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A letter from the President
New Americans,
Fresh Off the Presses
My Russia: One
Reporter's View of Life After Communism
The Paradoxes
of Russian Democracy
Transforming
Teaching and Learning Through Technology
The Foundation
Partnership to Strengthen African Universities
Foundation
Roundup
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The Foundation Partnership
to Strengthen African Universities
continued from previous page
Page 1 | 2 | 3
Leaders of the foundation partnership are mindful of these
concerns and the challenges they pose, which helps to shape their grantmaking.
Africas need to connect with and integrate global knowledge and
learning also helps explain why the foundations have chosen to concentrate
so heavily on improving higher education in the countries in which they
work: many in Africa, as well as in the U.S., are convinced that the continents
universities offer the best hope of combining an understanding of internal
problems with knowledge culled from around the world to create targeted
and effective responses to problems ranging from the spread of HIV/AIDS
to how to create models of sustainable development.
To meet the needs, a number of countries in the region
have started making significant changes to their higher education systems,
which include new methods of financing, new modes of governance, the creation
of evaluation and accreditation mechanisms, curriculum reforms and technological
innovations. As Raoul Davion, a program officer at the MacArthur Foundation
says, As universities in Africa continue to grow as centers of excellence,
opportunities for regularizing and formalizing exchanges between them
will increase, enabling them to deepen their specialization in particular
areas. However, progress has been uneven so far, giving rise to
sharp contrasts between as well as within higher education systems in
different countries.
One developing success story, though, can be found at the
University of Dar es Salaam, where efforts to strengthen and improve the
institution also led to gains in the area of gender equity. As part
of its institutional transformation program, the University of Dar es
Salaam also established a Gender Dimension Programme Committee to pay
attention to gender issues beyond the admission of more women students,
including those environmental factors that affect retention, educational
achievement and general well-being, explains Fenella Mukangara,
Gender Programme Coordinator at the university. This led to a $1 million,
three-year grant from Carnegie Corporation to implement a scholarship
program for undergraduate women as part of the Corporations contribution
to the Foundation Partnership. The real challenge is for us to continue
to build on the progress weve made so far, says Mukangara.
Its not enough to just increase womens enrollment. We
have to work on making the campus a more gender equitable place and also
make sure that women can afford to continue to come here.
Modes of Operation
A key principle of the foundation partnership is the recognition that,
in some respects, the differences among African universitiesespecially
in terms of organization, operation, culture and interestsare mirrored
by the differences among the collaborating foundations. Therefore, each
foundation participating in the partnership provides support for higher
education institutions through their traditional methods and in the country
or countries where they have chosen to work. To date, partnership activities
have focused on six sub-Saharan African countries: Ghana, Mozambique,
Nigeria, South Africa, Tanzania and Uganda. While the nature of the activities
being supported often varies, an important concern of all four foundations
is helping to establish regional and inter-country education leadership
links.
Currently, the criteria for selecting universities to
receive support through the foundation partnership include:
- Being located in a country undergoing systemic public policy reform.
- Supporting innovationsuch as institutional transformation, curriculum
review and being responsive to community concernsthat will better
position the institutions to meet the specific needs of their countries.
- Engaging in a strategic planning processincluding creating links
with stakeholders in government, the private sector and wider societyin
which a key element is a commitment to helping to build national capacity
for social and economic development.
- Having creative, broad-based institutional leadership.
The core functions of the partnership include grantmaking
by individual foundations and the dissemination of public information
on the importance of higher education for Africas development,
says Andrea Johnson, a Carnegie Corporation IDP program officer. She explains
that each partnership member works directly with institutions of higher
education in Africa, while also continuing to support other educational
activities under its specific thematic programs.
To focus attention on improving higher education in Africa,
the partnership shares information and coordinates its activities with
that of other international agencies, thus leveraging its work with critical
players in the future of higher education on the continent. Joint funder-partner
university meetings are also held to promote interaction between two groups.
Nico Cloete, director of the Centre for Higher Education Transformation
in South Africa said, of the last meeting in Accra, Ghana that the
increased socialization between . . . funders and non-funders was a positive
development.
| A
Selection of Partnership Grants |
| Country |
Foundation |
Grantee |
Amount
|
Purpose |
|
| Africa-wide |
Rockefeller
Foundation |
Africa
Dissertation Internship Award |
$1,530,204 |
To
enhance the quality of overseas education received by African
graduate students enrolled in North American universities.
|
| |
Rockefeller
Foundation |
Africa
Career Award |
$1,132,221 |
To
enhance research capacity and development of promising young
African scholars.
|
| |
Rockefeller
Foundation* |
African
Economic Research Foundation
|
$700,000 |
To
strengthen and help retain local capacity for economic policy
research and policy management in sub-Saharan Africa.
