New Academy to Promote Sciences
The Gambian government has announced the creation of its first science academy. Opened in a bid to address the shortage of scientists in the country, the academy will prepare students at primary and secondary level for university-level science, technology and mathematics programs. Gambian president, Yahya Jammeh, initiated the project that created the academy -- based in the western town of Kanilai -- that is scheduled to open in September 2008. Construction will start in September of this year. Chair of research and strategy at the University of Gambia, Momodou Jain, told SciDev.Net that this is a first step toward putting science at the center of Gambian economic development. The Taiwanese Government has donated US$344,718 to the project -- 20 percent of the total costs to run the project for one year. Other funding is being sourced from the private sector, foreign donors and the government.
- Scidev.net
June 12, 2007
Kenya
Education Tops Government Budget Agenda
With the Kenyan government’s recent decision to waive fees at secondary school adding to the costs and of funding primary education, education once again ranks as the top line expense in this year’s budget. From this year the government will cover tuition fees for public secondary school students in a bid to reduce costs increase the number of enrollments among secondary school-age children. Currently, an estimated 30 percent of eligible students are enrolled in secondary schools.
- The Nation
June 14, 2007
Rwanda
Degree Programs May be Cut from 4 to 3 years
The Ministry of Education announced in May plans to cut the duration of degree programs from four to three years. The move is intended as a means of harmonizing the country’s education system with other East African Community (EAC) member states and European nations. Rwanda (and Burundi) joined the EAC last November. The ministry said the move will also help reduce education costs.
- The New Times
May 13, 2007
South Africa
More Skilled Workers Needed
South Africa’s economy is growing fast, and with spending growing faster than productive capacity, it is in danger of overheating, reports The Economist. Due to a countrywide skills shortage there does not appear to be a quick, easy solution. According to the country’s largest bank, ABSA, managers are battling to cope with “severe shortages of skilled labor and production capacity constraints,” reflected in shortages of goods and services.
The South African Institute of Race Relations estimates that some 850,000 whites have left the country since 1995, reducing the white population (which, for historical reasons, is still the most skilled segment) to around 4.3 million people from more than 5 million a decade ago. ABSA believes that “the vast majority” of those who have left the country—or are contemplating doing so—are skilled people between the ages of 20 and 40. This white exodus is being compounded, according to the bank, by the increasing emigration of mixed-race, Asian and black professionals, especially from the public sector, which is losing medical, technical and engineering skills very rapidly.
In addition, the skills shortage is being exacerbated by three other factors: the growing impact of HIV-AIDS on the supply of skills, especially in key areas such as teaching and nursing, and on productivity levels across the economy; tight immigration laws; and a serious deterioration in education standards at schools, which are plagued by high drop-out rates.
- The Economist
June 13, 2007
Uganda
UNESCO Report Praises Battle Against Graft
Uganda has had good success in combating corruption in its education system, according to a report by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). The report written by Jacques Hallak and Muriel Poisson noted that in the early 1990s, only 13 percent of the money granted per student actually got to the recipient while the rest was taken by corrupt local officials. As a result of a national education campaign, it is now estimated that 85 percent of allocated funds are reaching their rightful recipients. The report titled "Corrupt schools, corrupt universities: What can be done" was released in early June.
- New Vision
June 8, 2007
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