AUDA-NEPAD’s EdTech Task Force

A Proposal by the Spix Foundation

This essay is #18 in a series of 30. View all essays

Executive Summary

In February 2026, AUDA-NEPAD launched the final African EdTech 2030: Vision & Plan (V&P) and the Policy Framework for Standards-based, Vendor-Neutral EdTech at the AU's Science, Technology and Innovation Week in Addis Ababa — completing a process that began with the V&P's draft launch at the Mobile Education Alliance's inaugural African conference in Nairobi in July 2025.

Both instruments call for Africa's Digital Public Infrastructure for Education (DPI-Ed). Implementing the V&P at continental scale — coordinating across countries, donors, platforms, and professional ecosystems — requires an institutional mechanism. This proposal recommends that mechanism: the establishment, as part of Africa's EdTech Breakthrough Project, of a time-bound AUDA-NEPAD-hosted EdTech Task Force, mandated to coordinate, de-risk, and enable delivery of Africa's EdTech Breakthrough System during the period 2026–2032, as aligned with AUDA-NEPAD's African EdTech 2030: Vision & Plan.

The Task Force is conceived as a delivery-oriented, non-permanent instrument focused on continental coordination, policy domestication support, trust preservation, and institutional transition—functions that are essential to success at scale but are not naturally owned by platforms, donors, or individual countries.

In addition to enabling Africa's EdTech Breakthrough System, the Task Force is proposed as a mechanism for positioning Africa as a global reference continent for DPI conception, governance, and delivery. This effort would use Africa's DPI-Ed as an existence proof that Africa can originate and execute world-class, multi-country Digital Public Infrastructure, and thereby potentially inform future African DPIs beyond education.

The Task Force is proposed to operate for seven years (2026–2032), with a Project-funded cash budget of approximately USD 33.2 million from three sources (V&P_Core bootstrap, a dedicated Planet-Project, and a coordination levy on the nine original Planet-Projects). AUDA-NEPAD provides the institutional home — mandate, convening authority, and staff time — per AU co-funding precedent (SIFA, COYWA); no cash match is assumed. The timeline deliberately extends beyond 2030 to allow full focus on delivery through the Vision period, followed by an orderly transition and sunset. This focused coordination investment enables alignment and acceleration of the multi-hundred-million-dollar-scale national and donor commitments required for continent-wide adoption of Africa's EdTech Breakthrough System.

1. Purpose of This Proposal

Africa's EdTech Breakthrough System brings together continental policy frameworks, open standards, shared platforms, national implementation, new professional certifications, and large-scale funding. While each of these elements has a clear institutional home, their coordination at continental scale presents a distinct challenge.

This proposal explores whether a time-bound AUDA-NEPAD EdTech Task Force could provide a focused institutional solution—supporting execution, accelerating uptake, managing risk, and preserving trust during the decisive years leading up to 2030, and then ensuring a responsible transition thereafter—building directly on the African EdTech 2030: Vision & Plan and RESPECT's DPI-Ed framework.

2. Why a Time-Bound Task Force

Africa's EdTech Breakthrough Project is inherently:

These characteristics argue for an institutional form that is:

A Task Force model meets these requirements. It enables focused execution without creating a new permanent bureaucracy, while allowing AUDA-NEPAD to exercise its comparative advantage in coordination, legitimacy, and continuity.

3. Mandate and Goals

Under this proposal, the EdTech Task Force would pursue six interrelated goals:

  1. Enable continent-scale DPI-Ed deliverySupport the transition from pilots to national scale-outs by reducing coordination friction across countries, donors, and partners.

  2. Enable federation of Ministers' country level education data into a continental-scale database (as health data is federated today)

  3. Support policy domestication at speedAssist Ministries of Education in the domestication of the AU EdTech Policy Framework through shared guidance, peer learning, and regional coordination—while fully respecting national policy authority and legislative processes.

  4. Preserve trust and system integrityUphold principles of non-capture, data responsibility, vendor neutrality, and public interest throughout DPI-Ed implementation.

  5. De-risk donor and country participationProvide credible coordination, assurance, and problem-solving capacity that lowers transaction costs for Development Partners and governments.

  6. Position Africa as a global DPI leaderUse Africa's DPI-Ed as an existence proof that Africa can originate, govern, and deliver world-class Digital Public Infrastructure—potentially informing future African DPIs, without expanding the Task Force's mandate beyond education.

