The Future Minds AI Summer Camp 2025 wrapped up on Saturday, August 17, with a Demo Day at the Alliance Française de Lagos / Mike Adenuga Centre, showcasing how African children are stepping into the age of artificial intelligence.
Powered by Digital Equity Africa in partnership with Oracle Academy and UNESCO, the two-week program is the first of its kind in Nigeria and among the earliest AI-focused initiatives for children in Africa. It gathered 60 participants aged 6 to 17 from private and government schools, ensuring inclusivity through sponsored placements.
AI for Good
Working under the theme “AI for Good,” students built websites, composed music, created animations, produced short films, and even trained their own machine learning models. At Demo Day, one project group presented a platform tackling Africa’s education deficits, while another focused on environmental protection, using AI to promote sustainable practices.
Parents expressed amazement at the pace of learning. “She comes home every day excited to share what she has built — from music to websites to animations. We never imagined she would be training AI models at her age,” said one parent.
Scaling AI Education
Digital Equity Africa founder Justina Nnam Oha called the camp the start of a movement. “Future Minds is about nurturing creators and problem solvers, not just consumers of technology,” she said.
The organization aims to reach one million children in five years through camps, school partnerships, and an upcoming self-paced online AI learning platform in English and French. It also plans to collaborate with governments to integrate AI into national curricula and equip teachers to deliver digital education at scale.
With Africa’s youth population projected to double by 2050, the program represents more than a summer activity. It’s a proof of concept for what’s possible when AI education becomes accessible, inclusive, and impactful.
“Imagine what is possible if AI becomes part of our national curriculum,” Oha said. “This is only the beginning.”