Kigali, December 2025 — Digital Futures Africa has signed landmark partnership agreements with 50 universities across 20 African nations to integrate its foundational digital skills curriculum into core undergraduate degree programmes. The initiative, announced at a ceremony in Kigali attended by vice-chancellors and academic leaders from across the continent, will reach an estimated 280,000 students annually once fully implemented.
“For too long, African graduates have entered the workforce underprepared for the digital economy. This partnership changes that.”
The Partnership Framework
Under the terms of the partnership framework, each participating university will integrate a minimum of 30 credit hours of DFA-accredited digital skills content into at least three core degree programmes over the next 18 months. The content — covering digital literacy, data fundamentals, AI awareness, and professional digital tools — is designed to be discipline-agnostic, meaning it can be embedded into business, arts, science, law, medical, or engineering programmes equally.
DFA will provide partner universities with:
- Full access to the DFA Learning Management System and all course content, translated into local languages
- Faculty training and certification for up to 200 lecturers per institution
- Co-branded certification for graduating students, recognised across the DFA employer partner network
- Annual curriculum review and update cycles to ensure content remains current with industry needs
- Research collaboration opportunities through the DFA Institute
Partner Universities
The 50 partner institutions include some of the continent’s most respected universities, spanning every African region. Founding partners include the University of Lagos, University of Nairobi, University of Ghana, Makerere University, University of Cape Town, Cairo University, Université Cheikh Anta Diop, University of Addis Ababa, University of Rwanda, and the Pan-African University. The full list of partner institutions is published on the DFA website.
“For too long, African graduates have entered the workforce technically qualified in their disciplines but underprepared for the realities of the digital economy,” said Prof. Ngozi Adichie-Okonkwo, Chief Academic Officer of Digital Futures Africa. “This partnership changes that. Within three years, a quarter of a million African graduates per year will enter the workforce with verified digital skills built into their degree.”
Rwanda as a Model
Rwanda was chosen as the venue for the signing ceremony for good reason: the country has become one of Africa’s most advanced digital economies, built on a foundation of deliberate human capital investment. The University of Rwanda was among the first institutions to pilot DFA’s integrated curriculum in 2024, with results that led directly to the scaling of this initiative.
Prof. Emmanuel Mutimura, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Rwanda and a member of DFA’s advisory board, described the partnership as “exactly the kind of public-private academic collaboration that Africa needs to accelerate its digital transformation from within.”
Employer Recognition
A critical dimension of the partnership is its connection to the DFA employer network. More than 180 employers across Africa — including major corporations, fast-growing startups, and government agencies — have committed to formally recognising the DFA digital skills credential on CVs and job applications, treating it as equivalent to an industry certification.
The partnership is open to additional African universities. Institutions interested in joining the DFA University Partner Network are invited to submit an expression of interest through the DFA website. The next cohort of partner institutions will be announced in March 2026.