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Jan./Feb.
2003
COVER
PAGE Methods of Document Recognition and Authentication REGIONAL
NEWS FEATURE
Masthead: Learn more about WENR and its editorial staff. Workshops: See a listing of upcoming workshops sponsored by WES. Browse the WENR Archives: View back issues of this newsletter or search for specific words or terms.
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Regional
News
ANGOLAConstruction Begins on University Expansion
The first stage will see the construction of four departments: chemistry, physics, mathematics and information technology. Construction of a central library will also be included in this first stage. Construction of the first stage is expected to be completed by the end of 2004. The new campus will increase the state-run university's student body from 8,000 to 17,000. The whole project should be finished in five years and will ultimately include nine new departments, the construction of a 350-bed hospital, a secondary school, a geology museum and accommodation for up to 5,100 students.
Angola
Press Agency (Luanda)
GHANAKofi Annan University to be Established
The university will follow Annan's example by training students in conflict resolution and peace-keeping operations, among other programs.
Ghanaian
Chronicle KENYANew President Pledges Free Primary Education for All
The National Union of Teachers, Kenya's largest teacher's union, offered to support and assist the government's policy of free education on the understanding that Kibaki remains true to his campaign promises, elects a new and competent national staff and implements a promised 1997 pay increase that the previous administration had stalled for years. The union secretary-general, Francis Nganga, stressed that "political sycophants should no longer be made to head such a crucial ministry." George Saitoti has been appointed the new minister of education. He said recently that parents would have to pay for school uniforms, but the government would handle other expenses, including textbooks. He warned that school officials would face unspecified sanctions should any students be turned away. The start of the new academic term Jan. 7 saw the fulfillment of Kibaki's promise as students returning from vacation to the country's 17,000 primary schools found that fees had indeed been abolished. But students also found overflowing classrooms in some parts of the country as many parents who could previously not afford school tuition took advantage of the new laws. Enrollment at public schools in the last year of Moi's rule was 85 percent, down from 95 percent in 1990; levies had excluded an estimated 3 million children from school. Conservative estimates put the cost of implementing free primary school education at Sh5 billion (US$65 million). Kibaki's government is confident it will be able to meet the costs, saying the previous government was so corrupt and inefficient that by simply running Kenya honestly, sufficient funds would be available. The government has already released Sh519 million to be shared among primary schools nationwide. Furthermore, UNICEF has pledged US$2.5 million to programs promoting female child education and rehabilitation of street children. The United Nations and the Kenyan government have also signed an agreement under the U.N. Development Assistance Framework to enhance collaboration and cooperation of various funds, to be implemented from 2004-2008.
East
Africa Standard NIGERIAApplications Flood Open University for First Term
The university is a federal government program aimed at providing equal and adequate educational opportunities for all Nigerians. According to President Olusegun Obasanjo, the institution will only offer courses deemed most relevant to national development. The university
plans to use the Virtual Library Project, established in February 2002
by several of the country's universities, to combat the problem of limited
and outdated books. Courses will
be offered in information technology and computer science, agricultural
science, business administration and management studies, engineering and
building studies, education, science and technology, health sciences and
legal studies, as well as vocational and continuing education studies.
Business
Day 1,000 Students Accused of Degree Forgery
The fake certificates mostly West African School Certificates and General Certificates of Education were uncovered after the council made available the master list of exam results from the 1997-98 academic year.
Newswatch Pankshin College of Education Re-Opens
This
Day (Lagos) Unions
Bring Universities to Standstill
The country’s tertiary institutions received another blow at the end of January, when the Senior Staff Association of Nigerian Universities, a union representing nonacademic staff, joined the strike, which it described as “total and indefinite” until all outstanding entitlements are paid. Despite government attempts to force university employees back to work, no progress has been made. The academic calendar will likely be pushed even further back, and students longing for a return to the classroom will have to wait until the unions and the government can come to an agreement. Currently, there seems to be no guarantee that this will happen soon.
Newswatch Private
University Welcomes First Intake of Students
The three colleges that make up the university – College of Business and Social Sciences, College of Human Development and College of Science and Technology – are offering 20 programs in six departments.
Daily
Trust SOUTH AFRICAMandela's Alma Mater Gets New Lease of Life
In 2000, the South African government responded to falling enrollments by threatening the disappearance of Fort Hare as an independent institution. But a working party committee recommended a merger with Rhodes University, a former liberal white university. Now, in a remarkable change of fortunes, Fort Hare is moving from remote Alice in one of South Africa's poorest provinces to East London, where it will take over the Rhodes East London campus. It is hoped the university will help regenerate East London, a major seaport and industrial city. Concentrating mainly on the arts, with some science and in particular, agriculture, Fort Hare, like many formerly black universities, suffered a decline in student enrollment, to just 2,500. That number has risen dramatically to 7,200. The institution's urban-centric programs, much better suited to a big-city setting, such as its MBA and other commercial programs will be moving from Alice to East London.
The
Times Higher Education Supplement Medical Training to be Restructured
The current curriculum provides six years of academic training and a one-year internship. The rationale behind the curriculum change is that the current system is too theoretical and interns do not gain all exit competencies for service delivery.
BuaNews Merger Creates Durban Institute of Technology
For a complete listing of proposed institutional mergers and closures, as laid out by the National Working Group in February 2002, please visit HERE. New
Grading, Exam Await Students
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