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 Kenyaโs 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.
โEvery day in Africa we turn a new page and a new chapter. This prize does not recognise me but recognises this great continentโs young people. I am only here because of what my students have achieved,โ Tabichi said.
โThis 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 Tabichiโs โdedication, hard work and passionate belief in his studentsโ talentโ.
All this combined, it said in a statement, โhas led his poorly-resource school in remote rural Kenya to emerge victorious after taking on the countryโs 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 Kenyaโs Rift Valley, where drought and famine are frequent.
Around 95 per cent of the schoolโs pupils โhail from poor families, almost a third are orphans or have only one parent, and many go without food at home,โ the statement added.
โDrug 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 โuses 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 โyour story is the story of Africa, a young continent bursting with talentโ.