IN THIS LESSON, YOU WILL:
β Understand different types of problems
β Learn about the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
β Identify the communities you belong to
β Observe and document community needs
β Brainstorm problems worth solving
STEP 1: START WITH THE COMMUNITY
Innovation begins with people.
A community is a group of people who share something in common.
Communities can be based on:
-
Location
-
Interest
-
Identity
-
Religion
-
Occupation
-
Age group
-
School
You may belong to more communities than you think.
Examples of Communities in Uganda
1οΈβ£ School Community
Example: Students at a secondary school in Jinja.
Possible Problems:
-
Poor internet access
-
Bullying
-
Limited access to career guidance
-
Poor exam revision systems
2οΈβ£ Local Village Community
Example: A rural village in Kamuli or Bududa.
Possible Problems:
-
Limited clean water
-
Poor waste management
-
Farmers lacking market price information
-
Flood warnings not reaching residents
3οΈβ£ Youth Sports Community
Example: A football team in Mbale.
Possible Problems:
-
Poor tracking of player performance
-
Lack of injury monitoring
-
No centralized communication system
4οΈβ£ Religious Community
Example: Youth fellowship groups.
Possible Problems:
-
Difficulty sharing event updates
-
Lack of mentorship resources
-
Poor attendance tracking
ACTIVITY 1: Understanding Your Communities
(15 Minutes)
Write down at least 4 communities you belong to.
Choose 2 and list:
-
Age group
-
Location
-
Activities
-
Common challenges
Then select 1 community to focus on for your project.
STEP 2: OBSERVE BEFORE YOU SOLVE
Do not assume.
Observe.
Many students jump straight to solutions like:
βLetβs build a mental health app.β
βLetβs build a climate app.β
But the real question is:
What is the exact problem?
Example:
β Vague: Students are stressed.
β
Specific: Senior 4 students struggle to organize revision notes and track exam topics.
Specific problems create strong solutions.
Field Observation Example (Uganda Scenario)
Imagine your team visits:
Scenario 1: A Rural Market
Observation:
-
Vendors do not know current district market prices.
-
Farmers accept low prices due to lack of information.
Problem Identified:
Small-scale farmers lack access to updated produce prices.
Possible SDG: SDG 8 (Decent Work & Economic Growth)
Scenario 2: Water Collection Point
Observation:
-
Long queues at boreholes.
-
Broken pump not reported quickly.
Problem Identified:
No system to report broken community water sources.
Possible SDG: SDG 6 (Clean Water & Sanitation)
Scenario 3: School Computer Lab
Observation:
-
Only 10 computers for 60 students.
-
Students cannot practice enough coding.
Problem Identified:
Limited digital practice time for learners.
Possible SDG: SDG 4 (Quality Education)
STEP 3: PARTNER WITH LOCAL ORGANIZATIONS
Another powerful strategy is partnering with organizations already helping the community.
Possible Partners:
-
Health Centres
-
Agricultural Extension Officers
-
NGOs
-
SACCO groups
-
Youth groups
-
Local councils
Ask them:
-
What challenges do you face daily?
-
What tasks take too long?
-
Where do you struggle with coordination?
You are not replacing them.
You are supporting them with technology.
STEP 4: USING THE UN SDGs
The United Nations created 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to address global challenges.
These help you categorize problems.
Main Areas:
1οΈβ£ Basic Needs (Water, Food, Education)
2οΈβ£ Environment (Climate, Energy, Sustainability)
3οΈβ£ Safety & Health
4οΈβ£ Social Needs
5οΈβ£ Equality & Justice
Example:
If students lack career guidance β SDG 4 (Quality Education)
If waste is unmanaged in town β SDG 11 (Sustainable Cities)
If farmers lose crops to climate β SDG 13 (Climate Action)
Categorizing helps you:
-
Research better
-
Align with global goals
-
Strengthen your pitch
STEP 5: BRAINSTORMING PROBLEMS
Brainstorming means generating many ideas without judging them immediately.
Rules:
β No criticizing
β Build on others’ ideas
β Capture all ideas
β One person speaks at a time
β Aim for quantity first
Example Brainstorm Session (Uganda Team)
Community: Secondary School
Ideas:
-
App for tracking homework
-
Anonymous bullying reporting tool
-
School event notification system
-
Mental health chatbot
-
Library book tracking system
After brainstorming, narrow down to the strongest, research-backed problem.
ACTIVITY 4: Brainstorm Problems
(20 Minutes)
Based on:
-
Your field observation
-
SDG categories
-
Community discussions
Generate at least 15 possible problem ideas.
Then:
-
Categorize them
-
Eliminate weak ideas
-
Highlight 3 strong candidates
REFLECTION
Ask yourselves:
-
Did we truly understand our community?
-
Did we observe or assume?
-
Is this problem real and validated?
-
Do people care about this problem?
-
Can technology realistically help?
KEY TERMS
Ideation β Generating ideas
Community β A group sharing something in common
Brainstorming β Rapid idea generation
SDGs β Global goals to solve world challenges
IMPORTANT MESSAGE
Do not rush this stage.
The quality of your problem determines the quality of your solution.
Strong Problem β Strong Research β Strong Prototype β Strong Pitch β Strong Competition Performance
Β