Teacher from remote Kenya village wins $1 million Global Teacher Prize

Teacher from remote Kenya village wins $1 million Global Teacher Prize

by Joseph Anthony
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Shaikh Hamdan presents the Best teacher award to Peter Tabichi, a Maths and Physics teacher from Kenya, as Sunny Varkey, founder of the GESF, looks on. Image Credit: Clint Egbert/Gulf News

A maths and physics teacher from a secondary school in a remote village in Kenyaโ€™s Rift Valley has won the $1 million Global Teacher Prize for 2019, organisers have said.


Peter Tabichi, who organisers say gives away 80 per cent of his monthly income to the poor, received the prize at a ceremony Saturday in Dubai hosted by Hollywood star Hugh Jackman.

โ€œEvery day in Africa we turn a new page and a new chapter. This prize does not recognise me but recognises this great continentโ€™s young people. I am only here because of what my students have achieved,โ€ Tabichi said.

โ€œThis prize gives them a chance. It tells the world that they can do anything,โ€ he added after beating nine finalists from around the world to claim the award.

The Dubai-based Varkey Foundation, which organises the event and handed out the prize for the fifth time, praised Tabichiโ€™s โ€œdedication, hard work and passionate belief in his studentsโ€™ talentโ€.


All this combined, it said in a statement, โ€œhas led his poorly-resource school in remote rural Kenya to emerge victorious after taking on the countryโ€™s best schools in national science competitionsโ€.

Tabichi, 36, teaches at the Keriko Mixed Day Secondary School in Pwani village, in a remote, semi-arid part of Kenyaโ€™s Rift Valley, where drought and famine are frequent.

Around 95 per cent of the schoolโ€™s pupils โ€œhail from poor families, almost a third are orphans or have only one parent, and many go without food at home,โ€ the statement added.

โ€œDrug abuse, teenage pregnancies, dropping out early from school, young marriages and suicide are common.โ€


To get to school, some students have to walk seven kilometres (four miles) along roads that become impassable during the rainy season.

The school, with a student-teacher ration of 58 to 1, has only one desktop computer for the pupils and poor internet, but despite that Tabichi โ€œuses ICT in 80 per cent of his lessons to engage studentsโ€, the foundation said.

Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta congratulated Tabichi in a video message, saying โ€œyour story is the story of Africa, a young continent bursting with talentโ€.

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