|
| |
Carnegie
Corporation,
Ford Foundation,
MacArthur Foundation,
Rockefeller Foundation* |
Boston
College |
$554,100 |
Toward
the establishment of the Journal of Higher Education in Africa. |
|
| Ghana |
Ford
Foundation
|
University
of Ghana
|
$350,000
|
To
integrate the Chieftancy, Governance and Development Program
of the Institute of African Studies into the Universitys
mainstream academic curriculum and for core support for its
research program. |
| |
Ford
Foundation |
University
of Ghana |
$253,000 |
Support
for planning and developing a Chieftancy, Governance and Development
Program under the aegis of the universitys Institute of
African Studies. |
|
| Nigeria |
MacArthur
Foundation |
Ahmadu
Bello University |
$3,000,000 |
For
strategic planning, information technology and the refurbishing
and upgrading of teaching and research facilities. |
| |
MacArthur
Foundation |
University
of Ibadan |
$3,000,000 |
For
staff development, information and communication technology
enhancement and training and university strengthening activities. |
| |
MacArthur
Foundation |
Bayero
University |
$2,000,000 |
For
a three-pronged university strengthening effort focusing on
staff development, computer technology and the creation of a
faculty of agriculture. |
| |
Rockefeller
Foundation |
University
of Ibadan |
$170,000 |
For
a study to develop and evaluate reproductive health education
and service programs for out-of-school youth in rural and urban
sites in Oyo State. |
|
| Mozambique |
Ford
Foundation |
Ministry
of Higher Education, Science and Technology |
$930,000 |
Support
for key policy reviews with relevant stakeholders; installation
and training in computer systems and a fellowship program in
the new Ministry of Higher Education, Science and Technology. |
| |
Ford
Foundation |
Eduardo
Mondlane University |
$480,000 |
For
staff development and doctoral training for teaching and research
staff of the Faculty of Agronomy and Forestry Engineering. |
|
| South
Africa |
Carnegie
Corporation |
Department
of Education |
$3,146,900 |
For
a national scholarship program for undergraduate women. |
Note:
Grants to
institutions in South Africa comprise a larger percentage of
partnership initiatives. |
Rockefeller
Foundation |
University
of Natal |
$1,128,707 |
To
help establish a center for crop improvement at the university,
providing Course-based Ph.D. training in the plant sciences. |
| Carnegie
Corporation |
University
of Natal |
$1,120,700 |
Toward
one-time funding to establish the KwaZulu Natal Centre for HIV/AIDS
Networking. |
| |
Carnegie
Corporation |
Rhodes
University |
$817,500 |
For
one-time funding of a project to train teachers and strengthen
a research center for science, mathematics and technology. |
| |
Ford
Foundation |
University
of the Witwatersrand |
$600,000 |
To
establish the African International Relations Centre. |
| |
Rockefeller
Foundation |
University
of Pretoria |
$400,000 |
To
support collaboration between its Center for Environmental Economics
and Policy in Africa and universities in eight African countries
in developing an African-based regional M.A. program in environmental
economics and policy. |
|
| Tanzania |
Carnegie
Corporation |
University
of Dar es Salaam |
$
3,491,000 |
For
implementation of institutional transformation (various projects). |
| |
Carnegie
Corporation |
University
of Dar es Salaam |
$1,000,000 |
For
a scholarship program for undergraduate women. |
| |
Ford
Foundation |
University
of Dar es Salaam |
$540,000 |
Support
for annual leadership training and research program for undergraduate
students at the Universitys East African Uongozi Institute. |
| |
Ford
Foundation |
Sokoine
University of Agriculture |
$250,000 |
Supplementary
support for a program to monitor institutional arrangements
for forest management in Tanzania. |
|
| Uganda |
Carnegie
Corporation |
Makerere
University |
$2,015,000 |
To
support its revitalization as an institution that can nourish
Ugandas social, political, and economic transformation
in the 21st century, and address the human capacity and research
needs of decentralization. |
| |
Rockefeller
Foundation |
Makerere
University |
$2,000,000 |
| |
Rockefeller
Foundation |
Makerere
University |
$1,900,000 |
|
| |
Carnegie
Corporation |
Makerere
University |
$1,000,000 |
For
a scholarship program for undergraduate women. |
* Indicates a joint partnership initiative.
(Support for a particular university or educational project
is considered a partnership activity when funding is provided
jointly by two or more of the partnership foundations.) The
other grants listed reflect individual partnership initiatives.
|
|
Next page: Making the partnership
work has required a sustained effort that actively involves staff at each
of the four foundations.
Page 1 | 2 | 3
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