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Decolonizing African Curricula Through AI-Enhanced Pedagogy: Reclaiming Indigenous Knowledge and Future Skills in Postcolonial Education Systems

Submitted:

03 July 2025

Posted:

04 July 2025

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Abstract
This paper explores the intersection between artificial intelligence (AI) and curriculum decolonization in sub-Saharan Africa, arguing for a transformative educational paradigm that integrates indigenous knowledge systems with AI-enhanced learning. As African nations grapple with postcolonial curriculum models rooted in Eurocentric frameworks, the emergence of AI offers an unprecedented opportunity to reimagine pedagogical tools that honor cultural identity while preparing learners for the demands of a digital future. Through a critical review of literature and analysis of current curriculum practices, this study proposes an Afrocentric-AI curriculum model grounded in contextual relevance, epistemic justice, and future-ready competencies. The implications for curriculum reform, teacher training, and educational policy are discussed, with practical recommendations for implementation.
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Subject: 
Social Sciences  -   Education

1. Introduction

Postcolonial African education systems remain deeply entangled in Eurocentric curricular frameworks, often marginalizing indigenous knowledge and epistemologies (Odora Hoppers, 2000; Dei, 2014). In recent years, calls for curriculum decolonization have intensified, driven by the need to make education more inclusive, context-sensitive, and empowering. Simultaneously, the advent of artificial intelligence (AI) in education—through tools like adaptive learning systems, language processing, and intelligent tutoring—presents both a challenge and an opportunity. This paper explores how AI can serve as a bridge rather than a barrier in the decolonization of African curricula.

2. Literature Review

2.1. The Postcolonial Curriculum Problem

Many African countries continue to operate educational systems designed during or after colonial rule. These curricula prioritize Western knowledge and marginalize African cultural, historical, and linguistic knowledge (Shizha, 2005; Ndlovu-Gatsheni, 2013). This has led to what scholars call "epistemicide" – the killing of indigenous ways of knowing (de Sousa Santos, 2014).

2.2. Decolonizing Education

Decolonizing education involves the dismantling of epistemic hierarchies and the revalidation of local knowledge, languages, and cultural heritage (Chilisa, 2012). It also requires a critical pedagogy that empowers students to challenge dominant narratives and become agents of transformation (Freire, 1970).

2.3. Artificial Intelligence in Education (AIED)

AI is transforming education globally by enabling personalized learning, automating assessments, and expanding access to knowledge (Holmes et al., 2021). However, most AI tools are developed within Global North contexts and reflect Western pedagogical assumptions (Cruz et al., 2023).

3. Problem Statement

While African educators seek to decolonize education, the rapid adoption of AI technologies risks reinforcing the very Eurocentric paradigms they seek to dismantle. Without intentional design, AI in African classrooms could become a digital colonizer, encoding biases, excluding indigenous content, and standardizing knowledge delivery.

4. Methodology

This paper adopts a conceptual and analytical approach, drawing from existing literature, African curriculum frameworks, and select case studies of AI deployment in education in sub-Saharan Africa. The analysis is informed by postcolonial theory, critical pedagogy, and Afrocentric curriculum theory.

5. Towards an Afrocentric-AI Curriculum Model

5.1. Centering Indigenous Knowledge

An Afrocentric-AI curriculum must recognize oral traditions, folklore, proverbs, local history, and indigenous science as legitimate forms of knowledge (Semali & Kincheloe, 1999). AI tools such as natural language processing (NLP) can be trained to digitize and preserve oral histories in local languages.

5.2. Contextualizing AI Algorithms

African education ministries must invest in AI tools built with African datasets and pedagogical inputs. For instance, language learning platforms should include African languages like Krio, Yoruba, and Swahili, not just French or English.

5.3. Teaching Future Skills Through Local Lenses

Critical thinking, coding, and data literacy must be taught using African contexts and problems. Instead of generic examples, students could use AI to solve real issues in agriculture, public health, or local governance.

5.4. Ethical and Cultural Safeguards

Ethical AI use in African education must respect communal values, spiritual knowledge systems, and data sovereignty. Policies must ensure that local communities have a say in how AI tools are developed and used.

6. Implications for Policy and Practice

  • Ministries of Education should create national AI curriculum task forces with educators, linguists, tech developers, and cultural scholars.
  • Teacher training institutions must integrate both decolonial pedagogy and AI literacy.
  • International partners should support local AI innovation rather than impose pre-made foreign solutions.
  • Education technology procurement should prioritize tools adaptable to African contexts.

7. Conclusion

African education stands at a crossroads. The choice is not between tradition and technology, but between dependency and design. By intentionally integrating AI with decolonial curriculum reforms, African nations can forge a new pedagogical path—one that honors their past, responds to the present, and prepares for a radically different future.

Author Contact Details:

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Email: emmanueldumbuya1@gmail.com; Phone +23276453739
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Institutional Affiliation: Njala University, Sierra Leone
ORCID ID: https://orcid.org/0009-0004-1390-5041
Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/-/e/B0DPR9HGHJ
Academia.edu: https://njala.academia.edu/EDumbuya

References

  1. Chilisa, B. Indigenous Research Methodologies. Sage Publications. Cruz, C., Pandya, P., & Osman, R. (2023). Artificial intelligence in education: A global perspective. Education and Information Technologies 2012, 28, 1223–1240. [Google Scholar]
  2. Dei, G. J. S. Indigenous discourses on knowledge and development: Contemporary voices; Routledge, 2014. [Google Scholar]
  3. de Sousa Santos, B. Epistemologies of the South: Justice against epistemicide, Routledge, 2014.
  4. Freire, P. Pedagogy of the Oppressed. Herder & Herder. Holmes, W., Bialik, M., & Fadel, C. (2021). Artificial Intelligence in Education: Promises and Implications for Teaching and Learning, Center for Curriculum Redesign, 1970. [Google Scholar]
  5. Ndlovu-Gatsheni, S. J. (2013). Coloniality of power in postcolonial Africa: Myths of decolonization, CODESRIA.
  6. Odora Hoppers, C. A. Indigenous knowledge systems: The challenge of relevance. South African Journal of Higher Education 2000, 14, 49–63. [Google Scholar]
  7. GPT-4o: Technical Report on Large Language Model Development and Applications. OpenAI. https://openai.com/gpt-4o.
  8. Semali, L. M. , & Kincheloe, J. L. (1999). What is indigenous knowledge? Voices from the academy, Falmer Press.
  9. Shizha, E. Reclaiming our memories: The education dilemma in postcolonial African school curricula. International Education Journal 2005, 6, 343–351. [Google Scholar]

Short Biography of Author

Emmanuel Dumbuya holds a Master of Education (M.Ed.) in Curriculum Development from Njala University, Sierra Leone, and has completed an MPhil in Education (Curriculum Development), Njala University-awaiting graduation. Emmanuel Dumbuya is a curriculum specialist, researcher, and educational reformer with over a decade of experience in curriculum development, teacher training, and education policy. His scholarly work focuses on inclusive education, gender equity, and the integration of future skills and technology in African education systems. Emmanuel is the author of over 30 academic books and more than 60 peer-reviewed articles. He is a leading voice in the decolonization of curriculum and a pioneer of the ODUMZ Framework for African education transformation.
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Copyright: This open access article is published under a Creative Commons CC BY 4.0 license, which permit the free download, distribution, and reuse, provided that the author and preprint are cited in any reuse.
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