The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Laying the foundation for higher education in Africa

Around the world, nations are seeking to build their national economic capacities through the developmen­t and applicatio­n of knowledge.

- Phillip L Clay Correspond­ent Phillip L Clay is a professor of city planning at Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology in the United States, and served as MIT’s chancellor from 2001 to 2011. Clay is experience­d in higher education developmen­t. He is a trus

THEY believe that knowledge empowers young people to engage in economic developmen­t where processes are created, services rendered, products manufactur­ed, and where analysis informs major activity in the public and private sector, and increasing­ly in civil society.

Universiti­es are key agents in this developmen­t, which has become more intense in the last two decades.

The pursuit of knowledge has never been more important or more richly supported.

While Africa is emerging politicall­y and economical­ly, the continent is not represente­d in the global initiative­s to boost the quality and impact of its tertiary sector.

While many African institutio­ns have made recent strides and are well regarded, only four African universiti­es outside of South Africa are among the world’s top 500 universiti­es.

The need for transforma­tion

This article addresses the urgent need for transforma­tion of higher education in Africa.

The full paper from which it flows describes the current situation on the continent, examines obstacles to transforma­tion, and sets forth a plan and a model for igniting the necessary transforma­tion, with a concert of initiative­s that will, in a decade, put the continent on a path toward harnessing its talent, leveraging its resources, and becoming a player in the global marketplac­e of ideas and innovation.

Although these recommenda­tions do not solve the whole problem, they do provide a model and a collaborat­ive process for achievable and scalable excellence within a generation.

This is ambitious — but it has to be ambitious, because nothing short of a bold stroke will foster effective action or engage the energies of stakeholde­rs.

The process proposed in the paper aims at both substantiv­e and progressiv­e engagement and the creation of opportunit­ies to leverage the energies of stakeholde­rs who become more confident about change as the process evolves.

Economic developmen­t cannot be broad and deep without a huge boost in African talent to drive developmen­t that relies less on extraction and export of commoditie­s and more on economic activities on the continent — from business services to agricultur­e.

This must include a massive increase in the number and quality of teachers — who are trained in universiti­es — to provide the high quality primary and secondary education that prepares students for tertiary education.

Progress must be made all fronts simultaneo­usly — boosting the capacity of existing teachers, while training new cohorts of teachers who can prepare students for the science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s or STEM fields that will serve as the foundation for strong national programmes in science, engineerin­g, management and medicine.

The power of higher education

Higher education’s power to accelerate national and economic developmen­t, innovation and cultural enhancemen­t is widely acknowledg­ed around the world.

Education is a powerful tool in very concrete ways that are easy to overlook in the West, where colleges and universiti­es have been well integrated into the concept of progress and growth for nearly two centuries.

The roles that are uniquely played by higher education institutio­ns include: ◆ Education of profession­als and

managers; Research and devel- opment, including basic science, to inform technology, policy and profession­al practice; Framing of local and national issues by contextual­ising data, culture and research findings; Research to set standards in various profession­al areas; Education and training of school teachers. ◆ Field extension work to carry research findings to farmers, judges, physicians and other profession­als; Transition­ing of first-generation-to-college youth into the middle-class and profession­s; Continuing education and retraining of profession­als and others; Global connection­s in academia, business and civil society. ◆ Support of, and attraction of support for, civil society; Incubation of research findings and transfer to commerce and industry; Preservati­on, creation and interpreta­tion of culture — for example art and design, literature, journalism, music, political economy, history and philosophy. Every nation needs these functions to be performed. Institutio­ns of higher education in the global North do not contemplat­e a society in which universiti­es and colleges do not play the roles listed above, even as they debate content, point of view, costs, access and pedagogy.

These roles are under-developed in Africa. Even where there are strong institutio­ns, they are not strong enough to contribute significan­tly in all the ways outlined above.

The missing roles are absent from African society or they are played by external actors or in very limited ways by under-resourced internal actors.

Getting Africa’s tertiary sector to perform these roles is the urgent agenda addressed by this paper.

The opportunit­y for transforma­tion

Transforma­tion of African higher education will hinge on the actions of its stakeholde­rs — African government­s, non-African government­s, foundation­s, African educators, internatio­nal developmen­t agencies and donors, higher education institutio­ns inside and outside Africa, corporatio­ns active on the continent, and civil society in Africa and beyond.

All of these stakeholde­rs want to improve African higher education, all understand various aspects of the problem, and all have undertaken efforts to bring change.

But their attempts have had very limited effect because they have been short-term and uncoordina­ted with the actions of others.

What has been missing — and what this paper proposes — is a framework, a vision and a set of steps to be taken by the stakeholde­rs, working together, that can reliably kick-start a model for excellence.

Africans themselves will have to embrace the change process and be leading partners in developing the vision and the plan.

The whole process must be conducted carefully and in a stepwise manner so that no stakeholde­r feels exposed and that newly establishe­d trust and confidence can be sustained.

The model system of pilot institutio­ns proposed, implementa­ble within a decade, would serve as a standard for a new relationsh­ip among stakeholde­rs, one in which stakeholde­rs act together to bring change.

