Cryptocurrency platform Bitget has entered a three-year collaboration with UNICEF Luxembourg to provide blockchain and digital skills training to 300,000 adolescent girls across eight developing nations. The initiative, announced this Wednesday, forms part of UNICEF's Game Changers Coalition targeting gender inequality in technology education.
The program will operate in Armenia, Brazil, Cambodia, India, Kazakhstan, Malaysia, Morocco and South Africa, combining online and in-person instruction. Participants will include not only students but also teachers, parents and community mentors — creating a multiplier effect for knowledge dissemination.
【Key Stat】Globally, adolescent girls in developing economies lose approximately $15 billion in annual economic opportunities due to digital skills gaps, according to UNICEF research.
Bitget Academy will develop interactive training modules using video game creation to teach blockchain fundamentals. "Gamification breaks down complex topics effectively," explained Bitget CEO Gracy Chen. "With 3.3 billion gamers worldwide, this approach leverages familiar environments for technical education."
The curriculum will integrate STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) competencies with blockchain literacy, addressing what Chen calls "the dual challenge of technical education and financial inclusion."
The initiative draws on Bitget's $10 million Blockchain4Her fund established earlier this year. Partners including the Micron Foundation and Women in Games will contribute technical expertise, with the coalition aiming to reach 1.1 million girls by 2027.
——"This isn't just about cryptocurrency," emphasized a UNICEF representative. "We're building foundational skills for the digital economy."——
The partnership comes as 90% of modern jobs require digital competencies, yet gender disparities persist in technology access. Bitget will connect UNICEF with leading Web3 developers to ensure curriculum relevance while maintaining accessibility for beginners.
Interestingly, the program will pilot AI-assisted learning tools, following similar experiments by former Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao's Giggle Academy project. This reflects growing recognition that emerging technologies can democratize specialized education.
Beyond immediate skills training, the partners aim to develop scalable models for integrating blockchain education into national school systems. "We're not just running workshops," Chen noted. "We're creating blueprints for systemic change in how technology education gets delivered."
The first cohort begins training this September, with progress metrics to be published quarterly. Success could prompt expansion to additional countries facing similar digital divides.