CEO End of Year Reflections

Dear friends

I’m ending 2023 thinking a lot about the work of improving schools: what makes it so hard but ultimately so fulfilling.

This past week, there have been moving tributes to Sir Tim Brighouse, the pioneering British education reformer who did so much to raise education standards in London, Birmingham and other parts of England. This paragraph in a wonderful profile by the Financial Times’ Christopher Cook stood out:

“Brighouse’s incredible skill set was to use his remarkable empathy and charisma to make sure teachers did not see [more rigorous accountability measures] as a threat or insult. Instead, he made educational improvement into a collective challenge to which they would want to rise together.”

Earlier in the week, I’d been reading a provocative recent essay by Lee Crawfurd at the Center for Global Development, arguing that governments in low and middle income countries should focus on expanding access to schooling, not improving its quality. Expanding access is something governments in many different places have shown they can do well, yet when it comes to improving learning outcomes the picture is dismal. We’re past the halfway mark to the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals and international agencies can’t even agree how learning outcomes should be measured, and so are about to give up trying. Do what is doable, Lee argues, and just get students into school rather than worry about raising the standards of teaching and learning they find when they get there.

I’ve visited more than 30 schools in the last three months, and let me be honest: there have been times during those visits where it’s hard not to agree with that argument. Times when the basics - the essential preconditions - seem so far from being met in a school that it’s hard to know where to start.

Occasionally that’s been about physical infrastructure. At one school I visited in rural Sierra Leone, children could go to the toilet in a pristine new brickwork toilet block paid for (and stamped with the logo of) a major development agency. But their lessons were taught in a shack, with several hundred children divided into cramped ‘classrooms’ with torn shards of rusted metal protruding from the corrugated iron walls and no light, waterproofing, soundproofing or ventilation. When it rained (which it does in Sierra Leone, a lot), attendance fell close to zero.

More often it’s been about people and systems. At one school in Northern Ghana, we turned up to find that 6 of their 13 teachers had been reassigned to other schools and not replaced. Rather than asking for help or improvising a response to this challenging situation - combining classes, bringing in temporary volunteers to cover, switching to a double shift, anything - the headteacher seemed resigned to let students in the grades affected just sit in their classrooms, completely unsupervised, hour after hour, day after day. In Rwanda, I watched a Grade 1 teacher struggle to teach his class about letter sounds in English that he clearly wasn’t sure of himself - unsurprising when it was his third language and one which until recently he wouldn’t have been expected to teach in.

But in the end, I’m an optimist. And on every one of these visits, I’ve found cause for that optimism. For example, the teachers at that school in Sierra Leone were actually doing a remarkably good job, putting the training and the teacher and student curriculum materials we’d provided them with to effective use and keeping students engaged and learning even when the physical environment was so sub-standard. And because the community and the PTA could see the changes that were happening in their children’s learning, they saw more value in attending to the building, and have since fixed up the current structure and got started on a new permanent one.

In Northern Ghana, what impressed me about Mohammed Mumuni, headteacher at Diare Radia Primary School, was his unwillingness to accept the status quo. Mohammed is from the local community and left a post at another school because he wanted to contribute back home. He’s constantly problem-solving and finding ways to enhance the educational experience of his students. Even as we sat talking at a table in a shady spot in his school compound, he was busy creating a beautiful and intricate A2 map of Ghana ready to display in one of his classrooms. He told me about the impact our literacy and numeracy programme is having on his students - and their families. Parents have been thanking him that their children are now able to read messages for them or find contacts on their phone.

In Rwanda, we were thrilled that after just a few months of implementation, schools participating in our Elimu Soko partnership demonstrated strong gains in both literacy and numeracy. But as I’ve spent more time there, what I’ve realized is even more remarkable is that so much of this change has been driven by the system itself: by teachers finding that the data we’re asking them for is not just easy to report but actually useful and actionable, by school leaders finding that the content on our teacher coaching app gives their weekly “communities of practice” meetings a purpose and structure they’d been missing, and by district education officials finding that our curriculum, coaching and data systems provide a useful anchor and focus for their own engagement with schools.

We know more and more about what works in global education. But the only way to make that knowledge count is to try to understand and connect with the students, teachers, school leaders, parents, communities, and governments whose behaviours determine what schools do and the kinds of educational outcomes they produce. That was the lesson Sir Tim Brighouse taught education reformers in England, but it’s a lesson that applies just as much elsewhere.

