| Executive Summary PEA’s research and thought leadership function is designed to bridge evidence and action across Africa’s education and workforce systems. It generates, synthesises, and communicates knowledge on priority areas including equity, teacher quality, digital learning, skills development, institutional capacity, governance, financing, and the future of work. Through applied research, strategic insight products, policy dialogue, and collaborative learning platforms, PEA seeks to make knowledge more accessible, practical, and useful to decision-makers. This work is intentionally balanced: public knowledge products support transparency, learning, and sector-wide dialogue, while detailed methodologies, internal analytical tools, partner-specific findings, datasets, and programme design logic are protected through appropriate collaboration arrangements. This allows PEA to contribute meaningfully to Africa’s education knowledge ecosystem while preserving institutional intellectual property and partner confidence. |
Knowledge Philosophy and IP Stance
PEA’s knowledge work is rooted in African-led, purpose-driven research. We value evidence that addresses real questions facing learners, educators, institutions, policymakers, and development actors, and we channel this evidence into accessible formats that can inform decisions, strengthen dialogue, and support practical action.
At the same time, PEA safeguards the integrity of its intellectual capital. Public deliverables, such as policy briefs, insight notes, summaries, and thought leadership articles, are designed for broad dissemination. These outputs help build trust, contribute to public learning, and position PEA as a credible voice in Africa’s education and workforce transformation agenda.
More specialised assets, including detailed datasets, unpublished methodologies, analytical models, internal frameworks, implementation learning tools, and partner-specific findings, are reserved for appropriate collaboration channels. Where required, these may be shared only with consortium partners, co-funded projects, or formally engaged institutions under agreed confidentiality safeguards.
This dual approach enables PEA to participate in open knowledge exchange while protecting the specialised insights and institutional learning processes that give its work strategic value. In practice, PEA makes key findings and high-level recommendations public to support policy dialogue, while treating technical reports, raw evidence, pilot analysis, and internal design logic as partner-managed materials.
By preserving this balance, PEA advances an inclusive African knowledge base: sharing what fuels public debate and learning, while protecting the advanced research, tools, and frameworks developed through institutional and partner investment.
Priority Research Themes
PEA’s thought leadership focuses on areas where research can support practical transformation, strengthen decision-making, and create clearer pathways between policy, institutions, and implementation.
Education Equity and Inclusion
PEA explores barriers to access, quality, gender equity, disability inclusion, rural and urban disparities, and the needs of marginalised learners. The focus is on understanding how education systems can become more inclusive and how policy, financing, community engagement, and institutional practice can reduce exclusion.
Teacher Quality and Professional Development
Effective teaching remains central to learning outcomes. PEA’s research interests include teacher preparation, in-service development, pedagogical support, coaching, professional standards, and the role of digital tools in strengthening teacher capability. The emphasis is on approaches that are context-aware, sustainable, and responsive to classroom realities.
Digital Learning and AI in Education
Technology is reshaping how education is delivered, accessed, and experienced. PEA examines responsible digital learning, blended education, AI literacy, data ethics, inclusion, infrastructure constraints, and institutional readiness. The aim is to support innovation that strengthens learning without deepening exclusion or dependency.
Skills Development and Workforce Readiness
PEA focuses on the relationship between education, skills, employment, entrepreneurship, industry needs, and economic participation. This includes employability, technical and vocational relevance, transferable skills, career readiness, industry collaboration, and the broader transition from learning to opportunity.
Early Childhood and Foundational Learning
Strong education systems begin with foundational learning. PEA is interested in early childhood development, literacy, numeracy, learning recovery, school readiness, and the policy and financing conditions that support stronger foundations for lifelong learning.
Education Governance, Policy, and Financing
Systemic transformation requires coherent policy, capable institutions, accountable governance, and sustainable financing. PEA explores how education plans are designed, funded, implemented, monitored, and adapted, with attention to the conditions that enable effective delivery across diverse African contexts.
Institutional Capacity and Implementation Learning
Many promising education ideas struggle at the point of implementation. PEA’s research interests include institutional capacity, leadership, delivery systems, coordination, monitoring, adaptation, and sustainability. This theme helps connect big ideas to the practical realities that determine whether they work.
Future of Work and Continental Development
PEA examines how technological change, digital economies, climate transition, entrepreneurship, industrial transformation, and lifelong learning are reshaping Africa’s education and workforce needs. This theme supports forward-looking insight for governments, institutions, donors, and young people.
