Thursday, September 18, 2014

Up-to-date African Perspectives


Content:
A course on active learning methods at university level
 First impressions: University life
“First impressions: Village life
Past, present, and future-oriented world views
The world history from an African point of view
Many African authors have written extensively about the consequences
The danger of a single story!
How to respond positively to the challenge of suspicion and violence in Kenya today?
A distinct difference between Tanzania and Kenya
Final thought on past, present, and future-oriented world views


During this past June I taught the first part of a training course on active learning methods at university level, at Sct. Paul's University in Limuru, north of Nairobi, Kenya. The participants were university teachers from Kenya, Tanzania, and Madagascar. The second part of the course is taking place right now, as action-learning projects in each participant's own teaching. The third and final part is a weeklong training course in November, again in Kenya.

All course materials (26 handouts, recommendation & development resources including 15 links, 6 free eBooks and 10 pdf's) are available here.
If you are interested in the course manual and how to organize such a course, please contact me at eghedegaard@gmail.com


Following, I share some of my experiences at Sct. Pauls University:

First impressions: University Life
Sct. Paul's University is a 1200 student campus situated in the highlands, 30 km north of Nairobi. Several of the teachers live onsite as well. The campus is green, well-organized, and well-maintained. The boundary is fenced and guarded as well at the gate as at specific buildings.

 

The uniformed guard at the "Women's Leadership Training Center" (where I stayed) and, the same guard on guard on a Saturday while her uniform was being laundered.


  

Previously, the campus was a theological college for educating priests, in colonial-style buildings and small houses (from 1930 to 2007). Students lived here with their families and grew their own crops for consumption.

 

The library and new buildings still under construction

Smiles and handshakes occur spontaneously wherever people meet, even when passing each other. Cell phones are used intensively, for texting or talking. "Your baby is crying!" ... is what one says in some parts of Africa, when someones cell phone rings.

First Impressions: Village life
Across a busy regional road bordering campus, a village is located. Heavy lorries constantly honking, minibuses, cars, and pedestrians walking on the shoulders, dominate the road. The contrast to the campus is evident. The roads between houses in the village are filled with red mud after the daily rain showers. Most houses are poorly kept, and many mothers carrying babies are very young.

At first glance, one can compare the lives on each side of the road. Most students on campus seem to have lifestyles and hopes for the future that appear rather similar to those to students in the western world. They appear part of the global village concerning music, fashion, looks, and idols.

Meanwhile, many of the villagers have jobs as laborers at the university, and others (not to speak of the millions in the Nairobi slums) live in absolute poverty, not relative poverty as in the West.

As I came to know several students, I learned that some did not have enough money to live on campus. Instead they lived in the village and cooked their own food on charcoal stoves in their rooms. These students are very determined even while fighting an uphill struggle to get an education.   



 


The belief that education is a road to a better life for you and your family seems to be very strong in Kenya. Whenever I visited the village and saw the young mothers, I was reminded of the girl in one of Nadine Gardiners short stories. Gardiners main character is a girl with a strong desire for literature, reading, and studying. She read any piece of newspaper or book she get hold of, but as a young mother she could only work hard for her kids to gain opportunities that she didn't get.

Past, present, and future-oriented worldviews
At the beginning of the training course I used quotes from "Alice in Wonderland", to start discussions on goals for using active learning methods in teaching: When Alice is lost in the magic forest, she asks a cat: "What path to take?" The cat answers, It depends on where you want to go! Alice says "It doesn't matter where I go..." and then the cat says: "Then it doesnt matter which path you take!"

It worked to start discussions on rationales for teaching (and at the same time training of the cooperative learning structure "think, pair, share")

When the course day ended, I read contemporary Kenyan literature, and in "The River and the Source" by Margaret A. Ogola (1994) I was confronted with a traditional African attitude "Where you are going depends on where you come from". You learn what is right and what is wrong to do as you are raised.

At first sight the two views are totally contradictory. The first represent a future-oriented worldview, while the second represents a past-oriented worldview.
- See introduction to past, present, and future oriented worldviews as a lecture combined with animation: (video, 15 min.)
- There might be different priorities in different cultures, but isn't it so that we have to keep all 3 perspectives in mind wherever we are?

The world history from an African point of view is very clearly stated in these lines:
"The world we live in today is the result of more than 500 years of Western colonial expansion and imperial design. Broadly speaking, this gave birth to a world system characterized by unequal power relations between the North and South, witnessed today in various spheres. These inequalities are realized through racial, class, gender, religious, pedagogical, linguistic, textual, aesthetic, ecological, and epistemological power hierarchies." Quote from Dr. Joseph Wandera at  (SPU Blog)

Many African authors have written extensively about the consequences:
- Franz Fanon wrote about the impact of colonization on the minds of the colonized already in 1961 in The Wretched of the Earth (Wikipedia article)

- The memoires of Nelson Mandelas "Long walk to Freedom" and the new film Mandela: Long walk to freedom based on this biography an inspiring example of how to fight against these power hierarchies. (Example of film review)

- Nelson Mandela on his Mission, to liberate the oppressed and the oppressor both”.

