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Exemplary Ugandan school named in Top 10 shortlists for World’s Best School Prizes 2026
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Exemplary Ugandan school named in Top 10 shortlists for World’s Best School Prizes 2026

Watchdog Uganda about 3 hours 5 mins read

An exemplary Ugandan school has today been named in the Top 10 shortlists for the World’s Best School Prizes 2026. The five World’s Best School Prizes, founded by T4 Education in the wake of COVID in 2022 to share the best practices of schools that are changing lives in their classrooms and far beyond their walls, have been described as the ‘World Cup for Schools’. They are the world’s most prestigious education prizes.

St Kizito High School – an independent secondary school in Namugongo, Uganda, which is equipping students with the skills to turn waste into income-generating opportunities through a hands-on, sustainability-led learning model – has been named in the Top 10 shortlist for the World’s Best School Prize for Overcoming Adversity.  

The winners of the five World’s Best School Prizes – for Community Collaboration, Environmental Action, Innovation, Overcoming Adversity, and Supporting Healthy Lives – will be chosen by an expert Judging Academy based on rigorous criteria. The Top 3 finalists and winners will be announced in November. In addition, all 50 shortlisted schools across the five Prizes will also take part in a Public Vote, which opened today, to determine the winner of the Community Choice Award. 

The winners and shortlisted schools will then be invited to the World Schools Summit in London, UK, on January 16-17, 2027, where they will share their best practices and unique expertise and experience with policymakers and leading figures in global education. 

Vikas Pota, Founder of T4 Education and the World’s Best School Prizes, said:

“Congratulations to St Kizito High School on being shortlisted for the fifth annual World’s Best School Prizes. It has shown that Uganda’s schools truly stand among the best in the world.

“Each one of these exemplary schools shortlisted for this global schools prize has, in its own unique way, helped prepare young people for a world that has never seemed so uncertain. It is more important than ever that our schools grow the leaders we’ll need to face massive challenges from rising conflict and inequality to populism and climate breakdown. 

“In their classrooms, every day, these institutions show what works. And governments and schools across the world should learn from their shining examples.”

About the school:

St Kizito High School, an independent secondary school in Namugongo, Uganda, is equipping students with the skills to turn waste into income-generating opportunities through a hands-on, sustainability-led learning model. Located in a major religious pilgrimage area with thousands of visitors passing through, the community has faced a longstanding problem with waste that creates environmental and health risks for the local population. Instead of treating waste as something to be collected and disposed of, the school used it as an opportunity to equip students with practical skills grounded in real-world application.

Supported by teachers and shaped by the needs of the community, the school introduced student-led green circular projects, in which learners work in clubs to run initiatives that convert waste into usable products. Taking place four days a week under teacher supervision, the clubs encourage learners to actively engage in hands-on projects where they can apply what they’ve been taught.

Built on an experiential and project-based learning model, a flipped-classroom approach sees students visiting markets, forests, and slums before returning to class to brainstorm and investigate, design, and implement practical solutions centred on skills development. Learning is reinforced through competitions, peer-led initiatives, and creative formats that encourage behaviour change, while teachers play an active role in supervising and assessing project work as part of overall academic performance.

Through this model, students gain hands-on experience, including producing carbonised briquettes from bio-waste, creating livestock feed from food waste, composting for bio-fertilisers, and running hydroponic farming systems. Another key aspect is helping students build entrepreneurial skills, and many have gone on to produce and sell goods, creating a circular economy that holds true sustainability impact.

Families and the community have also felt the impact as students apply what they learn at home. Knowledge is passed to family members and peers, giving learners a sense of leadership and accountability in building stronger environmental responsibility.

Student-led projects have reduced fuel costs by 25%, lowered the need for firewood, saving between 12 and 70 tonnes of trees, and reduced respiratory complications among the school’s kitchen staff. The production of livestock feeds has reduced farming costs up to 80%, while hydroponic and urban farming initiatives now supply the majority of the school’s vegetables . More than 50 learners support their tuition through the green skills they have learned, and more than 100 have started their own small-scale green businesses at home, proving that the impact extends beyond school walls.

The school has won multiple awards, including the National Environment Management Authority Environmental Award and recognition as a finalist in the Zayed Sustainability Prize. It has influenced national education policy with schools across Uganda now adopting a competence-based curriculum and has become a recognised benchmark for skills-based environmental learning, with more than 30 schools adopting similar approaches and others visiting to learn from its model. In terms of teacher recruitment and retention, it has the lowest staff turnover and the highest number of applicants in the district. Teachers have also learned new skills alongside the students, empowering them to build practical projects they can practice outside of school as additional streams of income.

By transforming a community challenge into a collective opportunity, St Kizito High School is upskilling students to become accomplished multipliers of environmental action and responsible community role models.

 

The post Exemplary Ugandan school named in Top 10 shortlists for World’s Best School Prizes 2026 appeared first on Watchdog Uganda.

This article was sourced from an external publication.

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