Mamadou Amadou Ly

Prize

Yidan Prize for Education Development

Year

2025

Contents

Bio

Judge's citation

Mamadou Amadou Ly

Executive Director, Associates in Research and Education for Development (ARED)

Expertise

Foundational learning; Bilingual education; Structured pedagogy; Remediation; Equitable and inclusive education

Teaching in languages children know so they can learn and thrive

Mamadou Amadou Ly and his colleagues at Associates in Research and Education for Development (ARED) are breaking down language and learning barriers in West Africa — a region rich in linguistic diversity but hampered by persistently low literacy rates.

 

In many countries in West and Central Africa, French is the official language of the state — and the classroom. But in a region home to hundreds of national languages, many children arrive at school to be taught in a language they’ve never spoken. In 2024, a KIX study found that 71% of Senegalese second- and fourth-graders cannot speak or understand French as well as another language.

 

To tackle the issue, ARED develops engaging, adaptable programs, where students begin by learning in a language they know and then move onto learning in both that language and French. The team also trains teachers, supporting them to transform classrooms previously centered on ‘chalk and talk’ methods into ones where students are engaged, and everyone can interact in a language they all know. It’s a step change, and it’s already seeing significant results.

 

One such model, the Ndaw Wune (‘Success For All’) accelerated learning program — which focuses on struggling students at high risk of poor learning outcomes and dropout — tracked a dramatic uplift in foundational literacy skills. In the 2023 – 2024 academic year alone, Ndaw Wune students saw average improvements of 74% in letter reading, 100% in syllable reading, and 134% in word reading.

 

For Mamadou, it’s also vital to harness the power of partnerships to refine and scale ARED’s work. In Senegal, ARED is the Ministry of Education’s technical partner, carrying out materials development, teacher training, and implementation research, and evaluating learning outcomes. That data goes back into improving programs and cost-effectiveness, iteratively.

 

Mamadou and the team are already influencing policy and practice beyond Senegal. Neighboring governments in the Gambia and Mauritania have launched programs based on ARED’s approach and openly licensed resources, freely available on platforms like the Early Learning Resource Network. There’s plenty of potential to adapt models to both similar and different contexts where bilingual teaching and learning could make education accessible to more children.

Mamadou Amadou Ly’s visionary work in multilingual education provides methods that open the door to literacy and opportunity for learners globally while safeguarding linguistic and cultural identities. This path to inclusive and equitable learning environments inspires education reform in Africa and beyond.

Dorothy K. Gordon

Panel Head, Judging Panel for Education Development, Yidan Prize