- All over Africa native authors have developed excellent literature. One of the many notable authors in the Kenyan setting is Ngugi wa Thiong'o. His first novel “Weep Not, Child” (1964) was the first novel in English to be published by an East African author. The book is now compulsory reading in Kenyan secondary schools, and this book is recommended for students everywhere.
Ngugi tells the story of a young man, Njoroge, who loses his opportunity for further education when he is caught between idealistic dreams and the violent reality of the colonial exploitation. In this way he described the specific characteristics of colonialism in Kenya and the impact on individuals, families, and indigenous cultures.
The colonizers simply stole the fertile highlands and made it illegal for Africans to live in the area through the colonial British rule 1895-1963. Dr. Sammy Gituku at SPU showed me a metal capsule, which his grandfather had to carry in a string around his neck with a written permission from an employer in order to stay in the area.

The danger of a single story!
In the last couple of years, writers of African descent, who have experiences from living in the west as well as in Africa, have focused on the contradictions and dilemmas they experience in our globalized world, and they also fight against all the stereotypes of Africa and Africans.

- Taiye Selasi has coined a new term "Afropolitans" in a text in which she dismantles outdated perceptions.(Wikipedia article on the phrase Afropolitans)
- "Taiye Selasi: I'm a multi local afropolitan. (video, 14 min.)
- Chimamanda Aidichie tells about "The danger of a single story about Africans today". (video, 19 min.)

Two recommendable novels:
- Chimamanda Adichie (2013): Americanah (introduction in Wikipedia article)
- Taiye Selasi (2013): "Ghana Must Go" (review, "More on this story", book extract)

How to respond positively to the challenge of suspicion and violence in Kenya today?
The international news on east Africa is totally dominated by reports of terror attacks in different parts of Kenya in general and the Nairobi suburb of Eastleigh in particular.
An example: "Conflict dynamics on Kenyas coast" (IRIN humanitarian news & analysis website)

Christian as well as Muslim communities are taking initiatives to develop so-called Diapraxis, where leaders of local faith communities communicate in order to find solutions to questions and problems they have in common.
Definition of "Diapraxis": "Diapraxis is the practical cooperation between different groups. The cooperation is meant to tear down prejudices, fear, and hostility between people. Diapraxis takes place in the border zone between religion and culture". (source)
One of these initiatives is "The Centre for Christian-Muslim Relations in Eastleigh (CCMRE)" which holds workshop and keep communicating across faiths.

During my first evening in Limuru I met by chance the participants in a conference for elders from more than 40 ethnic groups in Kenya (including followers of the Muslim as well Christian faiths). They were very committed to keep communicating across differences.

The Tanzanian participants in the training course voiced, seen from their point of view, a distinct difference between Tanzania and Kenya. Kenyans are first and foremost members of their local ethnic group while Tanzanians are first and foremost Tanzanians. They see this as a heritage from president Nyerere, who was the initiator of this sense of community. Although his ideas of African socialism organized as "Ujama"-villages did not become successful, his thoughts have had a lasting impact.
History and heritage of President Julius Nyerere (1922-1999) (Wikipedia article)

Julius Nyerere quote: "A nation which refuses to learn from foreign cultures is nothing but a nation of idiots and lunatics...[but] to learn from other cultures does not mean we should abandon our own”

Final thought on past, present, and future oriented worldviews

Finally, these thought reminds me of a Dalai Lama quote: There are only two days in the year where nothing can be done. One is called YESTERDAY and the other is called TOMORROW, so today is the right day to love, believe, do, and mostly live".


This text is "Teach GLOBAL CITIZENSHIP" network newsletter no. 13

Introduction to "Teach GLOBAL CITIZENSHIP" newsletters


See "Where Children Sleep", what´s your thoughts?



To you, students, and children everywhere:

Please, have a look below where these children sleep, at:



Now, send me your thoughts!

First, what do you notice about the portraits vs. their sleeping quarters?
Second, what do you think about when you compare where these children sleep?

After I’ve received comments from you, from different parts of the world, I’ll include some of your comments in a future "Teach GLOBAL CITIZENSHIP newsletter”.



Thank you very much in advance for sending your comments (3 sentences is fine)

















All the photos here and at the website are from the book "Where children sleep". 

The photographer and author James Mollison states “From the start, I didn’t want it just to be about ‘needy children’ in the developing world, but rather something more inclusive, about children from all types of situations. It seemed to make sense to photograph the children themselves, too, but separately from their bedrooms, using a neutral background. My thinking was that the bedroom pictures would be inscribed with the children’s material and cultural circumstances
‘ the details that inevitably mark people apart from each other ‘
… while the children themselves would appear in the set of portraits as individuals, as equals ‘ just as children.”  

Children are born into certain situations, and they are not to be blamed for their surroundings. They all do their best to cope with the situation they are in, and they all have the right to have hopes for the future, don´t they?

A resource:

A video made in Ireland on children´s rights:
(video, 2minutes)  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y_2nA49p3yw'

This text is "Teach GLOBAL CITIZENSHIP" network newsletter no. 12

______________________________________________________________________
This newsletter is written in collaboration with Glenn Sweitzer, Muncie, Indiana whom I also want to thank for proof reading of all the letters.

To read any of the previous newsletters simply visit the blog

Yours,
Egon Hedegaard
Educational consultant, independent instructor, and Developer of Education

Email: eghedegaard@gmail.com
______________________________________________________________________
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