Young Nigerian students received accolades as tech leaders during the INSPIRE Project (Innovation, STEM, and Partnerships for Inclusive and Relevant Education), which concluded with its highly anticipated National Innovation Challenge Showcase.
The project, backed by the United States government, was on full display as it gathered stakeholders for the two-day finale on Tuesday, marking the peak of a transformative year-long program that has reshaped STEM learning for thousands of students across Nigeria.
The students presented their original innovations in coding, robotics, and 3D design at the grand finale, as the INSPIRE Project reaffirmed its mission to foster a knowledge-driven economy and empower the next generation of Nigerian tech leaders.
Funded by the ExxonMobil Foundation and delivered through a strategic partnership between the TechWomen Alumni Association Nigeria and PanAfricare Nigeria, the INSPIRE Project has closed critical resource gaps in 14 underserved government secondary schools across Abia, Bauchi, the FCT, Kaduna, Lagos, and Rivers States.
Speaking during the innovation challenge, Lee McManis, the Country Public Affairs Counselor of the United States Embassy in Nigeria said the US Mission supports innovation and entrepreneurship because they create jobs, strengthen economies, and promote two-way trade.
He said “INSPIRE builds on the U.S. TechWomen exchange program, where emerging women leaders connect with mentors and technology companies in Silicon Valley in the United States, then return home to adapt global innovation to local realities. This approach puts Nigerian talent to work solving Nigerian challenges—creating prosperity through private sector-led growth.
He said further that the project reflects America’s commitment to energy security and economic opportunity stressing that students are applying skills in coding, robotics, 3D printing, and Augmented and Virtual Reality to design solutions that will power Nigeria’s future and create jobs in the energy sector.
“Nigeria is a strategic partner for the United States in technology, innovation, and energy development. INSPIRE ensures this partnership delivers results today and for generations to come—advancing shared prosperity and security” he noted.
Also Speaking at the Innovation Challenge, Country director Pancare Dr. Patrick Adah said, “We believe that sustainable development is not achieved through theory alone. It is engineered through knowledge transfer, strategic partnerships, and deliberate investment in human capital. The INSPIRE Project exemplifies this philosophy.
“PanAfricare remains committed to expanding this model, scaling laboratory modernisation across additional states, deepening teacher upskilling in frontier technologies and strengthening public-private partnerships for STEM ecosystem development,” he said.
He emphasized the provision of innovative learning tools and the deployment of modern laboratory science equipment, stressing that these pillars were intentionally designed to strengthen both digital innovation and practical scientific learning, ensuring that students are equipped not only with theoretical knowledge but with hands-on competencies required for the 21st-century knowledge economy.
President TechWomen Alumni Association of Nigeria Dr. Carolyn Seaman in her remarks said the INSPIRE Project is a vision where collaboration and commitment would converge to shape the future of the nation’s youth.”
The Project Manager Terfa Akpoyibo told reporters in an interview that the project was designed to bring the best from the students and make the programme sustainable by encouraging them in all dimensions possible to bridge the STEM gap in Nigerian schools.
Since its launch in May 2025, the initiative has delivered outstanding results in nurturing a new generation of innovators. Student interest in STEM subjects rose from 40 per cent at baseline to 88 per cent by project completion, while interest in STEM careers surged from 38 per cent to over 91 per cent
The project also exceeded gender-inclusion expectations, achieving 66.1 per cent female participation (463 girls) and ensuring representation of students with disabilities at 3 per cent
A total of 105 STEM teachers completed advanced Training-of-Trainers programs in Robotics, 3D Modeling, and AR/VR, each committing to implement these cutting‐edge techniques in their classrooms. More than 13,000 science students now benefit from state-of-the-art “INSPIRE Boxes,” equipped with 3D printers, microcontrollers, and essential laboratory kits.
Designed with sustainability at its core, the INSPIRE Project ensures long-lasting impact beyond the competition. Participating schools will continue to function as STEM resource hubs for surrounding communities.
The ExxonMobil Foundation is the primary philanthropic arm of Exxon Mobil Corporation in the United States. The Foundation engages in a range of philanthropic initiatives in areas where the company operates around the world, with a strategic focus on science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) education.
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