Six visionaries. One audacious bet: that Ghana's children could outlearn the world — if only someone built the school of tomorrow, today.
It began, as most revolutions do, with a refusal. A refusal to accept that a child's postcode should determine the quality of their education. A refusal to watch another generation graduate without truly understanding what they had been taught. A refusal to let the future arrive while Ghana's children stood unprepared.
In 2019, long before the world was forced online, Nii Adotei Omanye-YehowaDa — a computer networking officer who had built systems for national excavator management and insurance automation — began asking a dangerous question: What if a school could measure not what a student remembers, but what they actually understand? The research that followed would become the Omanye-Yehowada Learning Models, tested and refined before COVID-19 ever closed a classroom door.
But one visionary does not a revolution make. Enter Kwame Oteng Appiah-Nti, the creator of the Webby PHP Development Framework, who believed that African children should learn to build technology, not merely consume it. Elorm Attipoe Livingstone, a biochemical engineer from KNUST, brought the rigour of laboratory science to curriculum design. Sally N.D Hayford, a certified Oracle database administrator with majors in Mathematics, Statistics, and Computer Science, ensured no child would ever again fear numbers. Solomon Tetteh Sappor and Cobblah Gador Dagbedzi Hemade, with his dual Master's in Data Analytics and Advanced Mathematics, completed a founding team unlike any in African education.
Together, they built something radical: a school where mastery is the only passing grade. Where real-time assessment technology catches a struggling child before they fall behind. Where the curriculum of 2055 — artificial intelligence, robotics, data science, and creative problem-solving — is taught today. Where every student is guided not toward examination survival, but toward life-proof skills that no machine can replicate.
Today, IntelliLearn stands as Ghana's foremost fully virtual school — an EdTech company forged in research, powered by purpose, and unwavering in its mission: to give every child complete mastery of the subjects that matter, and the skills that will future-proof their lives.
To give students complete mastery and deep understanding of every subject and topic they encounter — not surface-level memorisation, but genuine comprehension. We guide them with the skills that will future-proof their lives: critical thinking, creative problem-solving, and the technological fluency to build tomorrow rather than be displaced by it.
A Ghana — and an Africa — where every child, regardless of geography or circumstance, commands the skills that matter. By 2055, artificial intelligence will have reshaped every industry; our students will not be its casualties. They will be its architects.
No child advances before they are ready. No concept is rushed. No learner is abandoned. We do not teach for examinations alone — we teach for life. This is not philanthropy. It is the only strategy that makes sense for a continent preparing its children for 2055.
Long before lockdowns made virtual learning fashionable, one researcher was already proving it could work — and work better than the classroom it sought to replace. The Omanye-Yehowada Models were not built for a pandemic. They were built for permanence.
While the world still commuted to classrooms, we were already testing whether a child in Tamale could learn as deeply as one in Tema. The answer was yes.
The Omanye-Yehowada Learning Models are documented across three formal whitepapers now under peer review. The methodology has been submitted for patent protection as a matter of record: when a student learns differently here, there is a specific, replicable reason why.
Peer-reviewed methodology, published findings, and an open invitation to scrutinise the science behind every lesson we teach.
IntelliLearn is more than a school — it's a movement. A commitment to raising the next generation of thinkers, builders, and problem-solvers who are ready to lead in the digital age.
It began with a refusal.
In the quiet, humming corridors of the digital world, where Nii Adotei Omanye-YehowaDa moved through the architecture of national excavator systems and insurance grids, a realization took root. He saw a world being built by machines, for machines, while the human element was being trained only to follow instructions. To the observer, the old system of education in Ghana was like an ancient clock — loud, heavy, and ticking toward a time that no longer existed.
Nii Adotei observed a curious phenomenon. Among his peers — men and women of immense brilliance — there existed a peculiar fear of numbers, a shuddering at the sight of complex equations. In simple conversations, he would explain the "impossible," and suddenly, the fear vanished. The problem was not the mind; it was the method. The understanding was missing.
He looked at an economy built on importation, a nation waiting for crates to arrive from across the sea, and he saw the danger. If Africa entered the age of automation without the talent to build its own machines, it would not be a participant in the future; it would be a spectator.
In 2019, Nii Adotei asked a question that bordered on heresy in the world of traditional schooling: What if we measured understanding instead of memory?
He began to craft the Omanye-Yehowada Learning Models. This was not a mere curriculum; it was a blueprint for cognitive liberation. While he consulted for giants like Infinidat and Lookout Security, and spent long nights in 2021 debugging and strengthening mobile operating systems, he was also debugging the human learning process. He was looking for the "bugs" in how children were taught to think.
But a revolution requires a vanguard. He reached out to the brilliant minds he had known through the long years of study and professional combat.
They came not for profit, but for the preservation of the future.
There was Kwame Oteng Appiah-Nti, the creator of the Webby PHP Framework. He didn't just want children to use the internet; he wanted them to own the code that powered it. He saw a world where African children were the architects, not just the tenants.
