We are happy to announce that inaglobe will be launching its model as a fellowship. The students that inaglobe supports are the fellows, and they will receive the action-based learning programme inaglobe has offered for the past 6 years. We believe that the narrative encompasses the depth and the wealth that inaglobe brings to students and educational systems, with a big part of the programme aligning with the official curriculum. It also tunes into an existing sponsorship model that is both global and established.
Read MoreIf you are a young person, and want to contribute to the discussion regarding the evolution of higher education, fill in the Youth Talks survey, who inaglobe has recently partnered with!
Read MoreThere is no doubt that visual impairment conditions severe affect on one's ability to live in a world engineered around sight. Society as a whole would also benefit from enabling visually impaired individuals to participate and contribute in the community. In this blog post, we will go over the latest developments in healthtech for the visually impaired, as well as how inaglobe has been involved in helping new solutions develop that could help visually impaired individuals.
Read MoreInAGlobe Education becomes inaglobe
Read MoreWith this blog post I seek to give a perspective on how structural racism is a part of development and also expand and develop InAGlobe’s position on certain issues. This will be done by exploring how technological innovation and collaborative design can be used to make the world a more equitable place by addressing the specific needs of the people we seek to innovate for.
Read MoreCoronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID19) has brought a great part of the world to a halt, it has obligated governments across the globe to act in unprecedented measures amidst enormous uncertainty. I wanted to write a post to update our followers on the impact that the virus has had on InAGlobe, and my personal interpretation with the information I have had available.
Read More“Health spending is not a cost, it’s an investment in poverty reduction, jobs, productivity, inclusive economic growth, and healthier, safer, fairer societies.”1 This was said by Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, World Health Organisation (WHO) Director-General. The health of each individual affects not just themselves but also society.
Read MoreInclusive education is a concept that stems from the idea that all children around the world, regardless of disability, race, class, sex, religion or language, are entitled to an education. It contains many similarities to the more widely known method of integration, which focuses primarily on disability and special needs.
Read MoreNowadays, basic education is expected from the government and the law requires citizens to attend school up to a certain level. Education is not only a human right, it is also a duty to fulfil. Indeed, literacy rates and enrolment rates have increased over the years, in which there were 62 million out-of-school lower secondary school children in 2015, a large decrease from 97 million in 2000 (UNICEF, 2019). However, if we really recognise education as a right, then much can still be done since there are still people who are illiterate (according to UNESCO (2017), 750 million people) or unable to attend school.
Read MoreWe usually associate education with academic knowledge obtained through institutions, such as primary and secondary schools and universities. Education can also refer to vocational training, where practical skills are obtained instead of purely academic skills. However, is education the equivalent of schooling?
Read MoreSystems thinking, or systems science came slowly into the scene with a set of academic dialogues between experts in Biology, Psychology and Ecology. The discovery of the Cell, the Theory of Evolution and Genomics catalysed these conversations (Capra, 2019). During the 1920s and 1930s, scientists began to observe levels of complexity in their discoveries that they were unable to fully comprehend using Descartes’s reductionist approach to science.
Read MoreHuman-centred design is a framework that emphasises the human perspective in all steps of the design process. It serves to provide the end user with a product that they will truly want, need and find useful. It is also often seen as something more than just a design framework: it is a mindset and a tool that intends to create a long-lasting, positive impact on the user.
Read MoreInnovation is a term we often hear. We say that Apple is innovative, so is Facebook and Dyson. However, innovation goes beyond the realm of technology. Innovation is the initiation of an idea through imagination and ultimately, the invention of a novel product when there is enough information. That seems to be a lot of ‘i’s to take in.
Read MoreMore than ever, in a world of increasing complexity, we need to become aware of the countless challenges that the forthcoming generations will need to tackle, we need to be aware of what is happening. This sounds journalistic, but the difference is that a lot of information is already there, we just need to interpret it, we need to understand it. At InAGlobe we see our mission as far more than simply building partnerships towards humanitarian innovation.
Read MoreAfter a summer of big changes, we are finally writing an update on progress. This summer has been one of true juggling of tasks for the InAGlobe team. As motivated as ever, we are now trying to get InAGlobe to take full flight, to standardise methodologies so that these can be iterated and improved in a formal manner and we can propagate our vision accordingly.
Read MoreThis year has come with progress for InAGlobe Education. As soon as we came back from Mozambique, the team turned the idea into an incorporated, vowed non-profit, organisation. The initial idea of becoming a charity was overturned by the difficulties of penniless, new graduates being able to run these organisations for a living; and also motivated by the sustainability that an economically sound status may bring to an idea that has a great potential for human development. InAGlobe Education became InAGlobe Education Ltd.
Read MoreThe 18th of October was also one of the biggest and most rewarding days for InAGlobe as Jaime picked up the award for Student Award for Outstanding Achievement 2017. This is an award that was established in 2003 by Imperial College London to recognise outstanding students for their achievements in any extramural activities.
Read MoreSo we have arrived to the end of our first official InAGlobe expedition. As we headed to Pemba airport with our favourite taxi driver, Abou, we could not help experiencing a fruit salad of emotions. The trip has taken us half way across the globe, into a country none of us had ever been to, following a drive, a motif to build something that creates a new tool for development and innovation for developing countries. As well as giving education in Europe a new dimension.
Read MoreSo once again we packed our bags and got on the move, this time with one of the earliest starts of the trip: 3 A.M. This was because there were a series of inconsistencies on the departure times, given by different islanders, and it was not clear when the public boat would set out from Ibo.
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