Breaking the fetters of Higher Education in Sub-Saharan Africa
Author(s) -
K. Moses,
Esi Mackin Eva
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
international journal of educational administration and policy studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2141-6656
DOI - 10.5897/ijeaps2015.0387
Subject(s) - mentorship , higher education , scarcity , curriculum , quality (philosophy) , medical education , political science , pedagogy , psychology , sociology , public relations , medicine , philosophy , epistemology , law , economics , microeconomics
Higher education institutions (HEI) are established to address human resource needs by producing graduates with the relevant knowledge, skills and attitude for the labour market and improving the country’s ability to maximize its long-term economic, social and political developments. The fetters of higher education are the challenges bedeviling its growth and development. This paper focuses on appropriate technology and innovations needed to break these fetters. Desktop research was used for data collection and textual analysis was deployed to analyze data. Results showed there were inadequate skilled lecturers, poor mentorship scheme, inequitable access, irrelevant curriculum, scarcity of lecture halls, inadequate research initiative and low ICT-mediated education. It is recommended that learner-centred and a problem-based instructions must be adopted, lecturers should be mentored and trained in the art and skill of teaching; assessment method must challenge students to perform at higher cognitive level of understanding, ICTdriven education should be adopted to impact equitable access, quality and cost of education.
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