Dary STEM · Built for Africa

Africa's mind for the world's STEM.

Learn maths, science, computing, and engineering — from primary school to university. Built in Ghana. Free for students. Always.

3
Classrooms
372
Students
11
Courses

What we believe

01

Curiosity is infrastructure.

A child who can ask why a circuit lights up — and trace the answer — is a child who can build the next generation of African industry. We treat that curiosity as foundational, not optional.

02

Theory dies in the chalk.

Every concept on Dary STEM is hands-on by default. Drag the resistor. Wire the LED. Watch current flow. Run the code on a virtual board. The lesson is the doing.

03

Mastery is visible.

Streaks, momentum rings, badges, mastery scores — every signal we surface answers one question for the student: am I getting closer to something real? The answer is always yes, and always shown.

Built for the whole classroom

One platform. Three audiences.

For students

Learn at your own pace through hands-on courses. Build a portfolio of real projects. Earn badges and climb the leaderboard. Free, always.

Start learning

For teachers

Author courses, manage classrooms, track mastery, grade portfolios, send messages. Standards-aligned rubrics. Free LMS that doesn't fight you.

Open the LMS

For parents

See what your child is learning. Get weekly progress reports. Set healthy usage caps. Receive triage signals when something needs attention.

See the family view

Dary STEM is the first platform my students ask to use after class. The simulator turned a chalkboard concept into something they can actually feel.

Portrait of Mrs. Adwoa Asante, Ghanaian physics teacher, in a tailored blouse with a subtle Ankara-print scarf, calm warm expression.Mrs. Adwoa AsantePhysics teacher · Accra Academy

What you can learn

Live now in electronics, robotics, and computing. The rest of the STEM catalogue is on the way.

  • Engineering
  • Computing
  • MathematicsSoon
  • PhysicsSoon
  • ChemistrySoon
  • BiologySoon

Open Dary STEM.

Free for students. Always.

Dary STEM