From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


African universities link with church counterparts


From "NewsDesk" <NewsDesk@UMCOM.ORG>
Date Fri, 15 Nov 2002 11:40:09 -0600

Nov. 15, 2002	News media contact: Linda Green* (615) 742-5470* Nashville,
Tenn.  10-31-71BP{527}

NOTE: Photographs are available with this report.

By Linda Green*

MUTARE, Zimbabwe (UMNS) - Africa's colleges and universities are seeking
partners and innovations that will help them remain solvent, relevant,
effective and accessible in the new millennium.

Those characteristics were emphasized throughout a daylong educational
symposium Nov. 15 at Africa University. The gathering opened the weekend's
10th anniversary celebrations for the only United Methodist-related
degree-granting institution in Zimbabwe.

African scholars and higher education officials joined for dialogue with the
presidents of the United Methodist Church's 11 historically black colleges
and universities as well as officials from other American schools. Meeting in
the main lecture hall of the new Bishop Lawrence J. McCleskey Faculty of
Theology Building, the participants discussed challenges and prospects facing
higher education in Africa.  

The event marked the first meeting in Africa for the Council of Presidents,
comprising the leaders of the church's black colleges and universities. The
group participated in a panel discussion about forging partnerships with
Africa University and other African institutions.

Johnnetta Cole, president of Bennett College in Greensboro, N.C., said the
idea for building partnerships between the black colleges and those in Africa
is not new. Many relationships exist already, she noted. For any partnership
to be of value, she said, the two parties must have mutual respect for one
another; have clear and definite knowledge of one another's history and
story; address respective interests and needs; be based on reciprocity; and
have a way of evaluating each other honestly and critically.

Robson Silitshena, chairman of the symposium subcommittee and dean of Africa
University's faculty of humanities and social sciences, noted that the United
Methodist-related black colleges and the African institutions of higher
learning share similar histories. "All have come into being to serve the
unserved and the underserved," he said.

African institutions can look to the historically black colleges as models
for marketing themselves to corporate and private-sector supporters and
philanthropists, he said. Africa's schools are facing increasing costs and
decreasing financial support from all levels, as well as inflation and
academic flight, leading them to seek out partnerships in the private sector,
he said.  

Eldred Jones, emeritus professor at the University of Sierra Leone, agreed.
The lack of financial support from government and other sources is inhibiting
the development of tertiary or third-level academic institutions, he said.
Universities are increasingly aware that they must generate income for
themselves, and they are doing so by selling consultative services and ideas
generated in their laboratories.

In most of Africa, the lack of employment opportunities after graduation
forces many students to leave the continent. Colleges and universities are
responsible for identifying the causes of unemployment and how it can be
countered, Jones said.

Linkages with the historically black colleges and universities of the United
Methodist Church and others in the United States is natural, but the more
relevant first step would be linking institutions within the same country and
across Africa, Jones said. African schools must establish networks among
faculties, departments and other groups to share common problems and
solutions. 

Most African countries share common histories and social conditions. Jones
said African higher education must adopt a critical attitude "both to what we
have and what has been brought to us. This should be a guiding principle in
the selection of what we teach and how we teach it." The aim in teaching, he
said, is to produce men and women who are both critical and creative.
Students should be encouraged to be thinkers and doers, rather than
accumulators of facts and received knowledge, he said. "This must be so if
they are to be instruments of change, working towards the realization of a
just and consequently stable society."

The search for and dissemination of truth is central to the purpose of higher
education, Jones said. That quest must always be at the forefront, regardless
of the problems schools are facing. The institutions also must ensure that
they are relevant to the needs of the people in the community.

In his keynote address, Swithun Mombeshora, Zimbabwe's minister of higher and
tertiary education, said the government invited the private sector to
participate in making university education accessible to all. "Africa
University was the first private initiative in this challenging area."	

Africa University has emerged as a "cosmopolitan enterprise, rich in cultural
and intellectual diversity," he said. The university, which has more than
1,000 students enrolled, has definitely become "a pan-African university of
repute, drawing students from all over the world."

Mombeshora expressed the government's "unequivocal" support for Africa
University and others in Zimbabwe, noting that they have widened the access
to higher education. However, he said, universities in Africa, as in other
places, are under pressure to be more relevant to society by being more
responsive to societal needs, current with technology and flexible in their
structure.  

He praised Africa University's efforts to foster peace and conflict
resolution on the continent through its establishment of the Institute of
Peace, Leadership and Governance. He also warned that the university sector
is highly competitive, and "survival depends on innovation, imagination and
creativity." The university, he said, must continue aspiring to carve a niche
for itself in Zimbabwe, Africa and the world.

# # #

*Green is United Methodist News Service's Nashville, Tenn., news director. 

*************************************
United Methodist News Service
Photos and stories also available at:
http://umns.umc.org


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