With the purpose of centralizing our learning process we want to focus our work on four important aspects of the intercultural education system based in the department of Chocó. El Chocó, a territory of water and forests; of catch bread and fish crops, as well as a variety of minerals, plants and animals. El Atrato, San Juan and El Baudó are part of the amalgam of rivers that run through a region that shares the flavor of the Pacific. It is a unique department for several reasons, because no other has a border with Panama, nor has so much African heritage, nor is it bathed by two oceans, the Pacific and the Caribbean, this makes Chocó a place that mixes abundant forests, beautiful rivers and magnificent beaches. Another characteristic that stands out in Chocó is its musical folklore, which has an African origin and that uses drums to create frenetic rhythms, which, even today, are heard and danced in the area. Chocó has been listed as one of the places with the greatest biological diversity on the planet, according to the multidimensional poverty report by departments carried out by DANE in 2018, Chocó ranks fifth in the poorest departments in the country with a figure of 45.1% Its population is made up of 73.77% Negro, Mulato, Afro-descendant, Afro-Colombian - 14.96% indigenous - 6.51% mestizo - 0.03% root - 0.03% longliner - 0.01 % gypsy. Only in a factor conducive to development and this is education, Chocó stands up strongly. Optimism about the value of education has spread widely, even among the poorest elements of the population and is symbolized by a motto in a school building outside of Quibdó: "Studying more, we will transform Colombia."