International Mother Language Day - Tuesday 21 Feb 2017
Academy Junior School will celebrate different mother languages of the school community through sharing songs and stories in Telugu, Hindi, Marathi Gujarati, Dari, German, and many more!
Grade 5 overnight stay – Friday 2 June
To celebrate their last day in the PYP and in acknowledgement of their stellar performance through the year, grade 5 students will sleep over at the Academy to enjoy games, swimming, movies and a lot more!
Happy Teachers Day! - Tuesday 5th September 2017
Academy Junior & Senior Schools are celebrating Teachers Day through special assemblies with skits, songs and dances showing appreciation for their teachers on this special occasion.
Saturday School - 9th September 2017
Junior School will be exploring the theme 'celebrating diversity and pluralism' through the lens of festivals, while Senior School hosts the biggest debate competition to date, 'VOX Academy'!
Africa and Beyond Student Conference
About our Student Conference 2025
The Aga Khan Academy Mombasa, in collaboration with the International Baccalaureate’s Festival of Hope, is thrilled to host its first-ever Africa and Beyond Student Conference 2025 from 23-25 April. This student-led conference will be centred around creative arts, culture and service, under the inspiring hashtag #HopeThenAct. This unique event will empower students to explore Africa’s vibrant heritage, creativity and commitment to service through “ubuntu", using these themes as lenses for social change. Designed by students, for students, the conference will provide a dynamic space to connect, learn and take actionable steps toward a hopeful and impactful future. Join us as we celebrate youth agency and Africa’s rich contributions to global culture and service!
What to expect:
Creative approaches: Discover innovative, hands-on methods in arts, culture and service that empower students to create change – starting with hope and moving towards action.
Empowering conversations: Connect with peers in dynamic discussions about how young leaders can use their passions to drive social impact in their communities.
Actionable takeaways: Walk away with practical strategies and insights to apply in your school or community, empowering you to turn your vision of hope into impactful change.
Workshop fees
- Early Bird: USD 100 (1 January-21 February)
- Regular: USD 150 (22 February-10 March)
- Accommodation: USD 40 per night
Accommodation for the Student Conference 2025 will be provided in our vibrant on-campus residences, which are homely and offer a unique and immersive boarding experience. Each spacious room, accommodating up to four students, is designed for comfort and productivity, featuring individual beds, personal work tables and shelves. With high ceilings and large windows, the rooms are bright and airy, creating a refreshing space for rest and reflection.
The residences include separate male and female blocks, ensuring a comfortable and secure boarding experience for all attendees. If you have more than four students of the same gender, please note that, if needed, you might be sharing rooms with peers from other schools across Africa, offering a wonderful opportunity for cultural exchange and networking.
Students will also have access to several amenities, including a comfortable student lounge with a large-screen television and a stunning sea view, as well as laundry facilities for convenience. In addition, our campus offers a variety of recreational spaces, such as a swimming pool, astroturf, main field and multi-purpose hall for socialising and unwinding after each day’s activities.
You can explore our facilities through the picture gallery here.
Participants are expected to arrive on 22 April and depart by the morning of 26 April. Arrivals or departures outside of these dates will require personal arrangements for both transport and accommodation.
Sessions
The conference’s sessions will be a dynamic, student-led experience designed by students for students. Over three inspiring days, student facilitators will guide participants through an engaging mix of workshops, insightful discussions, creative performances and interactive activities. The first two days will feature skill-building workshops, thought-provoking panel discussions and collaborative activities that delve into themes of service, creative arts and cultural expression.
On the final day, participants will take part in immersive hands-on experiences, including a dedicated service day, an art exploration day and cultural sessions led by on-ground experts. This unique opportunity will allow students to dive deeply into local culture, fostering connections through art, service and cultural exchange, and empowering them to apply the "Hope Then Act" mindset in meaningful ways.
We are looking for passionate students who are excited and willing to be part of the student team by hosting either a workshop, activity, etc. If you and your team are interested, kindly fill out the form below and get in touch with the student conference design team at servicelearning@agakhanacademies.org.
Registration form
To register, please click here.
Each school is allowed to register a maximum of eight students and two adult chaperones. If your school has more, kindly get in touch with us through the contact email below. While selecting students, please remember the dynamic of four students in a room in the residences.
An invoice will be sent to you once we receive the payment confirmation. The fees must be paid in full before the deadline and a receipt will be issued.
Queries
For any queries, please contact the organising team at servicelearning@agakhanacademies.org.
