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Science training: If governments lead, others will help

Arlen Hastings

11 March 2009 | EN | ES | FR

masindeMuliroUniLib_kenya-flickr-Aluka-Digital-Library.jpg

African governments must provide resources to train scientists in their own universities

Flickr/Aluka Digital Library

African governments must invest in science training — but they don't have to go it alone, says Arlen Hastings.

Africa so often seems captive to its own contrasts: poverty and disease amid rich natural resources; hunger amid plenty. Just as striking is the contrast between what is and what could be: the unrealised human potential is both a terrible waste and a tremendous opportunity.

This is especially true in the sciences. Sadly, many of the people best placed to address Africa's urgent problems — biologists, chemists, physicians, engineers — go abroad in search of better opportunities. They leave behind under-staffed, under-resourced universities and an upcoming generation of would-be scientists with too few mentors.

Donors have been working for decades to mitigate the problem through programmes to support African universities and individual researchers, and there has been some progress. But unless African governments provide adequate resources to train scientists and engineers in their own universities, improvement will be unacceptably slow and Africa will continue to lose some of its most capable citizens.

RISE to the challenge

A new foundation-supported programme is helping address this issue, at least on a modest scale. The Regional Initiative in Science and Education (RISE) trains African post-graduate scientists and engineers to staff universities in their home countries and guide the next generation. Managed by the Science Initiative Group at the Institute for Advanced Study, New Jersey, United States in partnership with the African Academy of Sciences, RISE has five networks across topics including materials science and natural products chemistry.

Students benefit from complementary instruction and research opportunities available at different institutions in the network and each institution is strengthened through affiliation with the others.

A US$4.9 million grant from Carnegie Corporation of New York funds RISE. It also has strong support from the fifteen African universities and research institutes involved, all of which contribute some of their own resources. Some RISE networks have relationships with industry and are establishing links with American universities.

But to be sustainable and scalable, RISE cannot rely on foundation support alone. Until more African governments back up their pro-science, pro-education rhetoric with action, capacity-building initiatives will remain perilously dependent on foreign aid and Africa's potential will remain unfulfilled.

Actions speak louder than words

African leaders acknowledge that adequate resources for training university scientists are essential for development. The Addis Ababa Declaration on Science, Technology and Scientific Research for Development, signed by African Union Heads of State in January 2007, states that: "We...reaffirm…our common objective to advance the development of the continent by promoting research in all fields, in particular in science and technology."

The signatories also pledge to "ensure the enhanced role and the revitalisation of African universities and other African institutions of higher education, as well as scientific research institutions, so that they can play an effective role as loci of science, technology and engineering education and development."

It is not very difficult for a group of people to come together and agree that something is important. The challenge is in the implementation.

The Millennium Science Initiative (MSI) in Uganda offers a useful model for effective cooperation among African governments and universities, donor agencies, and the international scientific community (see 'US$30m 'millennium science initiative' for Uganda').

Initiated by African scientists and colleagues around the world, and designed by the Ugandan government in collaboration with the World Bank, the MSI is a science capacity-building program tailored to Uganda's development needs. The programme, supported by World Bank and country counterpart funds, addresses some of the challenges in Uganda's strategy for science and technology. These include producing graduates with the science and engineering skills the labour market needs, strengthening graduate education and increasing links between universities and the private sector. The Uganda MSI is embarking on its third annual competition and is widely regarded as a success.

Other countries could replicate this collaborative model. The essential elements are a national commitment to develop a science and technology strategy, involvement of a development bank or other agency with the expertise and resources to help implement it, and input from active scientists in Africa and abroad.

For any regional programme, including RISE, to be sustainable, it is not enough for just one country to buy in — multiple countries will need to make a commitment to science, technology, and education.

The challenges are great, but so are the opportunities. African university faculty and students want to be able to thrive professionally in their home countries. The international scientific community is keen to contribute and development agencies can provide strategic guidance.

African governments alone cannot solve their countries' development challenges, but they can and should play a central role. Friends are standing by, ready and eager to help.

Arlen Hastings is executive director of the Science Initiative Group at the Institute for Advanced Study, New Jersey, USA.

Comments

Pierrot Ngadi ( Irish Congolese Empowerment | Ireland )

12 March 2009

The Millennium Development Goals are eight international development goals that 192 United Nations member states and at least 23 international organisations have agreed to achieve by the year 2015. They include reducing extreme poverty, reducing child mortality rates, fighting disease epidemics such as AIDS, and developing a global partnership for development. It is the primary responsibility of poor countries to work towards achieving these Goals. They must do their part to ensure greater accountability to citizens and efficient use of resources. But for poor countries to achieve the first Goals, it is absolutely critical so that they seek support and help and developing partnership working with rich countries. In the case of DRC, it would be preferably advantage to establish a partnership with Ireland and develop an educational programme toward universal primary education. Because Ireland has been already working with six African countries; with DRC the difference is that the DRC will not seek for financial support to some extend but human resources. This means to identify volunteers including teachers, doctors, and students who can support education and health programme in the DRC.

Referring to the MDGs, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon explained how education played an important role to our society today. He said “We have ample evidence that education improves individual incomes, economic growth, child and maternal health, resistance to disease and environmental practices,” This is true because education plays a very important role in a person's life. It gives us power and strength. Education teaches us to write, read, think, listen, speak, discover to react and achieve in our life...If today the Congolese government improve the system of education by making it accessible, adaptable, acceptable and available to Congolese people, they will contribute a lot to their country and also be responsible for their futures. Because of life long learning and education is a driving force towards sustainable development and the best investment that any country can make to its citizens is to educate them improve their family’s well being and also for the stability of both individuals and the country. “If this is not the case therefore a whole generation of the country is at risk” Therefore, environment, society and economics which I consider being pillars of sustainable development for any country will collapse. Pierrot Ngadi Muller

Idowu Ola ( Obafemi Awolowo University | Nigeria )

18 March 2009

Africa's main problems are Africans and African's main problem is attitude. One of the greatest Nigerian educationist, Late Tai Solarin, used to say that Rich people makes themselves rich and so poor people makes themselves poor. If Africa is to get out of the dungeon of underdevelopment it must drop its self deceiving attitude. As well articulated in Hastings paper, Africa has got all (human, intellectual and natural resources) to get itself moving. It is only a pity that successive African government has paid lip service to the issue of science and development. The aids agency, in my opinion, have given more than enough support and are still willing to do more. I will canvass that these agencies should demand more stringent conditions, such as higher counterpart funding/support/provision from the government before giving them aids. After all heaven help those who help themselves. Without a very tough requirements to be met by the grantees all the foreign grants will continue to go down the drain, mostly into some few pockets. (Idowu Ola. Coordinator, Nigerian Community of Young Scientists)

Mpumi Bikitsha ( South Africa )

14 July 2009

It is a very sad observation for me that since our independence, democracy has also tended to have many skewed interpretations, i.e. things are interpreted according to who is in power at the time. For example, in South Africa, with the new administration, some of the people who are in parliament today are those who showed unshakable support for President Zuma and demonstrated in front of the courts whenever he appeared for his court cases. Education has got nothing to do with it but there they are earning obscenely high salaries than for example, doctors who studied for seven years and more. We can have as many and as fancy conventions and summits on poverty eradication but as long as the will is not there but the lining up of pockets of some, we will always have poverty in our developing countries in escalating numbers. Let us look closely at Prof Muhammad Yunus's model of the Graemin Banks which he started in Bangladesh, then start thinking of opening those poverty museums that will be a result of this model that successfully took thousands of people in Bangladesh out of poverty.

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