Project-Based Learning at Koa Academy

A More Impactful Way to Learn

For many parents, one of the biggest frustrations with traditional schooling is that learning can sometimes feel disconnected. A child might learn a specific concept or skill in Mathematics, only to encounter it again in Science, History, or English – yet they rarely get the opportunity to bridge those ideas across their subjects or link them to real-world skills.

At Koa Academy, we believe that meaningful learning should go beyond memorising content for a test. Students need to understand what they are learning, why it matters, and how to apply it in different contexts. This is where project-based learning plays such an important role.

Project-based learning, often referred to as PBL, is an approach that allows students to engage with curriculum content through meaningful, practical and often cross-curricular projects. Instead of learning every subject in isolation, students are given opportunities to work with ideas, skills and concepts in a more connected way.

As Janeen, Koa’s Intersen Academic Head, explains, project-based learning isn’t about memorising isolated subjects; it’s about diving deep into the curriculum to see how different fields of study naturally overlap. “The real value,” she says, “comes when students begin to connect these threads to solve real-world problems.”

How Project-Based Learning Comes to Life at Koa

In the Intersen phase, Koa’s commitment to project-based learning comes to life through our integrated term projects, known as Expos. As Janeen explains, these major projects are intentionally designed to mirror real-world professional work by breaking down the walls between subjects. Instead of studying facts in isolation, students tackle a central theme through multiple academic lenses, building robust research and critical thinking skills along the way. Learning how to apply this knowledge prepares them for the ultimate test: Demo Day. At this end-of-term event, students step into the spotlight to present their work to external guest judges, mastering the vital skills of public speaking, confidence, and responding to authentic feedback.

Beyond Expos, this same project-based approach also shows up in smaller cross-curricular tasks within students’ Engage subjects. These moments may be smaller in scale, but they still help students connect knowledge and skills across different learning areas.

For example, a student might learn about the human body and digestion in Science, create a poster to show their understanding, and then present their findings to their Pod Teacher. While the content is Science-based, the presentation component can also contribute to English, because the student is developing oral communication, structure, clarity and confidence.

This matters because it helps students experience learning as something connected and useful. They are not simply completing a worksheet for one subject and then moving on to the next. Instead, they begin to see how knowledge and skills can work together across different contexts.

Janeen describes this as a kind of “cross-pollination” of the curriculum. At Koa, this means that courses are designed with intentional links between subjects, helping students understand that learning is not just a set of separate facts to remember, but a set of connected skills they can use. They may not always see every curriculum box being ticked in the background, but they are engaging with the content in a deeper and more meaningful way.

The Curriculum Still Matters

One important misconception about project-based learning is that it replaces the curriculum or makes learning less rigorous. At Koa, the opposite is true.

The curriculum remains the foundation. The difference is in how that curriculum is approached. Students still need to cover the required concepts, skills and content, but they are often given more meaningful ways to engage with them.

This is supported by Koa’s Subject Specialist team, which works together to ensure that content across subjects is accurate, relevant and well-designed. The team includes teachers who specialise in their subject areas, which means that cross-curricular work is not simply a loose idea or a creative add-on. It is carefully built and checked by people who understand the curriculum deeply.

In many ways, this kind of collaboration is more attainable in a purpose-built online school like Koa. Because our teachers are not limited by the same physical timetable and classroom constraints as a traditional school, subject specialists can come together more easily to collaborate on courses, align content, check accuracy and design learning experiences that make sense across subjects.

This means that project-based learning at Koa is not about doing “fun projects” at the expense of academics. It is about designing learning in a way that is engaging, structured and academically sound.

Less Assessment Pressure, More Meaningful Learning

Another important benefit of project-based learning is that it can help lighten the assessment load for students.

In a traditional setting, a child might have one project for English, another for History, another for Maths and another for Science, all due around the same time. At Koa, a well-designed project can sometimes allow one piece of work to assess skills across more than one subject area.

Janeen explains that one well-designed project can assess learning across several subjects. A single task might allow students to demonstrate understanding in History, apply Maths skills, and develop English communication skills, without needing three separate assessments. The result is not less learning, but less duplication. Students are not overloaded with separate tasks that assess overlapping skills. Instead, they can spend more time engaging properly with the content and producing work that reflects their understanding.

For many families, this is significant. Children often carry a heavy academic load, and school can begin to feel like a constant cycle of tests, tasks and deadlines. Project-based learning helps create space for deeper engagement, while still ensuring that learning is tracked and assessed.

Building Skills That Last Beyond School

One of the biggest strengths of project-based learning is that it develops skills students will use long after a particular topic is finished.

Students learn how to investigate, organise information, communicate clearly, think critically, solve problems, create visual representations, manage time and present their ideas. These are not skills that belong to one subject only. They are life skills, academic skills and future-ready skills.

