

EduFocal Group | #1 EdTech Comp In The Caribbean
4.3K posts

@EduFocal
#1 PEP Exam Platform In Jamaica. Building and scaling AI-powered software for governments, businesses, and individuals. Tech-first. Impact-focused. 🇯🇲




@Gordonswaby @5Solae Congratulations Gordon🙏🏽🙏🏽

There are over 1,000 schools in Jamaica and less than 5% of them have websites. As in, they have zero presence online. That’s really unacceptable in 2026. We want to fix that; for free. Tell school leadership to apply to EduFocal100.com. We’ll give them a website for FREE




We have some exciting news. We are launching our Referral & Content Creator Programme 🎉. You can now earn cash monthly by referring someone to EduFocal Academy. Check it out at edufocalacademy.com/ref/signup 🧵A thread.

Referral partners will earn $300 JMD monthly for each active referral. Yes, monthly. Once the person stays subscribed you earn. e.g. 8 active referrals = $2.4k JMD monthly. 8 active referrals monthly for 3 months = $7.2k JMD



Traditional report cards tell you a grade. The EduFocal Progress Report tells you what to do next.



Sweden is committing more than €100 million to a sweeping classroom overhaul: replacing tablets and screens with traditional printed textbooks to help reverse falling student performance and sharpen focus. After more than a decade of embracing digital-first education, Swedish authorities are now pivoting back to paper-based learning. Official data and recent studies cited by the Ministry of Education show that prolonged screen use in class has been linked to shorter attention spans, weaker reading comprehension, and reduced critical-thinking abilities. Research consistently finds that reading on illuminated screens requires greater mental effort and invites more distractions compared to the calm, linear experience of physical books—factors believed to have contributed to declining academic outcomes in recent years. Under the new plan, every student will receive printed textbooks for all core subjects, restoring books as the central learning tool. Digital devices and online resources will remain available as supportive tools, but they will no longer dominate daily instruction. This bold €100+ million investment signals Sweden’s leadership in rethinking the role of technology in education. It underscores a broader, growing recognition worldwide: while screens provide speed and access, the hands-on, distraction-free engagement of physical books supports deeper concentration, stronger memory retention, and more effective long-term learning. By choosing paper over pixels, Sweden is charting a path toward a more balanced, evidence-informed classroom future—one that puts proven pedagogical principles ahead of unchecked digital trends.









