Teach Middle East Magazine Jan-Feb 2019 Issue 3 Volume 6 | Page 46

A Moment with A MOMENT WITH SHADY ELKASSAS A MOMENT WITH PRIYA LAKHANI O.B.E BY LEISA GRACE WILSON H ave you ever had a meeting with someone which was supposed to last for only 15 minutes but an hour or more later you wonder where the time had gone because the discussion and the learning were so engaging. This was how my chance meeting went with Priya Lakhani O.B.E during the JESS Innovation Summit in Dubai late last year. Priya is the CEO of CENTURY, a platform that uses artificial intelligence to learn how every brain learns. In this feature we get to learn a little more about Priya and the work that CENTURY is doing in schools. Priya was brought up in Cheshire, near Manchester, where she went to an independent school and later a grammar school. She comes from an East African Indian family whose entire purpose throughout her childhood was formal education. The underpinning of that was to give her opportunity and choice later in life. She was always really entrepreneurial. She and her elder brother would buy and sell things for profit; anything from chocolate bars to auction stock. Priya decided at a very young age that she wanted to be a barrister. Her dad would encourage her to go into courtrooms and watch the proceedings. It was intense, but exciting, and she liked the idea of advocacy. Spending time in East Africa as a child, Priya was struck by all the poverty, and decided that it was her job to change the world for the better. As much as she loved her career in law, Priya found that she wasn’t changing the world in the way she had hoped. Her entrepreneurial spirit was strong and working late nights, she saw a need for something healthy and quick to cook. Priya swapped her three- piece suit for a tracksuit and created her first company Masala Masala. It was a social enterprise: for every pot of sauce sold Priya fed a homeless person a hot meal, helped to build schools, and funded vaccines in Africa. Its success led Priya to join Vince Cable’s advisory board when he was Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills. This was where she learned about the problems in education and wanted to help. The one-size-fits-all delivery of education was inadequate and teachers weren’t spending enough time doing what they had signed up to do: teaching. We’d gone from blackboard to whiteboard but that was it in terms of technology which can help teachers and learners. Priya thought surely there should be a more advanced technology. So she launched what is now CENTURY. Like Masala Masala, it’s a social enterprise.