For Janeen, one of the biggest strengths of project-based learning is that it helps students move beyond simply completing curriculum requirements. It gives them the opportunity to engage with ideas more deeply, make meaningful connections, and develop a more positive relationship with learning. When students understand why something matters, and when they are given the opportunity to work with ideas in a practical way, learning becomes more meaningful.

This is something Koa families are noticing, too.

As Togolani, a Grade 9 student at Koa, shares: “One thing I enjoy about the courses is that it’s not just a bunch of information handed to you and you’re expected to remember this, remember that. It’s structured in a way where retaining the information does not feel like a chore.” He adds, “The curriculum is much more interesting and enjoyable than a traditional school setting, so it’s not as tedious.”

For parents, this shift is powerful. Mutheu Mecha, a Koa Academy parent, explains: “They are not just absorbing information, but they are actually getting skills that enable them to be lifelong learners.”

That is the heart of project-based learning. It is not only about what students know today, but about how they learn, how they think, and how they approach new challenges.

Learning at the Right Pace

Project-based learning at Koa also works alongside another important part of our model: structured flexibility.

Students are guided by their Pod Teachers, supported through coursework, and given clear expectations around time, deadlines and outcomes. When a course or project is launched, students are usually given a sense of how long the work should take and what is expected of them. This helps them plan, manage their time and understand the scope of the task.

At the same time, there is room for students to move through content in a way that suits their learning. A student who loves a subject may move through a section more quickly, while a student who needs more time can slow down and engage with the content at a steadier pace.

As Mecha Simba, a Koa Academy parent, shares, “We have seen our son grow and enjoy learning, and he is able to do this at his own pace, so he does not feel the pressure of having to keep up.”

This does not mean students are left on their own. Their progress is supported, tracked and guided. At Koa, our Dashboards help students, teachers and parents keep sight of tasks, due dates and progress. This gives students ownership, while still keeping structure firmly in place.

Preparing Students for the Next Stage

One of the strengths of project-based learning is that it helps students practise the kinds of skills they will need as they move into the FET phase (Grade 10-12): applying knowledge, thinking critically, communicating their ideas, managing tasks and working with information in different contexts.

This is especially important in Grade 7, where students are preparing for the transition into high school. At Koa, some of our Grade 7 students take part in the IEB’s MATCH assessment, which stands for Measuring Abilities and Thinking Competencies for High School. MATCH is designed to benchmark preparedness for this transition, looking at academic proficiency as well as the skills base needed for continued success, including problem-solving, communication and critical thinking.

This aligns closely with the kind of education Koa values: learning that is rigorous, applied and connected to the skills students need for the future.

Why This Kind of Learning Matters

Project-based learning helps students see that school is not just about getting through content. It is about making sense of the world, asking better questions, building confidence and learning how to use knowledge in meaningful ways.

At Koa, project-based learning is not a once-off activity or an extra project added at the end of a unit. It is part of a broader approach to learning that is structured, intentional and designed around the student. 

It helps reduce unnecessary assessment pressure. It strengthens cross-curricular thinking. It gives students opportunities to communicate, create, investigate and apply. And perhaps most importantly, it helps students experience learning as something engaging, connected and worthwhile.

Because when students are not just memorising information, but actively working with it, they become thinkers, problem-solvers, communicators and lifelong learners.

And that is exactly the kind of learning we believe children need.

About Faure

Faure is the Head of Merchandising, Promotions, & Catalogue at Takealot. He is responsible for onsite marketing, product merchandising, and promotional campaigns, ensuring customers have a seamless and engaging shopping experience. He has been at Takealot for over six years, helping bring e-commerce to millions of South Africans.

Before that, he worked at a tech start-up developing proof-of-concept grocery shopping and payment apps and began his career as an investment analyst, gaining a strong foundation in business understanding and financial modelling.

About Sandras

Sandras is the founder and CEO of Pranary. With his expertise in entrepreneurship, innovation, and tech education, he helps business leaders unlock new potential with AI. He is building a pan-African institute for practical tech and business education.

With global experience across 50+ countries, he has worked with entrepreneurs, led gender-lens investing initiatives, and lectured at top universities. Sandras has also shared stages with tech leaders, including Facebook and Asana co-founder Dustin Moskovitz and YouTube co-founder Steve Chen.

About Sasha

Sasha Knott, an EY winning woman, is the Global CEO of Crystal AI and the CEO of Job Crystal. A visionary in the recruitment space, she is revolutionising hiring by integrating AI and technology to make recruitment faster, smarter and more effective. She co-founded Job Crystal to help businesses find top talent efficiently and led the development of Crystal AI, an AI-driven recruiter transforming the hiring landscape.

About Majozi

Majozi, Koa’s Head of Arts and Culture, is an award-winning South African musician. He rose to prominence in 2013 when he released his first EP, ‘Marvelous Light’. The track went to number 9 on the South African iTunes chart and resulted in him being signed with Universal Music South Africa. He has worked with internationally acclaimed artists such as The Lumineers and Mango Groove.