2025 Yidan Prize laureates advance multilingual education and computational thinking

The 2025 Yidan Prize has been awarded to Mamadou Amadou Ly and Professor Uri Wilensky for their work in education development and research. Ly promotes multilingual education in Senegal, while Wilensky advances computational thinking through his NetLogo platform. Their innovations aim to equip learners with skills for a rapidly changing world.

The Yidan Prize, established in 2016, is an annual award that honors changemakers whose action-driven research and evidence-based practices improve education worldwide. The 2025 laureates, Mamadou Amadou Ly and Professor Uri Wilensky, tackle education from distinct angles: Ly through multilingualism and Wilensky via computational thinking.

In Senegal, formal schooling is in French, spoken fluently by only about 20 percent of the population. Ly, executive director of the non-profit Associates in Research and Education for Development (Ared), addresses this barrier. “Our bilingual education model starts with learning in the national language, that is, the languages children speak at home and in the streets,” Ly says. “French is introduced gradually and this ensures better understanding for these children of what they are learning.” Teachers are trained for interactive classrooms beyond rote learning, yielding a 134 percent increase in word reading compared to monolingual peers. Partnering with Senegal’s Ministry of Education, Ared has scaled nationally and aided neighboring countries, promoting equitable multilingual education for millions.

Wilensky, Lorraine H. Morton Professor of Learning Sciences, Computer Science, and Complex Systems at Northwestern University in the United States, fosters computational literacy to help students understand complex systems. “In traditional instruction, a teacher gives information to the students and they learn the results of the scientific process,” Wilensky says. “But our world is changing very rapidly, and what’s more important is the skill of being able to adapt, create, reason about and model the new situations that we’re in.” His NetLogo platform enables visualization and testing of phenomena like disease outbreaks and economic dynamics, encouraging discovery through experimentation.

As 2025 Yidan Prize laureates for education development and research, respectively, each receives HK$15 million (US$1.9 million) in cash and HK$15 million in project funding to expand their impact. They engaged in the Yidan Prize Summit in Hong Kong and received gold medals at the December 6 award ceremony, capping a week of education events.

مقالات ذات صلة

14th Global Korea Awards ceremony honoring multicultural youth, with grand prize winner Selma Naciri on stage surrounded by diverse winners and officials.
صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

جوائز كوريا العالمية الـ14 تكرم الشباب متعدد الثقافات

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

نظمت صحيفة The Korea Times الدورة الـ14 من جوائز كوريا العالمية، والتي احتفلت بالشباب متعدد الثقافات في 27 نوفمبر 2025. أبرزت الفائزة بالجائزة الكبرى سلما نصيري تركيز الحدث على ربط الثقافات. شدد المسؤولون والحكام على مستقبل شامل للجيل الشاب المتنوع في كوريا.

French economist Philippe Aghion, winner of the 2025 Nobel Prize in Economics, praised Javier Milei's government reforms during a speech at the CAF International Economic Forum in Panama. Aghion highlighted how these policies combat corruption and bureaucracy to promote innovation and help Argentina escape the middle-income trap.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

أعلنت مجموعة يانغو، الشركة التكنولوجية العالمية، عن توسيع برنامج زمالات يانغو لإطلاق المواهب في مجال STEM عبر أفريقيا. تم إطلاق البرنامج في البداية في زامبيا وساحل العاج، ويمتد الآن إلى أربع دول أخرى: موزمبيق وإثيوبيا وغانا والسنغال.

The Colombian government has withdrawn state funding from Colfuturo's Crédito Beca program, which supported postgraduate studies abroad for over 20 years, to redirect resources toward a new doctoral scholarship model targeting vulnerable populations. Science Minister Yesenia Olaya defended the move, stating that Colfuturo failed to meet democratization criteria for educational access. The decision has drawn criticism for restricting opportunities amid global technological shifts.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

An open letter published on International Day of Education urges South African scientists to actively engage with students to improve stagnant STEM marks, despite a record-high matric pass rate of 88%. The piece highlights declining maths and physics performance and calls for visibility and storytelling to inspire future innovators.

Daily Maverick has unveiled the complete winners of its People of the Year 2025 awards, based on over 10,000 reader votes. Following our in-depth profile on Rassie Erasmus as Person of the Year, the full list celebrates impactful figures across positive and negative categories in South Africa and beyond.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

In his message for the 2026 World Day of Social Communications, Pope León XIV stresses that the challenge of artificial intelligence is anthropological, not merely technological. He urges higher education institutions in Colombia to develop critical capacities to govern these tools, preventing them from supplanting human thought. This reflection arises amid the rapid integration of AI in universities, posing risks of excessive automation.

 

 

 

يستخدم هذا الموقع ملفات تعريف الارتباط

نستخدم ملفات تعريف الارتباط للتحليلات لتحسين موقعنا. اقرأ سياسة الخصوصية الخاصة بنا سياسة الخصوصية لمزيد من المعلومات.
رفض