Rwanda’s dynamic young Minister of Education Hon. Gaspard Twagirayezu and the creator of the Elimu Soko partnership puts it well:

There is still a very long way to go, but we have done a good job in enrollment in primary schools. So, the big question is if kids are now able to go to school but what type of education do they get and when they go to school, what do they get there?

When they go to school, what do they get there: that’s the question we rededicate ourselves to at Rising as we go into the new year. And not just any new year, but our 10th. This time a decade ago I was preparing to quit my job and start a purpose driven education company in Sierra Leone. It would be fair to say I had no idea what I was letting myself in for. But I can honestly say I’ve never regretted it for a second. Watch this space in the new year for how we plan to celebrate #Rising@10.

For now, thanks for all your support this year, and best wishes for 2024.

Rising students achieve stellar results again in Sierra Leone!

Continuing the success of last year, our private schools in Sierra Leone have delivered outstanding results in the National Primary School Examinations (“NPSE”), which take place at the end of Grade 6. Rising finished #1 out of 600 schools in the rural Western Area region. Furthermore, Rising students across all schools realised a 100% pass rate, with the average score of the girls (296) slightly surpassing the average score of the boys (294). This is the second successive year Rising students have achieved a 100% pass rate in the NPSE exams. 

Success in Grade 6 was replicated by our students in Grade 9 also. 100% of our 141 students taking the Basic Education Certificate Examination (“BECE”) passed. Rising achieved the top BECE results in the West Area Rural District Council, ranking 1st out of 350 JSS schools!

Students of Waterloo, Grafton and Calaba schools celebrating their BECE results.

Congratulations to all the students for these outstanding achievements.

We’ve been delighted to see these strong results for our students lead to very positive reviews from our Parents. In a recent survey, Rising’s parents gave the schools an extremely high Net Promoter Score of 73. These high satisfaction levels are leading to increased enrolments. Our private schools in Sierra Leone have seen a 17% enrolment increase from the last academic year at the time of writing.

Rising wins new global innovation award and joins the Learning Engineering Virtual Institute (LEVI)

We are thrilled to share that we’ve been selected as a participant of the the Learning Engineering Virtual Institute (LEVI), which has a mission to revolutionise math education globally. LEVI selected a cohort of seven teams committed to harnessing the potential of AI and machine learning to enhance middle school maths education. The program has the ambition to more than double math outcomes for millions of low-income students.

The seven teams selected for LEVI are Carnegie Learning, Carnegie Mellon University, Eedi, Rising Academies, the University of Colorado Boulder, Khan Academy, and the University of Florida.

LEVI teams are already making remarkable strides toward accomplishing this ambitious goal. We are using LEVI to accelerate the development of Rori, our engaging virtual math tutor delivered via WhatsApp, which is already reaching more than 50,000 children across Africa (more details on Rori shared below). 

The honour of joining LEVI comes in the same week that Rori was selected as one of the 100 most impactful and scalable education innovations from around the world in the HundrED 2024 Collection. This is Rori’s 5th global innovation award.

HundrED awards in Helsinki Finland, 31st October 2023.

For a comprehensive overview of LEVI, the 7 participating teams, and the groundbreaking projects, please visit https://learning-engineering-virtual-institute.org/.

For more information on HundrED’s Global Innovation Collection, please visit: 

https://hundred.org/en/collections/hundred-global-collection-2024 

For more information on Rori, please visit www.rori.ai or read our short Q&A below:

More information about Rori

Why did you create Rori?

200 million children in Africa are not achieving minimum levels of proficiency in mathematics. Research shows that high-quality, high-dosage tutoring is one of the best ways to improve outcomes. Despite the growing size of the private tutoring market, access to high-quality provision is out of reach for the vast majority of children. Rori addresses that gap.

How does Rori work in practice?

Rori is a virtual math tutor built for low-resource settings. Students converse with Rori on their phone, for free, in their natural language via WhatsApp. Rori delivers micro-lessons, asks practice questions and understands students’ answers. Students progress through topics at their own pace. The conversational format creates a durable, friendly rapport between the bot and the student and promotes meta-cognition. We are also currently integrating text-to-speech technology that will make Rori more accessible to children with low levels of literacy.

How has it been spreading?

Since being launched to the public in November 2022, Rori has reached over 50,000 users. Rori was developed across 30 schools in Ghana, with a large, representative sample of the types of teachers, parents and students who will be using Rori. This has allowed us to follow best practices in human centered design and conduct rapid micro-evaluations as we developed the products capabilities.

If I want to try it, what should I do?

