until university to introduce AI may already be too late, warning that delayed exposure risks raising a generation that consumes technology without understanding it and lacks the foundational skills to participate in an AI-driven economy.
Whether through sponsored community programmes, government curriculum additions, or international corporate partnerships, Ghana is beginning to assemble the building blocks of an AI-literate generation. The test will be whether these early investments are scaled, coordinated, and sustained.
