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African networks needed to improve higher education

Mammo Muchie

17 March 2010 | EN | FR

Networking can help improve graduate training

Flickr/mark.taber

Collaborative networks are crucial to improve the state of African higher education, says innovation expert Mammo Muchie.

Higher education and research in Africa have largely been neglected, both internally and externally, since the 1980s.

If Africa is to join the global knowledge community as an equal partner, it must revolutionise its research, education and training systems.

This does not simply mean pumping money into individual institutions. This can help raise the profile of single universities or research institutes but will do little to improve the system as a whole.

Rather, the key is to foster and sustain a network that circulates knowledge and encourages the creative learner, researcher and knowledge producer.

The priority must be to promote networks for African researchers to engage with and learn from each other. These must initially work within Africa, set up at various scales in multiple forums. A first step would be to establish an Africa-wide university accreditation scheme.

It is scandalous that this has not already been done, although East African universities have recently revived the possibility of recognising each others' degrees, paving the way for a university accreditation system operating throughout the African Union.

Working together

South Africa will clearly be an important player, as it has a strong higher education and research system that includes five universities recognised in international rankings. The challenge is to use these strengths to support the efforts of other countries.

South Africa must continue to keep its borders open to students and researchers from the rest of Africa — more African postgraduates now travel to South Africa for their training than to Europe or the United States.

The rest of Africa must encourage South Africa to engage in their local knowledge activities. This is already happening in some countries. For example, the Uganda National Council for Science and Technology is cooperating with researchers in South Africa on its Millennium Science Initiative and is working to stimulate innovation and improve relations between the two research communities through a joint science prize.

At a broader scale, Africa needs a network of locally relevant journals — such as The African Journal of Science, Technology, Innovation and Development — to disseminate research results and knowledge, to facilitate policy learning and informed dialogue, and to encourage emerging African researchers to publish their work.

Developing networks

Equally important are training networks to boost PhD numbers and reverse the sharp decline in doctoral training seen over the past 30 years.

There is already some progress to report. African scientific board members ofthe Global Network for the Economics of Learning, Innovation and Competence Building Systems (Globelics), for example, are inspiring and building research and knowledge capacity in Africa by inviting scientists from other developing regions and top researchers from the North to interact with and help their counterparts in Africa. 

The African Globelics Academy for Research, Innovation and Capability (AGARIC) will be running its first PhD school in 2010. The Globelics Academy has provided scholarships for ten African PhD students each year for seven years, where they have an opportunity to interact with the best and brightest from the rest of the world. By establishing AGARIC more African students will benefit by also inviting PhD candidates from the rest of the world to interact with them.

Another scheme, proposed by Stellenbosch University in South Africa, is the African Doctoral Academy, which aims to help PhD students develop generic skills. Although the project would initially focus on students studying arts and social sciences at the university, it is expected to grow to provide for other disciplines at other African universities in Botswana, Malawi, Tanzania and Uganda.

Help from abroad

But efforts must not be limited to within the continent itself. We must engage the broadest possible mobilisation of everyone involved in higher education, research and knowledge to contribute to training and research capacity building. The diaspora could prove pivotal in achieving this. 

A good starting point is starting national initiatives to connect local researchers with those who have left to work overseas. For example, in Ethiopia we have recently launched a web-based Network of Ethiopian Scholars-Global (NES-Global) to encourage free and open communication between those at home and abroad.

The virtual space is home to e-books and an e-journal and also acts as an information library or kiosk where Ethiopian universities can upload scientific materials.

Similar efforts could help build links with the diaspora from other parts of Africa — all it takes is some initiative.

Africa has a long history of division and fragmentation — from the European scramble for Africa and the thousands of communities that preceded it, to today's states that, for the most part, remain fragile and aid-dependent.

It is time for us to join up the pieces — through networking — and work together to improve the quality, productivity, capability and use of knowledge to transform African societies, economies, politics and ecology.

Mammo Muchie is a South African national chair on innovation studies at The Institute for Economic Research on Innovation, the Tshwane University of Technology, Pretoria, South Africa. He is also professor at Aalborg University, Denmark, and Senior Research Associate at Oxford University, UK.