Joshua Ekirikubinza's Speech - AKA, Mombasa's Graduation, 2015
Teachers, I would like to begin with you. I am not going to thank you right now. However, I will start by saying sorry. For every time we ducked when we saw you coming down the hall, knowing we were not going to hand in that piece of homework. For every time we extended that deadline so far that it became inexistent. For every time we treated the piece of paper we are about to receive as your problem and not ours, and for every opportunity to thank you that we missed, thank you for being there from the beginning and here with us at the very end.
Parents, thank you. Those two words come nowhere near expressing the gratitude I know that every single student seated in front of you feels. Thank you for the support, whether financial or emotional. Do not worry; the product of your labor is awe-inspiring. In front of you sit the pioneers of the next generation, the heroes who will shape the world and leave a resplendent legacy for decades to come. DP2s, I just made a lot of promises to your parents, your job is to turn those incredibly romantic notions I sent flying their way into reality. And while it may seem like I just placed an immense task on your shoulders, I only ask of you what you are more than capable of.
In two years you have overcome every single obstacle that the IBO managed to throw at you, even though I know you imagined they sat in a boardroom discussing how to make your lives as difficult as possible. Now you are at your graduation and I know a lot of you are probably wondering what it was all for. I sincerely hope you do not expect me to give you that answer. In fact I hope you realize that no one in this room or outside it can give you that answer. As cliché as it is to say, the only person who can answer that question is you. Why did you decide to do a program renowned for its rigor? I hope it is because somewhere inside yourself you believed that you do have the ability to do anything you set your mind to; which would make everything I promised earlier a piece of cake.
So if I have not made myself clear yet, the world is yours. It is yours to shape and mould, yours to save and re-vitalize or yours to ignore and let crumble. If there is one thing you should know going forward it is that you no longer have the luxury to sit back and watch. You had about eighteen years of your life to do just that and I hope you enjoyed it. Soon the decisions about the world we live in will be left up to you. Make sure that when you are attending the next generation’s graduation the legacy you hand over is one that you are proud of.
The way to such a legacy is of course no walk in the park. There will be challenges, but the greatest one, I believe, is the day you question how special you really are. The day you stop believing you can impact the world around you is the day that ability is eternally lost you. Do not let the world tell you what you can and cannot do. Do not subscribe to the bigotry and intolerance that runs rampant throughout the world, you are far too intelligent for that. Do not gauge your abilities by comparing yourself to someone else. If you look to your left or right you will find a classmate and a team mate, not your competition. You do not benefit from being better than the person sitting next to you. I do not often quote people because I am ambitious in that I hope to create a few of my own one day, but Ernest Hemingway once said “There is nothing noble in being superior to your fellow man; true nobility lies in being superior to your former self.” Thus the key to your success does not lie in being better than everyone but, and the administration in no way coerced me to say this, in having a growth mindset. Please do not be that dentist who argues you are more important than the engineer.
Be accepting of the people around you. You cannot hope to change the world if you cannot even begin to accept the people within it. We are different. That is a reality you will have to accept. Also, please remember when you re-shape the world you affect everyone. Every culture, every race, every ethnicity and every religion. It is a complex puzzle, remember that. You can only solve it if you understand it.
Do not your let your education amount to just a piece of paper. As the incredible sagacious Albert Einstein said, “Education is what remains after one has forgotten what one has learned in school.” When you read that over 8,000 people died in an earthquake in Nepal earlier this month, do you simply let that statistic ring through one ear and out the other? Or do you let such facts inform your decisions about what you want to do to change the world? Do not think accumulating wealth is the way you change the world either. If you think I am being dishonest then how about you consider that there are over 5 million millionaires in the US alone. There is a treat in it if you can name more than 100 of them. I believe you know less than 100 names because they have not done enough to change the world. Martin Luther King Junior died without any financial assets at all or a will, almost 50 years later we still revere him. In the end you deserve to have your name written down in the annals of history, not a checkbook.
Finally remember as wonderful as you are, there is only one of you. You are one piece in a seven billion piece puzzle. Try and fit as snuggly as possible, keep your elbows, knees and feet in a position that does not bother anyone else.
So as I conclude this intentionally overly verbose speech, I leave you with a simple fact. Those are crazy enough to believe they can change the world, are often the ones who do. So here’s to the crazy ones - we can disagree with them, hate them, love them, quote them glorify or vilify them. About the only thing you cannot do is ignore them because they change things. They push the human race forward. I hope that you are all crazy enough to do it.