100 Secondary Schools Join Uganda’s National ICT Club Movement

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A Full Report on the 2024–2025 Rollout Led by KAWA in Partnership with UCC/UCUSAF

Uganda has taken another bold step in advancing digital literacy and innovation in schools with the successful launch of ICT Clubs in 100 secondary schools across the country. This milestone, coordinated by the Kisubi Associated Writers Agency (KAWA) with funding and technical support from the Uganda Communications Commission (UCC) and Universal Communications Service Access Fund (UCUSAF), is part of a national strategy to prepare young Ugandans for the digital economy.

The ICT Clubs initiative seeks to transform students from passive users of technology into active creators, problem solvers, and leaders in their schools and communities. Below is a full report capturing what has been achieved, how it was done, the challenges faced, recommendations moving forward, and a full list of the 100 participating schools.

A. Report Based on the Planned Activities

1. Development of Educational and Training Materials

To support the ICT Club program, KAWA developed tailored teaching and learning materials that are practical, engaging, and aligned with Uganda’s secondary school curriculum and global digital trends. These resources are used to introduce club members to key ICT skills and inspire creativity.

Resources produced include:

  • Dedicated Website: A central digital hub where clubs can access tutorials, upload projects, and connect with others.
  • Topical Videos: Curated video lessons on topics like web development, coding basics, cyber hygiene, and animation.
  • Training Curriculum: A step-by-step ICT Club manual that outlines leadership, project development, lab maintenance, and innovation activities.
  • PowerPoint Presentations: Used during school launches to explain the purpose, structure, and benefits of ICT Clubs to students and staff.
ICT Club learners at Ikwera Girls Secondary School, Kwania accessed coding tutorials directly from the ICT Clubs portal and began learning how to create animations using MIT App Inventor

2. Establishment of ICT Clubs and Leadership Structures

At each school, KAWA worked with the headteacher and club patrons to officially establish the ICT Club. This included launch events, election of student leaders, and distribution of club constitutions to guide operations.

Key components included:

  • Electing student leadership (President, Vice President, Secretary, etc.)
  • Adopting a club constitution to define club values, responsibilities, and procedures.
  • Maintaining attendance lists, student contacts, and visual documentation (photos and videos).
At Fatima Aloi Comprehensive SS, students formed a club leadership team and began planning their first school-wide innovation challenge.

3. Creation of the ICT Club Handbook

To ensure consistency and sustainability, KAWA produced an ICT Club Handbook—a complete operational guide with modules on lab management, project work, safety, leadership, and digital skill development.

The handbook is:

  • Available in digital format (downloadable is here).
  • Distributed to all schools via shared Google Drive
  • Updated annually to reflect new skills, challenges, and innovations.

4. Digital Skills Training for ICT Club Members

One of the most impactful components was practical skills training. KAWA conducted intensive hands-on training sessions in each school to introduce core digital concepts.

Training modules included:

a) ICT Lab Management and Sustainability

  • Safe equipment handling
  • Lab scheduling and usage rules
  • Maintenance checklists
  • Power management and energy saving
Impact: Students now manage the ICT labs, freeing teachers to focus on instruction.

b) Basic Computer Maintenance and Troubleshooting

  • Diagnosing and fixing boot errors
  • Installing software updates
  • Antivirus protection and malware removal
  • Replacing hardware components

Impact: At Amugu SS, students diagnosed and fixed slow-loading PCs after training.

c) Internet Safety and Cybersecurity

  • Password hygiene
  • Avoiding scams and phishing attacks
  • Understanding digital footprints
  • Protecting personal data

Impact: At Bishop Willigers SS, students launched a campaign on safe social media usage.

d) Digital Skills Beyond the Curriculum

  • Basic coding in Scratch and Python
  • Google Docs, Sheets, and Forms for schoolwork
  • Creating PowerPoint presentations and digital posters
  • Researching global SDG-linked projects

Impact: Students at Mukono High School built an online quiz using Google Forms.

5. Reporting and Monitoring Progress

KAWA maintained a transparent and accountable reporting process, aligned with UCC/UCUSAF requirements.

  • Weekly field reports from each district
  • Launch-day logs and photos
  • Phase 1 summary report (50 schools)
  • Contact database of ICT patrons and headteachers

6. Workshops and Activity Calendar Development

KAWA organized engagement workshops with headteachers, patrons, and ICT teachers to ensure they understood their roles and actively participated in club planning.

Each school is developing a custom activity calendar featuring:

  • Weekly digital challenges
  • Innovation project deadlines
  • Peer-to-peer training days
  • Cybersecurity awareness week

⚠️ B. Key Challenges Encountered

Despite success, several issues were observed:

  1. Religious Observances – In some schools, fasting affected concentration during launch sessions.
  2. Unreliable Power Supply – Rural schools faced blackouts, limiting hands-on training.
  3. Lack of Computers – Some schools had very few or no working computers.
  4. Delayed School Admin Support – A few administrators were slow to respond.
  5. Time Constraints – Busy school timetables left little room for club activities.
  6. Low Digital Literacy – Some learners had never used a computer before.
  7. Teacher ICT Gaps – Some staff lacked basic ICT knowledge to support the clubs.
  8. Hard-to-Reach Areas – Poor roads and rain delayed facilitators and equipment.

