May 2026 marked another strong month for TME Education, with ambassadors across Africa and Asia expanding access to practical STEM learning through school workshops, robotics clubs, IoT training, digital skills programmes, teacher development, and innovation-focused activities.
In India, Ambassador Deepak Porwal continued Arduino and basic electronics workshops across schools in Delhi and Uttarakhand, reaching more than 110 students. Learners explored circuits, sensors, coding, smart lighting, plant watering systems, security monitoring, 3D printing, and IoT applications.
In Kenya, Ambassador Kelvin Kangethe Gitau strengthened national STEM visibility through the Young Programmers Competition, IoT workshops, robotics outreach, and mentorship for the AI for Good Robotics Challenge. His support helped both junior and senior teams qualify for the global finals in Geneva, while outreach at St Anne’s Lioki Secondary School introduced 20 girls to robotics.
Cameroon recorded one of the strongest technical engagements, with Ambassador Dessap Loic reaching over 150 participants through IoT and sensor networking workshops. Learners worked with LoRaWAN, GPS tracking, mesh networks, and real-time dashboards, ending with a 24-hour hackathon.
In Tanzania, ambassadors supported advanced Arduino training, smart wheelchair development, teacher capacity building, and inclusive education advocacy. A Training of Trainers workshop equipped 17 teachers, with potential indirect reach of more than 3,400 students annually.
Zambia continued to advance robotics and embedded systems through Makerspace training, student certification, and project development. Edward Phiri engaged more than 45 students, while Obrey Muchena supported cohort completion and onboarding.
Further activities in Liberia, Botswana, Ethiopia, Zimbabwe, Eswatini, Burundi, Madagascar, Uganda, and Egypt strengthened learning in climate-smart agriculture, electronics, coding, robotics, ICT, and digital fabrication.
Across all countries, the May reports show TME Education’s growing role as a practical STEM education partner. Learners are not only studying technology, they are building, testing, improving, and applying it to real challenges. As 2026 progresses, TME Education continues to strengthen skills, inclusion, innovation, and youth readiness for the future.
For more interesting events please follow our social media.