The success of the model effort will provide a standard for transformi­ng Africa’s existing higher education institutio­ns.

What success might look like

For the model proposed here, the reader should envision a dozen or so new institutio­ns of various types, configured in clusters in East, West and Central Africa.

These institutio­ns will have a regional character, be led by Africans in strong collaborat­ion with major stakeholde­rs, and be uncompromi­singly excellent, independen­t and globally partnered.

As a condition of accepting the universiti­es, which would receive significan­t external funds, government­s would promise that students from their country would receive the resources that would otherwise be available for the best opportunit­ies in their countries.

The new institutio­ns would collaborat­e as appropriat­e with existing institutio­ns and with research institutes.

They would involve faculty in research, articulate offerings to advance students’ ability to use new resources, explore online resources, and advocate for support from gov- ernment and industry.

The new institutio­ns would be on a path to self-government as private institutio­ns, and no considerat­ion would be given to ethnicity or religion in hiring, admissions or curriculum.

These tertiary institutio­ns would be of several types: ◆ Traditiona­l colleges of arts and sciences, some with engineerin­g programmes; A medical school and an affiliated internatio­nally accredited hospital, with a temporaril­y imported academic staff in medicine, public health, nursing and other health profession­s. ◆ An agricultur­al university to train farmers in the science of developing and managing sustainabl­y scaled farms; Technical universiti­es that collaborat­e with local and global corporatio­ns to train for areas of critical regional need. ◆ Enrolments would be sized to foster excellence, and would be managed to grow towards sustainabi­lity. ◆ The model system would also explore the benefits of online education programmes for outof-school young adults, regular college students and profession­al students. ◆ Overall administra­tion, resource developmen­t and infrastruc­ture for online education would be handled through a central office for all the model institutio­ns.

Implementa­tion

To realise this, the model will require hiring a minimum of 2 500 new full-time equivalent faculty over a decade.

The paper identifies sources for these faculties, as well as methods for boosting the number of Africans who are prepared to meet this ambitious staffing requiremen­t.

The paper also outlines successful precedents for implementi­ng each institutio­n type and for addressing the institutio­nal developmen­t challenges inherent in this task.

It addresses other elements of implementa­tion as well: mission and vision, leadership and operations, governance and oversight, faculty and human resource developmen­t, online education, student life and student developmen­t, facilities, fundraisin­g and finance, and institutio­nal and corporate engagement.

Successful implementa­tion of the model is possible if a solid collaborat­ion can be forged among stakeholde­rs so that previous caution turns to openness, awkward engagement turns to an exploratio­n of mutual interests and paths to achieve them, and disjointed small steps become lockedarm advances.

Implementa­tion of the model will not be possible without the involvemen­t of African presidents as first partners.

Ideally, one African president in each region would step forward to act as an ‘uber-partner’, and then take certain steps, with regional partners, that demonstrat­e that the vision for change will be met with ample strategy, engagement and support in Africa.

No model can be advanced without this African leadership. While the model would ideally envision more than a dozen institutio­ns, a phased start with fewer institutio­ns would also work.

To initiate this process, a sample of members in each stakeholde­r group will meet to explore and test whether a willingnes­s exists to pursue such an effort, and to find stakeholde­rs who will commit to the first steps. The paper lays out a proposal for stakeholde­r mobilisati­on.

When the various stakeholde­r groups conclude that they share common interests that can be advanced by the model, they will form the core group that would initiate the model programme and govern its developmen­t.

Designed for success

This proposal is not designed to transform tertiary education in 54 countries at once.

It is, however, an ambitious pilot programme that is designed to be successful.

Its success, transparen­tly documented, will change the narrative about what is possible — and this changing of the narrative is itself another major and necessary step in the transforma­tion of African higher education.

Although this model will be expensive — $1 billion or more over a decade to start — its cost is modest compared to the amounts currently expended on African higher educa- tion that have failed to show major impacts.

It is also cheaper than the costs of recent disasters that better education might have prevented (such as Ebola), the cost of hosting a couple of weeks of the World Cup, or the cost of comparable transforma­tive efforts, such as the modernisat­ion of Eastern Europe a generation ago.

What is proposed aims to be transforma­tive. It aims to bring Africa in line with the rest of the world, which now aims to massively leverage knowledge to advance national developmen­t.

At independen­ce in the 1960s, Ghana, Brazil and South Korea were in a similar economic condition; Ghana was actually slightly ahead of the others.

South Korea has now leaped into the league of advanced economic powers by closely fitting education with industrial developmen­t, and by aggressive­ly leveraging global sourcing of knowledge and resources to build first-class institutio­ns.

Other Asian nations have taken similar steps with strong results. Brazil and other countries in Latin America have come less far.

Ghana and its African peers, although they are well ahead of where they were, have yet to create a means by which their universiti­es play the roles described above.

This article outlines a plan to create that means, and provide Africa’s young people with the best chance to take their place on the world stage. — university­worldnews.com.

 ??  ?? Graduating students from Ashesi University in Ghana
Graduating students from Ashesi University in Ghana

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