✅ C. Recommendations

To build on the program’s success, KAWA proposes the following:

  1. Engage school leaders earlier for better buy-in.
  2. Provide solar power to off-grid schools.
  3. Upgrade hardware and internet access in under-resourced schools.
  4. Train more teachers and patrons to mentor students.
  5. Allocate time in timetables for weekly ICT Club meetings.
  6. Appoint regional coordinators to visit and support schools regularly.
  7. Run awareness campaigns to emphasize ICT for learning.
  8. Support transport logistics for remote schools and districts.

🎓 D. Conclusion and Acknowledgements

KAWA is proud to report the successful establishment of 100 new ICT Clubs across Uganda in 2024–2025. This would not have been possible without the unwavering support of the Uganda Communications Commission (UCC) and UCUSAF, whose vision for digital equity continues to transform the education sector.

Through this initiative, over 7,000 students have gained practical digital skills, formed peer-learning communities, and begun innovating for impact. We look forward to showcasing their projects at upcoming national ICT Club exhibitions and competitions.

“This initiative proves that when you equip young people with the right tools and guidance, they can build solutions for tomorrow,” — Moses Wamanga, Team Lead, KAWA.

List of Ugandan Schools

List of Participating Schools

No. School Name
1.Amugu Secondary School
2.Fatima Aloi Comprehensive Girls SS
3.Apala SS
4.Bombo Army Secondary School
5.Bihanga Secondary School
6.Namwezzi S.S
7.Kojja Secondary School
8.Kibibi Secondary School
9.St Anne Vocational S.S
10.Bishop Willigers SS
11.Bubinga High School
12.Bulunguli Seed SS
13.Mpanga Secondary School
14.Wanyange Girls School
15.Saint Gonzaga Secondary School Kagoma
16.Namasagali College
17.Uganda Martyrs SS Kayungwe
18.St. Charles Lwanga SS Zorooma
19.Kambuga Secondary School
20.St. Pius Secondary School
21.St. Joseph’s Kanaana
22.Butogota Trinity College
23.Ndeeba Secondary School
24.Namagabi Secondary School
25.St Mathias Kalemba Secondary School
26.Kiganda H.S
27.Kazo Secondary School
28.Kyarusozi Secondary School
29.Ikwera Girls SS
30.Aduku SS
31.Chawente Secondary School
32.Aduku Seed Secondary School
33.Busara High Hill SS
34.Mahango Seed SS
35.Buwambo Seed Secondary School
36.Ndejje Vocational Secondary School
37.Lukole Seed Secondary School
38.Mazzi Vocational Secondary School
39.Bbowa Community Polytechnic
40.St. Andrew Kaggwa S.S Kassala
41.Luweero Secondary School
42.Kasana Voc School
43.Nalinya Lwantale Girls Secondary School
44.Mbiriizi Seed Secondary School
45.St. Anthony SS Kyazanga
46.Kyabuuza Muslim Secondary School
47.St. John’s Comprehensive SS Lyantonde
48.Lyantonde SS Kasambya
49.St Joseph Voc School Mbarara
50.St Paul S.S Biharwe
51.Nyangahya Community SS
52.Kiyuya Seed Secondary School
53.Kiyanga Vocational Secondary School
54.Nyakahita Muhiirwa Voc. S.S
55.Mbazzi Riverside S.S
56.St. Peter’s SS Busubuzi
57.Kiggwa SSS
58.Mumsa High School Mityana
59.Ttamu Moslim Secondary School
60.Mityana S.S
61.St Joseph Secondary School Konge
62.Myanzi S.S
63.Comprehensive High School Mubende
64.Kiyuni SS
65.Kasenyi SS
66.Nabingoola Public Secondary School
67.Bageza Seed Secondary School
68.Mukono High School
69.Sir Apollo Kaggwa S.S
70.Nakanyonyi Secondary School
71.Namakwa Secondary School
72.Seeta College
73.Kinyogoga Seed SS
74.Ngoma Secondary School
75.Nakasongola Army S.S
76.St. Peters Warr Girls Secondary School
77.Ogenda Girls S.S
78.Fr. John Kiggen Memorial College
79.Ngora High School
80.Ngora Girls Secondary School
81.Kobwin Seed Secondary School
82.Archbishop Bakyenga Vocational Secondary School
83.Pallisa Secondary School
84.St Adrian Kasozi
85.Kiziba High School
86.Bwongyera Girls Secondary School
87.Kabezi Secondary School
88.Kihanga Public Secondary School
89.Rweikiniro Secondary School
90.Bwambara Modern Vocational S.S
91.Bishop Robert Vocational S.S
92.St Paul Kazindiro
93.Blessed Parents Vocational SS
94.Kagunga Seed SS
95.St Elizabeth Girls Secondary School Kidetok
96.Atiira Seed Secondary School
97.Dakabela Comprehensive Secondary School
98.Immaculate Girls SS
99.Airforce S.S Entebbe
100.Wakiso School of the Deaf

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