4. Core Functions

The proposed EdTech Task Force would concentrate its work within three high-level core functions. Together, these functions capture all essential responsibilities required to enable continent-scale DPI-Ed delivery, while keeping the Task Force focused, time-bound, and non-bureaucratic.

4.1 Continental Coordination & Delivery Enablement

The Task Force would enable coordinated, continent-scale delivery of DPI-Ed by reducing fragmentation, accelerating uptake, and aligning execution across countries, implementing partners, and Development Partners.

Key responsibilities would include:

This function is focused on making progress move faster, without assuming policy authority or implementation responsibility.

4.2 Trust, Integrity, and System Stewardship

The Task Force would preserve DPI-Ed as a trusted, public-interest system by maintaining legitimacy, integrity, and confidence among governments, donors, and the public.

Key responsibilities would include:

This function protects DPI-Ed not by controlling outcomes, but by sustaining confidence under pressure.

4.3 Institutional Transition & Capability Transfer

The Task Force would manage time-bound responsibilities and ensure that DPI-Ed capabilities are transitioned cleanly to permanent, appropriate institutions at the end of its mandate.

Key responsibilities would include:

This function ensures that DPI-Ed endures beyond the Task Force, without orphaned systems, rushed handovers, or institutional ambiguity.

5. Institutional Boundaries

To maintain clarity and avoid overlap, the Task Force would not:

This separation preserves institutional roles and accountability.

6. Governance and Institutional Interfaces

Under this proposal, the Task Force would be:

7. Why Seven Years for a 2030 Vision

While Africa's EdTech 2030 Vision & Plan defines the delivery horizon, the proposed Task Force includes a deliberately reserved post-2030 transition period.

This design allows the Task Force to focus fully on achieving its substantive objectives through 2030, and only thereafter to concentrate on:

This separation protects delivery focus while ensuring a responsible and credible sunset.

8. Indicative Budget and Resourcing

The Task Force's Project-funded cash budget is approximately USD 33.2 million over seven years, corresponding to an average annual operating level of roughly USD 4.7 million. This is funded entirely by the Breakthrough Project through three complementary mechanisms:

In addition, a 7% coordination levy on the nine original Planet-Projects contributes approximately $8.2M over seven years, reflecting the Task Force's role as shared infrastructure for the entire system.

AUDA-NEPAD provides the institutional home. Per AU co-funding precedent (SIFA, COYWA), AUDA-NEPAD provides the mandate, convening authority, and institutional platform; external partners provide programme cash. No AUDA-NEPAD cash match is assumed.

The Task Force budget covers:

These costs represent program-level infrastructure, not platform development or country implementation.

Table 1: AUDA-NEPAD EdTech Task Force — Indicative Annual Profile

Year V&P_Core Share PP Funding Levy (est.) Project Total Rationale
2026 2.1 — 1.2 3.3 Stand-up, senior staff, REC domestication launch
2027 2.1 — 1.2 3.3 Peak coordination, donor & country onboarding
2028 2.1 2.0 1.2 5.3 Multi-country scale acceleration; PP funding begins
2029 2.1 2.0 1.2 5.3 Peak policy + delivery coordination
2030 2.1 2.0 1.2 5.3 Final delivery push under Vision
2031 2.1 2.0 1.1 5.2 Transition, hand-off, data custody work
2032 2.1 2.0 1.1 5.2 Sunset, audits, institutionalization
Total $15M $10M ~$8.2M ~$33.2M

The Task Force's cash budget (~$33.2M) is fully funded by the Breakthrough Project. AUDA-NEPAD provides the institutional home — mandate, convening authority, staff time, and facilities — per AU co-funding precedent (SIFA, COYWA). This in-kind contribution is not monetized in the budget above.

9. Conclusion

This proposal suggests that a time-bound AUDA-NEPAD EdTech Task Force would provide the necessary institutional vehicle to translate Africa's EdTech Breakthrough System into durable, trusted delivery—while positioning Africa as a global leader in Digital Public Infrastructure.

The Spix Foundation recognizes that any such Task Force would proceed only with AUDA-NEPAD's leadership and consent, and would be co-designed to align with AU priorities, practices, and institutional realities. Feedback is invited on the proposed mandate, scope, and resourcing assumptions, as a basis for further joint refinement.

Note: This essay is a proposal authored by the Spix Foundation. It does not represent an endorsed position of AUDA-NEPAD, the African Union Commission, or any African Union body. It is intended to support discussion and co-design with AUDA-NEPAD and its partners.

The next essay in this series is 19. Human Capital in Africa's EdTech Breakthrough.