Pascal Kanik is bringing the digital into schools in DR Congo with his startup Schoolap, a digital platform that provides students with access to digital lessons and transforms the way teachers teach in schools.
He created the startup in 2017 alongside another entrepreneur, Guy-José Leta. The idea of setting up this tool was born while he was on a work mission as a Vodacom employee to raise awareness about sustainable development in the country's provinces. “I realized the lack of quality learning in the areas I visited. I noticed that teachers don't know what sustainable development is. I then wondered how they could teach something they don't know,” he says. He then decided to bring quality lessons to them. Access to the digital platform is free and lessons can be downloaded to any device.
Schoolap also incorporates a tablet for those who wish to purchase it. The courses available meet the criteria and requirements of the Ministry of Education. "There are even courses in sign language for deaf and dumb people, and cartoons for kids," he adds.
Pascal Kanik won several international awards for his innovation and has even sold the concept to Seychelles. In April 2019, Schoolap won the award for best online education platform at Seedstars, a startup competition focused on emerging markets. That same year, the entrepreneur entered into a funding agreement with CFC, and subsequently raised $500,000 from the international Eutelsat Group, which accelerated his penetration of the Congolese market.
Schoolap has become increasingly successful with the lockdown imposed due to Covid-19. According to Pascal Kanik, the platform already has more than 20,300 educational content, a network of more than 6,000 schools, 1,900,000 students, and 105,000 teachers. The startup wants to reach 28,000 schools in the long term and conquer new markets.
Schoolap recently established an adapted bank loan with RawBank, the country's main bank, to enable the delivery of more than 10,000 tablets by the end of this year, much more than the 500 tablets sold monthly at the beginning of its marketing in 2021.
Aïsha Moyouzame