Kadoma Student Innovations Highlight Gaps in Youth Support Systems

 

In Kadoma, several secondary-school learners participating in recent provincial STEM activities (8–20 November) showcased low-cost environmental tools assembled from recycled electronics and basic sensors. Among the demonstrations were hand-held devices capable of providing basic soil pH and moisture readings — prototypes similar to those promoted under national climate-smart agriculture awareness. Local horticulture farmers in Mashonaland West have been openly encouraging such innovations, with Agritex’s current advisory encouraging farmers to use affordable diagnostic tools to reduce input costs. However, most student innovators remain outside formal pathways for product testing, intellectual-property registration, or incubation. The displays underscore Zimbabwe's strong grassroots technical creativity but also the structural gaps preventing school-level innovations from scaling into commercially viable solutions — a challenge repeatedly highlighted in youth industrialization policy reviews.

Related Stories

Leave Comments

Top