Knowledge Products and Audiences
PEA disseminates research and thought leadership through a range of products, each tailored to specific audiences and purposes. Public outputs are designed to invite engagement and inform debate, while deeper technical materials may be shared through partnership channels where appropriate.
| Product Type | Primary Audience / Purpose | Indicative Format |
| Applied Research Study | Policymakers, donors, academic partners, and education planners | Full report or technical paper |
| Discussion Paper | Researchers, think tanks, institutional leaders, and policy actors | Medium-length analytical paper |
| Policy Brief / Insight Note | Ministries, development partners, institutional leaders, and programme teams | Short, decision-oriented publication |
| Teacher Guide / Practical Toolkit | Educators, trainers, school leaders, and capacity-building partners | Practice-oriented guide |
| Voices and Case Reflections | Public audiences, practitioners, youth platforms, and partners | Article, interview, story, or multimedia feature |
| Annual / Flagship Report | Donors, policymakers, media, partners, and broad public audiences | Strategic report with visuals and synthesis |
| Conference Proceedings / Learning Report | Participants, policymakers, professional networks, and institutions | Event report, summary brief, or multimedia record |
Engagement Modalities With Partners
PEA works collaboratively with partners to co-create and apply knowledge. Engagement may take different forms depending on the nature of the partnership, the maturity of the question, and the intended use of the evidence.
- Joint Research Projects: Co-designed and co-funded studies with universities, think tanks, civil society organisations, governments, or development partners.
- Commissioned Analyses: Targeted studies, policy scans, evidence reviews, or evaluations conducted for partners under agreed terms.
- Policy Dialogues and Roundtables: Multi-stakeholder spaces where findings are shared, tested, and translated into practical policy or institutional conversation.
- Learning Labs and Pilot Engagements: Action-oriented spaces where ideas are explored, tested responsibly, and refined through structured learning.
- Closed Technical Briefings: Confidential sessions for partners requiring deeper analysis, sensitive findings, or strategic interpretation.
- Communities of Practice: Networks that support ongoing peer exchange, shared learning, and evidence-informed collaboration across institutions and countries.
Safeguards for Proprietary Methods
To protect intellectual property and sensitive partner content, PEA applies appropriate safeguards to its research and thought leadership work. These may include confidentiality provisions, data anonymisation, limited-access repositories, clear attribution protocols, and partner-specific publication arrangements.
Specialised tools, raw datasets, unpublished analysis, custom frameworks, and internal programme learning assets remain within the relevant project team or partnership structure. Public outputs use aggregated findings, strategic synthesis, and carefully framed recommendations to ensure that PEA contributes to sector learning without exposing its internal solution architecture.
Impact and Learning Indicators
PEA tracks the effectiveness of research and thought leadership through indicators that reflect reach, uptake, influence, and learning. The indicators below are illustrative and may be adapted depending on programme design, partner requirements, and the maturity of specific engagements.
| Indicator | Measurement Approach |
| Published Knowledge Products | Number and type of briefs, reports, studies, papers, and insight notes released. |
| Access and Engagement | Downloads, views, attendance at dialogues, webinar participation, and readership analytics. |
| Stakeholder Reach | Number and diversity of policymakers, donors, institutions, educators, and partners engaged. |
| Policy and Institutional Uptake | Evidence of research being referenced in decisions, plans, speeches, strategy documents, or institutional processes. |
| Partnership Initiatives Launched | New collaborations, studies, pilots, or programmes emerging from PEA-led knowledge work. |
| Implementation Learning | Documented evidence of adaptation, learning, or improvement arising from research-informed engagement. |
| Partner Feedback | Qualitative and survey-based feedback on usefulness, relevance, clarity, and applicability of PEA knowledge products. |
PEA Research-to-Practice Pathway
PEA’s research-to-practice pathway can be understood as a continuous cycle of evidence generation, synthesis, dialogue, decision support, implementation learning, and feedback.
- Research and data generation
- Knowledge synthesis and strategic reporting
- Policy dialogue and institutional engagement
- Decision support and programme reflection
- Practice and implementation learning
- Monitoring, feedback, and new research questions
Invitation to Partners
PEA invites donors, development partners, policymakers, universities, research institutions, private sector actors, and civil society organisations to engage with us in building an African-led knowledge ecosystem for education and workforce transformation.
We welcome collaboration on applied research, policy briefs, knowledge forums, learning reports, strategic commentary, institutional studies, and thematic dialogues. For development partners and donors, this is an opportunity to support knowledge that is not only produced, but used: knowledge that informs dialogue, strengthens institutions, guides investment, and contributes to long-term transformation.
“PEA’s research and thought leadership agenda is rooted in a simple belief: Africa’s education future must be shaped by knowledge that is credible, practical, and connected to the realities of the continent.”