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| July/August 2003 | Volume
16, Issue 4 |
PRACTICAL
INFORMATION REGIONAL
NEWS FEATURE
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Regional
News
Africa
ANGOLAAgostinho Neto’s Faculty Strike
The demands of those on strike call for improved wages and working conditions, medical assistance and the full payment of salary arrears. The public university lecturers are also demanding that the Angolan Government join the “Arucha Convention” on the recognition of qualifications in higher education in Africa.
Angola
Press Agency DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC of CONGOKinshasa University, Cisco Systems Provide Hope for the Future
The science faculty’s library now houses fewer than 300 books, and the volunteers who work there complain that all are out of date and half are in languages nobody speaks. Degree courses are supposed to last five years, but strikes by unpaid lecturers and riots by angry students mean the academic year often runs up to a year late. However, information technology (IT) courses at the university are providing some with hope for the future. Cellular telephones and e-mail are booming in a country whose fixed-line services have long since decayed, and the firms supplying the technology need recruits with modern IT skills. A course sponsored by the United Nations and Cisco, an American software firm, is providing just such an education to a handful of students studying how to build networks and link them to the Internet. All learning is done online, and tests are sent off to exam centers continents away. The UN-Cisco partnership is one that was launched at the G-8 Summit in 2000 and named the Least Developed Countries (LDC) Initiative. Programs similar to the one at Kinshasa University are available in more than half of the world’s LDCs that suffer from poverty, as well as from weak human resources and economic institutions.
The Economist THE GAMBIAEducation Policy: A Success Story
The new education policy and action plan laid great stress on basic education (first nine years); increasing access and quality; expanding senior secondary education (years 10 to 12) to significantly improve transition rates; closing the gender gap; skills training; developing scientific and technological competencies; improving literacy and numeracy; and strengthening higher education through the creation of a national university. Five years ago, the United Nations set the Millennium Development Goals of education for all (EFA) by 2015. In this, the Gambia’s objective is to provide at least nine years of good-quality schooling to all Gambian children by 2015. Since that objective was set, the gross enrollment ratio has increased from 44 to 87 percent. If this pace is maintained, a 100-percent ratio could be reached in only a few years, well before the target year of 2015. An important element in achieving the EFA goals depends on how fast the Gambia can increase female enrollment, retention and performance. In 1996, girls constituted only 42 percent of enrollment in grades one to nine and nearly 35 percent in grades 10 to 12. Recent 2003 figures place basic enrollment at 82 percent, with similar increases at the secondary level. The government’s policy for higher education placed emphasis on consolidating and expanding vocational and technical training facilities. The policy also created the first-ever university in the country (1999) — University of The Gambia — granting degrees in education, nursing and health sciences, medicine, engineering, technology, hotel and tourism management and the arts. The success that the Gambia has achieved in implementing its education policy has been attributed to a number of factors, the two most prominent being an extraordinarily committed ministry and executive coupled with an allocation of over one-fourth of the national budget on education. Community-based efforts are also strongly supported, as are those of nongovernmental organizations. Religious groups pre-date the government in the provision of education, and they still play a prominent role in the sector.
The UN Chronicle GHANALegon Campus Forced to Cut Enrollments
Vice chancellor
of the university, Kwadwo Asenso-Okyere, made the announcement at the
inauguration of an international student hostel for the Ghana Medical
School in Accra. He stated that inadequate facilities were the reason
for the reduced number of enrollments.
Ghanaweb NIGERIACourses at Private Colleges to Be Accredited
A similar exercise at public universities was carried out in 2001, after which institutions were ranked on the basis of the quality of their programs. Private universities were not included in that round of inspections because their programs were deemed to be too young and not eligible for accreditation. The recent licensing of ABTI University (see May/June issue WENR) has brought the number of private universities in the country to eight.
The Nigeria Congress Online SOMALIAMuch-Needed Medical College Opens in Mogadishu
The Benadir University Medical College (BUMC) is to be funded by donations from Somali physicians and an annual fee of US$1,500 per student. The institution is currently training 22 medical students who started classes late last year, before its official opening in June. According
to BUMC’s director of training and international cooperation, Dr.
Abdirazzaq Ahmed Dalmar, the college has concluded agreements with a number
of foreign universities, including King’s
College London, University College
London, Howard University in
Washington D.C., Palermo University
in Italy and Lund University
in Sweden.
IRIN SOUTH AFRICAUNISA to Expand its Operations in Africa
The new agreements will partner UNISA with the University of Sudan, Mauritius College of the Air and Kigali Institute of Education in Rwanda. The new agreements come on top of already existing partnerships with tertiary institutions in the Seychelles, Kenya, Zimbabwe and Mauritius. With UNISA soon expected to further expand its distance-education export operations into Africa, South Africa could establish a strong base and dominate the distance-education sector in Africa.
Business Day TANZANIAUniversity of Agriculture to Introduce 2 New Degree Courses
The two new programs — bachelor of science in aquaculture and bachelor of science in biotechnology and laboratory science — will bolster the number of degree programs on offer from 13 to 15.
The
East African UGANDAKyambogo University Approved
A motion establishing Gulu University was passed earlier this year (see June/July issue WENR). The creation of Kyambogo University comes as a result of a merger between Uganda Polytechnic Kyambogo, Institute of Teacher Education Kyambogo and Uganda National Institute for Special Education.
The Monitor
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