The fastest way to experience Rori is by sending a WhatsApp message to our Rori Demo experience on +1(202)9824479. This includes experimental features and is constantly being updated. If you would like to complete a full user sign-up to access the official Rori product, WhatsApp “Hi” to Rori on +1(206)5906259

Rising presents the Rori Chatbot at The New York Public Library for UNGA78

“If we want the AI revolution to be an inclusive one, we need to design solutions that meet the diverse needs of the world’s young people.”

This was the message from our Chief Strategy Officer, George Cowell, when we were given the opportunity to present at New York Public Library for the United Nations General Assembly in September. 

The event, convened by Secretary of State, Antony J. Blinken, focused on using AI to accelerate progress towards the Sustainable Development Goals. 

During our presentation alongside Liz McNally, Co-CEO of Schmidt Futures, George described how our virtual math tutor Rori combines a low tech front end (WhatsApp), a high-tech backend (Generative Chat, Machine Learning, Natural Language Processing), and a representative dataset (African learners) to create a highly inclusive tool for children across Africa and beyond. 

“Rori is designed to tackle one of the biggest barriers to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals: too many children are in school but not mastering basic literacy and mathematics. Because Rori works on any device that supports WhatsApp, it’s scalable and affordable to students, parents and schools in the places that need it most.”  

“A low-tech front-end. A high-tech back-end. And a representative dataset. If we want the AI revolution to be an inclusive one, that is the combination we need.” 
The Event Fact Sheet can be found here.

Rising delivers strong pilot results in ground-breaking Rwanda Elimu-Soko Partnership

Students in Rwanda benefitting from RisingFaster, a structured pedagogy programme

In January 2023, Dalberg, in partnership with the Hempel Foundation, launched their ground-breaking Elimu-Soko Partnership in Rwanda. We were delighted to be chosen as the project’s innovating partner by the Ministry of Education and Rwanda Basic Education Board.

The project aimed to strengthen the systems that supports teacher professional development, and ultimately to improve student learning in foundational literacy and numeracy (Grades P1, P2, and P3). To do this, Rising Academies worked with 40 schools to pilot RisingFaster, our solution to support governments improve teachers’ capacity to teach foundational literacy and numeracy (FLN). 

The results from the 6-month pilot have been positive. Students participating in Rising's FasterReading and FasterMath programs outperformed the control group by 11% in numeracy skills and 19% in literacy skills. In the graphs below you can see the progression of students across the four cycles of the programme. 

In addition to student learning outcomes, we saw significant improvements in teacher knowledge of how to teach foundational math and literacy, and also improvements in teacher beliefs.

These are the second set of positive findings we’ve received looking at the impact of our RisingFaster programmes. Results from an early-stage RCT research project with IDInsight in Liberia found that children who enrolled in FasterReading had a 0.28 SD or 36% improvement in their foundational reading compared to the status quo. They were also 11% more likely to attend school.

Teachers in Rwanda at the end of their 3-day Rising Refresher Training

Following the pilot results, the Ministry of Education and Rwanda Basic Education Board have extended the project into a second year.

You can read more about the Elimu-Soko project here. 
To obtain the full Endline Report for the pilot please contact us at information@risingacademies.com

What calls us back: a story of escape and return in Liberia

July 2023, Monrovia, Liberia. Precious Jabloh Buxton, Managing Director of Rising Academies, Liberia.

This is the story of how, on the 3rd April 2023, I came back to Greenville, the capital of Sinoe County in south-eastern Liberia. But to tell you the story of how I came back, first I need to tell you the story of how I left. 

That story begins thirty years ago, one sweltering Sunday morning in early 1993, a few months before my seventh birthday. I was sitting with my family - my dad and siblings - in St Joseph’s Catholic Church, when a man came to the door and changed my life forever. 

“The rebels are coming!”, he yelled. “Run!”

So we ran. A group of us fled the church towards Seebeh, about 5 miles away, going towards Puchan, where my mother’s people are from. But when we got there, it was already deserted, so we continued another 15 miles to Upper Tartweh, where my father had family, finally arriving late that night, safe but exhausted. 

Tartweh offered sanctuary for a time. There wasn’t enough food to go around, and there had been no school during peacetime, never mind when there was a war on. But my grandfather had a rice farm across the river and we stayed there for a while. After just a few months, however, my grandfather came and told us the rebels had now entered this area too. We had to pack up our things and go, leaving behind my eldest sister who had polio and couldn’t make the trip.