Comments (10)

Rendani Wilson Maladzhi ( South Africa )

17 March 2010

Wow, this is a great initiation that will put Africa on the map as far as innovation is concerned.I strongly believe that institution of higher learning has greater opportunity to influence the societies of the world. Great work Prof.

mentesnot mengesha ( United Kingdom )

17 March 2010

I think, the current initiatives what Prof. Mammo Muchie listed are evidence how such doable schemes would renovate the capacity and capability of African Universities. Indeed, networks like NES-Global would play a pivotal role in revamping the knowledge exchange among and within academic communities. Such schemes could also viewed as stepping stones for aspiring researchers to publish a good quality and peer-reviewed articles before moving to established Journals of international status. Mentesnot Mengesha (UK)

Vusumuzi Duma ( South Africa )

18 March 2010

Africa is blessed to have people at the intellectual level like Prof Muchie who truly confront and speak on issues affecting the development and growth of Africa. Yes indeed, Africa will do well if it can foster research collaborative networks that will enable African scholars to look at research projects that addresses African problems for African people. It is time for African scholars and intellectuals to start doing the job of solving problems and ignore some political stumbling blocks.

Arlen Hastings ( Science Initiative Group (SIG) | United States of America )

18 March 2010

Regarding Prof. Muchie’s comment that “Equally important are training networks to boost PhD numbers and reverse the sharp decline in doctoral training,” we strongly agree, and draw readers’ attention to the Regional Initiative in Science and Education (RISE), which prepares PhD and MSc-level scientists and engineers in sub-Saharan Africa through university-based research and training networks. Funded by the Carnegie Corporation and administered by the Science Initiative Group in partnership with the African Academy of Sciences, RISE currently supports five networks involving 13 universities and 2 research institutes in 9 countries. RISE prepares African scientists and engineers both to address issues critical to their countries' development and to train the next generation of problem solvers. Students benefit from access to expertise and equipment in all the institutions in their networks, and institutional capacity is strengthened through partnerships. Details are at www.ias.edu/rise.

tamerat bedada ( Ethiopia )

19 March 2010

Building networks and increasing the number of PhD and MScs is all good and nice. But there is something we have to always remember and that is quality. We need to have a quality standard in place to check that the networks we build and the PhDs and MScs we produce meet the international standard. Otherwise everything will fizzle out later.

Pathfinder Opia ( Johanna foundation | Nigeria )

19 March 2010

Africa need to improve higher education by helping and encouraging private individuals who have the same goal, vision.

Pathfinder Opia ( Johanna foundation | Nigeria )

19 March 2010

We are Johanna Foundation; a subsidiary of Johanna Nigeria Ltd, a registered company in Nigeria, west Africa.We rescue youths who are stranded in life who for one reason or the other could not complete their education and as a result have no job nor even a base. Some we pick sleeping under the bridge; male/female We get them, shielter, food and teach them skillful hand-works such as computer training, fashion /designs, catering etc. We need the world assistance to include curricular education in secondary and higher education as so many of them are very intelligent and a lot of them in all the 36 states in Nigeria. Presently we are in three(3) states Lagos, Imo and Anambra .We are looking for expansion as many people are joining us everyday from far and near. We need the world's assistance in feeding, shelter.

Judith Baker ( United States of America )

22 March 2010

African educators, need more professional organizations where they can share, learn from each other, publish, network, work jointly on projects. One immensely valuable network of educators is the African counsels of the International Reading Assoc. [IDC/A], which holds a Pan African conference for literacy professionals every two years, publishes papers presented, has a google group where you can post messages and papers and is growing. Join us in Botwsana in 2011. See our blog and join group: http://6thpanafricanrfa.blogspot.com/

Liz Jupe, VSN International ( VSNi | United Kingdom )

23 March 2010

Collaboration and networking are massively important for any project, scheme or plan to move forward, and progress positively and rapidly. Certainly we at VSNi take this view in the way we work with customers and colleagues throughout the world, and it’s one of the reasons we made our software free to the developing world. We chose to make GenStat Discovery accessible to all researchers and scientists in the developing world to enable them to pursue agricultural and biological research and teaching, with first class software. Too many times we found our colleagues in Africa (and other developing world countries) unable to use or access suitable data analysis software, unable to share their work and findings. GenStat Discovery’s success is down to its accessibility, appropriateness and the fact that networking, through for example RUFORUM (the African distributor of GenStat Discovery) has meant that it is available to those who need it. We are determined to continue to support Africa and encourage improved networking opportunities.

zakaria lassen abdul-hanan ( Denmark )

26 March 2010

Congratulations Prof.Mammo Muchie for the wake up call,this is a hallmark of a professor. Africa remains proud of your numerous and crucial calls on the journey towards a new Africa but with very little action to hit the ground running.This initiative could stand the test of time if migrant workers/Africans in the diaspora compliment the call.Over a month ago, I asked a committee member of the AAU Africa Forum to request for AAU partnership with University for Development Studies (UDS)in Ghana and the request was made however, your African voice to that request will make significant progress. Please compliment your call with action to help UDS and AAU partner.Zakaria Lassen Abdul-Hanan. Aalborg University-Denmark.

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