Elorm Attipoe Livingstone, a biochemical engineer, brought the cold, hard logic of the laboratory. He treated curriculum design like a chemical reaction — precise, repeatable, and potent.
Sally N.D Hayford, a master of Mathematics and Statistics, became the "Slayer of Shadows." To her, no child should ever fear a number. She turned the "complex" into the "obvious," stripping away the mystery that had kept generations from the beauty of logic.
Solomon Tetteh Sappor and Cobblah Gador Dagbedzi Hemade — a man who lived in the high altitudes of Data Analytics and Advanced Mathematics — completed the circle. They were a team of specialists who volunteered their genius to build a bridge across the digital divide.
Imagine a child standing before a massive, iron gate. In the old world, the child is given a key and told to memorize its shape. If they lose the key, they stay outside.
At IntelliLearn, the child is taught how to forge the key.
They built a virtual school where "Mastery" is the only passing grade. In the traditional classroom, a child who understands 60% of a lesson is allowed to move on, leaving a 40% hole in their foundation. Eventually, the house collapses. At IntelliLearn, the technology — a real-time assessment engine — catches the child the moment a concept blurs. They do not move forward until the foundation is solid as granite.
They teach the language of 2055: Artificial Intelligence, Robotics, and Data Science. They are preparing children for industries that do not yet exist, for problems that haven't been named, and for a world where the only "life-proof" skill is the ability to understand and create.
IntelliLearn stands today as Ghana's foremost virtual school. It is an EdTech fortress forged in research and powered by a singular, unwavering purpose: to ensure that the African child does not just survive the era of automation but masters it.
They have moved from the "importation of things" to the "exportation of thought." The revolution did not start with a bang; it started with a conversation, a refusal, and a group of friends who decided that the future was too important to be left to chance.
The machines are coming. And thanks to IntelliLearn, Ghana's children are the ones who will write their instructions.
Mastery Before
Progression
Learner Levels
Supported
Future-Focused
Subjects
Commute Required —
Learn From Home
Six individuals who looked at Ghana's education system and decided not to complain, but to build something better. Each brings a domain mastery no ordinary school could afford — and a shared conviction that every child deserves access to it.
Certified Oracle Database Administrator
With 9 years of experience as a Senior Database Administrator in Ghana's major financial institutions and Director of Mathematics, Sally brings a unique blend of technical expertise and educational passion to IntelliLearn.
Technology Strategist & Partnership Expert
Computer Networking Officer and alumnus of Accra Academy. His groundbreaking work includes building the National Excavator Management System and PruBot for Prudential Life Insurance.
MSc Biochemical Engineering, KNUST
Elorm brings a strong scientific background to IntelliLearn's curriculum development, particularly in Chemistry and Biological Sciences.
Creator & Founder of Webby PHP Framework
Visionary software architect and creator of the Webby PHP Development Framework. Students learn Webby PHP directly from its creator.
Lead Designer & Visual Strategist
With over 15 years of professional graphics design experience, Solomon has served as Lead Designer for Nalem Clothing, Zoobashop eCommerce, and Juxbuy. He now leads IntelliLearn's Graphics, Animation & Creatives department, training the next generation of visual storytellers.
Data Scientist & Mathematics Specialist
A data analytics and advanced mathematics expert, Cobblah brings rigorous statistical thinking and data-driven insights to IntelliLearn's curriculum and student assessment models. His expertise ensures every learner's progress is measured, understood, and optimized.
These are not subjects chosen for examination convenience. They are the competencies that will separate those who shape the future from those displaced by it.
The language of logic, the foundation of AI, and the discipline that separates thinkers from followers. We build mathematical intuition — not calculator dependency.
From molecular bonds to pharmaceutical synthesis — the science that powers medicine, materials, and modern industry. Taught by someone who has actually done it.
In a world where software eats everything, coding is no longer a specialisation — it is literacy. From Scratch to Python to building real applications with Webby PHP.
The machines are coming. Our students will be the ones building them. Circuit design, Arduino programming, and automation thinking from day one.
Forces, energy, electricity, and the laws that govern everything. Not memorised for an exam, but understood deeply enough to build upon.
In an attention economy, visual communication is power. Branding, composition, and the creative confidence to make ideas visible and compelling.
In an industry crowded with shortcuts, these are the lines we will not cross. They define who we are — and who we refuse to become.
No child advances on a foundation of sand. Understanding is the only acceptable outcome.
A postcode in Tamale is not a life sentence. Every child deserves the same quality of instruction.
We do not teach the way we were taught. We teach the way the future demands.
Parents are not customers. They are co-architects of their child's future.
A child's digital classroom must be as protected as their physical one. Non-negotiable.
We do not prepare children for the world that exists. We prepare them for the one that is coming.
Every day a child spends in a system that moves on without them is a day of potential lost forever. The school of 2055 is already here. The only question is whether your child is in it.