So we kept running, from Tartweh to Jeabpo, from Jeabpo to Karweaken, staying in each place as long as we could before new reports of encroaching rebels and fresh atrocities in nearby communities would force us to move on. From Karweaken we finally made it to a camp for internally displaced people in Pleebo, near the Ivorian border. By the time we reached Pleebo, it was approaching Christmas time in 1994. “Oh, we missed celebrating your eighth birthday”, someone said. “We never celebrated my seventh, either”, I thought. 

Camp life was hard but for the first time since leaving Greenville I got the chance to go back to school. Some of the kids were sent to a nearby Catholic school, but by this time it was just me and my sister, and there was no one around to pay the fees for us to go. Not for the last time in my life, someone gave me the gift of education. I got to know a kind woman who taught first grade. She’d secretly let me sit in on her class, give me a pencil and paper, and tell me to do what the other kids were doing. Whenever the school principal came I had to stay out of sight. 

Before long, even Pleebo wasn’t safe any more. We made our way to the port of Harper, and from there across the border to Tabou in Cote d’Ivoire. I was officially a refugee.

Tabou would be my home for the next three years. My brother, sister and I were reunited with families, and went to an English-medium school for displaced Liberians run by the Adventist Relief and Development Agency. School didn’t make much sense to me. I never seemed to finish a grade. They would give me tests and after each test I’d find myself bumped up another grade. Only much later did I discover how little I had really been learning.

January 1998, Northern Kentucky, my first month in the United States. 

In 1997, four years after leaving Greenvillle, we got a call to say that an American woman was looking for us. The woman, a former Peace Corps Volunteer in Liberia who had employed my birth mother as her housekeeper when she’d lived there, had been watching the unfolding horror of the civil war from her home in Northern Kentucky and was desperate to get us out. She couldn’t take all of us, but she had space for two girls. My sister and I were the lucky ones. She flew to Liberia to complete the paperwork, we re-crossed the border to meet her, and a week later we were on a plane on our way to a new life, and a new home.

January 1998, Northern Kentucky, my first month in the United States.  

Adjusting to life in the US was tough. The local schools really didn’t know what to do with me. Without the patience and love of my adopted mom, I’m not sure I would have made it. But I did. I graduated high school and then college, where an internship at UNIFEM (now UN Women) took me to New York. It was love at first sight and I decided then and there that I wanted to come back for grad school, taking a Masters in Public Affairs at NYU’s Wagner School. No doubt inspired by my own history, my program piqued an interest in peacebuilding and conflict, and I found myself drawn to working on these issues in schools, first through a placement in Rwanda and then as a volunteer back in New York. That turned into a 10 year career in education, rising through the ranks to become a Director of Operations with Uncommon Schools, one of the leading charter school networks in the US.

August 2022, Brooklyn NY, Uncommon Director of Operation

It wasn’t an easy decision to give all that up and return to Liberia. Leaving New York meant leaving a system and a network of education leaders I knew well for a country that had not been home to me for three decades. It meant leaving one of the largest and best resourced school systems in the world for one of the smallest and poorest. New York’s public schools spend more money educating an elementary school pupil for half a day than a Liberian school would spend in a year.

But I’ve always known it was a question of when, not if, I would come back. I tried once before, spending two years working for Professor Amos Sawyer’s Governance Commission before that other great Liberian tragedy, the Ebola epidemic, cut short our work. In truth, it was not just the logistical disruption that sent me back to the US, but the realisation that my skills were not what the country needed at that time. I vowed to come back when I had more experience, and when my skills as an educator could be put in service of the right mission.

Which is how, on the 3rd April 2023, I found myself on my way back to Greenville. It was three months since I had taken over as Managing Director for Rising Academies in Liberia, and I was visiting Greenville for the first time in my new role. Rising partners with the Ministry of Education to operate 95 public elementary schools in Liberia, 12 of them in Sinoe County. 

Since leaving Greenville all those years ago, I have been back from time to time. But this visit was different because one of the Rising schools I was visiting was Elementary Demonstration, and Elementary Demonstration is special to me and my family. Across the street from the school is the house where I was born and raised. In the evenings, after a hard day’s work selling used clothes and raising her children, my mom, Comfort Toe, would cross the street from our house for night school classes at Elementary Demonstration. She dreamed of giving her children an education, and in the end even a war couldn’t get in the way of that dream.

