Headlines
- Japan and Tanzania teams up to boost Kilimanjaro Coffee consumption in Tokyo
- Guinness World Records Unaware of Tanzania’s Landrover Parade Claims
- Tanzania prepares to break Germany’s Record for staging the longest parade of Land-Rover trucks in the world next October
- Bus Company hatches route between Dar-es-salaam and Nairobi via Tarakea and Oloitokitok
Browsing Category
Education
Arusha Meru Talent Hunt 2024: Students stand to pocket 125 million/- in education scholarships
Many Tanzanians want to access international education such as Cambridge, but most cannot afford, therefore Arusha Meru is rolling out this opportunity to the talented Tanzanian youths
How tourism activities support school feeding programs in Meatu District
Assured of midday meals at school on daily basis, the pupils in Meatu district no longer abscond from classes.
‘One Brick, One Smile!’ Residents raise money to build community Library, reviving book…
The Girls Foundation of Tanzania, though the One-brick, One-smile initiative is reviving the physical book reading culture in Northern Tanzania
Proposed Monduli Vocational and Technical Training Center stuck in Limbo for 40 years
Former Prime Minister, Edward Moringe Sokoine who was the legislator for Monduli had donated land for the proposed vocational training facility
Aga Khan to work with East African Community in addressing Health and Education challenges in the…
The Aga Khan University is currently at the forefront to improve health and education sectors in East Africa
Korean Students raise money to construct five classrooms for the youth in Kilimanjaro Region
So far nearly 300 youth have graduated from the establishment’s training programs in Moshi with others being sponsored to attend other colleges.
Dyslexia: The latest learning plight hounding children in schools which has just come to light
Characteristic of dyslexia include difficulties in phonological awareness, verbal memory and verbal processing speed and that usually Dyslexia occurs across a wide range of intellectual abilities.
Kenya slowly but surely kills Kiswahili by deleting language from compulsory subjects in Schools
Kiswahili is no longer a compulsory subject in the new grading system announced by the Kenya's Education Cabinet Secretary
Inter-University Council of East Africa to Key into New Headquarters in January 2025. They Hope
The project worth over USD 8.4 million is expected to be completed within 18 months.
There is ‘Free Lunch’ and other complementary services courtesy of Tourism in Meatu…
And just in case water becomes scarce, the tourism entities saw to it that the learning institution is also equipped with a special rain precipitation harvesting system installed at the school.