Changing the way people engage with education has become the life's work for Zambian teacher and entrepreneur Rozious Siatwambo.
He is the founder of the Great North Road Academy, an independent school in Zambia's capital Lusaka.
The school encourages "drop-outs" of any age to return to education.
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Rozious Siatwambo with a student |
Projectors are installed in classrooms to encourage
interactive learning and students unable to attend classes can enrol in
distance learning at home through DVDs and CDs recorded at the school.
Mr Siatwambo had a fairly conventional start in education -
he gained a degree in education from the University of Zambia but after
graduating he decided that he was not going to follow his peers.
"I didn't want to join the government. I didn't want to join
anywhere. So what I had to do is, I had to now search my heart, search
what I'd learnt at the university and then I started using those skills
to come up with something," he told the BBC's series African Dream.
With his passion for education and determination to be his own boss, he identified a gap in the independent school market.
"If you look at most of these private schools, most of them
are not run by teachers, most of them are just business persons, so I
wanted to come up with something different which would have an education
attached."
'Growing of ideas'
Mr Siatwambo reached out to the public to sell his idea.
"I started printing some flyers
and also calling some people and I remember during the initial stages,
sometimes I'd leave the office, I'd go on the streets," he told the
BBC's Mutuna Chanda.
For Mr Siatwambo it is these early stages and the "growing of
ideas" which enabled him to visualise how the school would work and how
it would stand out from other independent schools.
"We started looking at where we can come out different from
these other schools and we started bringing in new ideas such as
modernising our system, ensuring that even those who didn't come here
got the best services they could ever get. And this is what has seen
rise us to this level," he said.
However, not many people seemed to have much faith in his plans.
He says he wrote to about 50 banks and organisations and
received only rejections. But he describes this as an important lesson.
"I learned that you don't need to depend on others or even
other organisations. You can still do it on your own. I find it
sometimes cumbersome where I have to do all this paperwork so I would
rather stand on my own."
He turned to friends who backed him to the tune of $15,000
(£9,700). This plus his own personal funds enabled him to put some money
behind his idea.
Within the first month the school had enrolled more than 30 pupils. Today it has around 700 pupils and more than 30 employees.
So given the large injection of capital he had, what is his
response to those who might say they do not have the same financial
advantages?
"You don't start a business with money, you start with an idea. And that idea it has to be grown," he says.
"So the idea is the one that is going to lead you to where
money is. I had to grow that idea. Upon growing that idea, that's when
my brain would tell me to say now can you source some money to fill the
gaps.
"Running a business doesn't actually take money, it is the brain."
Mr Siatwambo has now turned his attentions to producing exam guides.
In 2006 he had the idea for Exams Made Easy and went about
getting it published. To keep his costs low, he had the book published
in China.
"After printing quite a number of copies [50,000] let me just
say it was quite challenging because locally it was quite expensive to
have a book printed," he says.
"There was one major challenge I faced when the books were being shipped to Dar es Salaam, Tanzania," he remembers.
"The ship that was carrying the books had been hijacked in
Somalia and you can imagine there were only two weeks before the launch
and I'd invited all the people, ministers and other people, so now what
was I going to do? Abandon the launch? I just went ahead with the launch
through just a few copies that I'd printed locally."
He now has plans to build on the book and to expand his Great North Road Academy.
"I have now converted the book into a DVD. My intention is to
expand the school into a university in the next three or four years.
"I've already acquired some land. We wanted to construct a
complex which will house a primary school, a secondary school and also a
university. Now we are just looking at financiers to finance the work.
Hopefully by 2015 all of the structures will be in place."
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