I started my day by watching a FasterReading session - a literacy program that Rising has rolled out across its schools in Liberia to help students build the foundational literacy skills they need if they are to succeed. After the session, I wandered down the hall towards the Principal’s office to give her some feedback on what I’d observed when a voice called out “Muki!” I turned around in shock. It’s a nickname only my friends and family would know. It was my cousin Juah Kanmoh. It turned out he teaches Grade 2 at the school. And it’s not just in the staff room that I found relatives. There were distant cousins in nearly every grade.

Being back in my hometown, and back at Elementary Demonstration, brought mixed emotions. Sadness, that some things are as bad today as they were 30 years ago. Elementary Demonstration is still a struggling, under-resourced public school serving families who are no better off than their parents and grandparents were. The classrooms are still filled with students over-age for their grades, like my mother was back in the 80s. 

But hope, too. Hope inspired by the excitement of the students to learn. Hope inspired by the commitment of the staff to their community and their country. And hope inspired by the work Rising is doing to help. We’re training teachers and equipping them with world-class curriculum materials. Our coaches - what we call School Performance Managers - visit each school once a week to provide real-time coaching and feedback, monitor learning and child protection and collect data we can use to further refine and improve our program. We are changing how people view public education in Liberia.  

People often ask me why I moved back. It’s pretty simple. I am one of 10 kids. Two of us got out. Eight didn’t. I was no more deserving than my brothers and sisters that were left behind, nor for that matter the thousands of other kids just like us who went through things no child should experience. 

I live with that guilt every day. But on my better days I can find my way to seeing it not as guilt but as obligation. I guess you could say I left something behind in Greenville when we ran for our lives that day, and it has called me back ever since. I could not help then; I can help now.  

Later that day in April, at another Rising school nearby, I met a different relative of mine. This young man is not even yet on the government payroll, but still commutes an hour-and-a-half each day on a bike to get to school where he is paid a meagre stipend for his efforts. For years, many of the villages around here did not have schools, and if they did, it was just a building without teachers because few would venture out to the far eastern counties. During his lunch break, we talked about how proud our townspeople are of him, and I asked him what keeps him motivated to work so hard for so little. Like me, he is obsessed with ensuring every child from the village has the opportunity to learn. “This is where we are from,” he said. “This is who we are.”

You can watch the full story below:

Precious visiting Elementary Demonstration Public School, in Greenville, Sinoe. April 3rd 2023

A classroom in a Rising Partnership School. Children interacting with the tablets from one of our partner organisations, Imagine Worldwide. 

Rising’s first ever Mandela Washington Fellow!

We are absolutely thrilled to announce that Rising’s Program Associate in Liberia, Morrison T. Morris, has been awarded a highly-prestigious placement on this year’s Mandela Washington Fellowship Program; selected from a pool of more than 45,000 applicants across the African continent.

Morrison joined Rising in June 2017, following 4 years as a classroom teacher. At that time, Rising was just getting started in Liberia, supporting 5 schools a few hours from the capital city of Monrovia. 

7 years on, Rising’s work now serves 95 rural government schools and more than 21,000 students in the country’s flagship education partnership program: LEAP and will be extending to a new 5-year system strengthening project this year. 

Morrison was not only integral to helping to grow Rising’s work in partnership with the Ministry of Education, he has also played a lead role in securing some of the strongest academic outcomes for an education program in Liberia’s post-war history. These results were demonstrated most notably in the 3-year randomized control trial delivered by the Centre for Global Development, which showed that children in Rising’s schools learned more than twice as fast as children in comparable schools. 

The 6-week US-based fellowship, which includes modules in innovation, community engagement, ethics, and delivering value and impact, is another step in Morrison’s exciting leadership journey. Speaking about the opportunity, Morrison said: 


“This is a rare chance to hone my leadership skills and network with other young leaders from across the continent. I see it as an exceptional opportunity to learn and return home ready to serve – creating lasting impact in my country and the education industry.” 

Precious Buxton, Managing Director of Rising’s work in Liberia, added: 

“Morrison has demonstrated that he can make an impact at every level of the education sector, whether it’s coaching a teacher in the classroom, working side-by-side with Liberia’s County Education Officers, or sharing ideas and shaping policy with our Senior Ministry partners. I’ve no doubt that this experience will help Morrison take another step forward, allowing him to contribute even more to the sector he cares so much about. Congratulations Morrison, from everyone at Rising!”

If you would like more information about the Mandela Washington Fellowship, click this link: https://www.mandelawashingtonfellowship.org/

Morrison leading a training at a Rising Teacher Training Institute in Liberia