Nigeria's Mark Zuckerberg' Puts Tech Into Higher Learning
At 23, many people around the world are still at university -- at that age,
Gossy Ukanwoke had already started
one.
The
young entrepreneur is the founder of Beni American University (BAU),
Nigeria's first private online university. Launched in late 2012, the
school allows students to access their classes at any time of the day
with any internet-enabled device.
"We are providing executive
programs for graduates who are looking for employment and want to build
up their resumes, or managers who want to climb up the hierarchy of
their companies," says Ukanwoke, now 25.
"We also have courses
targeted at people who want to start their own business." 'Nigeria's
Mark Zuckerberg' Ukanwoke's idea to start BAU came from his previous
online venture called Students Circle, an educational social networking
site he'd launched while in university that allows learners to interact
and access free resources from leading schools.
"When I created
Students Circle in 2010," explains Ukanwoke, "I found out that many were
looking for certificates, hoping that they could get something they
could use to maybe find employment or get a promotion in the workplace.
"There was a need for a new institution to be created in Nigeria," adds
Ukanwoke, who was once described by Forbes as "Nigeria's Mark
Zuckerberg."
Now, some 18 months into his new business endeavor,
Ukanwoke has hired 10 instructors and has about 200 students, with an
average age of 26.
But the startup's journey so far has not been
without challenges -- Nigerian laws require universities to have a
physical campus so last year Ukanwoke went and bought land in the
country's Benue State with the goal to build a private campus that could
accommodate some 10,000 students.
The project is expected to
launch next year, but in the meantime the web courses are up and running
-- a 12 week online program can cost between $100 and $300.
Among
the courses offered are corporate diplomacy, global marketing,
leadership and management, digital journalism, project management and
entrepreneurship and innovation, which is the university's most popular
class.
Ukanwoke relies mainly on social media to advertize but says that it's student referrals that are increasing BAU's enrollment.
"We still have a long way to go, we have a lot of work to do, a lot of policy
wrangling too," he admits. "But it's a work in progress and we are quite happy with where we are."

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