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Higher Education and Economic Development in Africa: Herana One

Higher Education and Economic Development in Africa: Herana One. University of Ghana Chet May 2012. The Project and Context. Higher education and economic development (1). Different approaches to HE and Economic Development (Chicken problem) Impact

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Higher Education and Economic Development in Africa: Herana One

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  1. Higher Education and Economic Development in Africa: Herana One University of Ghana Chet May 2012

  2. The Project and Context

  3. Higher education and economic development (1) Different approaches to HE and Economic Development (Chicken problem) Impact • Land Grant Universities (understudied) • Multiple variable impacts (CHEPS) • Counterfactual comparisons (Siegfried, 2007) – University of Beau, Cameroon (Fongwa) Rate of Return • Psacharopoulos (1986) – social returns to HE 10.8%, primary 19%. Private return to HE 19%, primary 27%, but (2006) trend was reversing HE increasing by 1.7 percentage points, primary education decreasing by 2 percentage points. Contributionto GDP • Bloom (2006) In Sub Sahara Africa the addition of 1 year of tertiary education, GDP increased by 0.25 % points and 0.40% in terms of productivity. African Development Bank reported even greater gains.

  4. Higher education and economic development (2) Connectivity contexts • University–industry interactions • Innovation hubs – California, Boston, Cambridge, Finland Market – State steering? (Castells & Himanen) • Regional development – stimulus to a variety of regional industries, education, local government and promoting regional urban, equity (OECD, Goddard) Knowledge • Basic- applied – strategic – innovation • Modes/types of knowledge (Mode 1 & 2) Causality • what is the ‘direction’ between HE and Growth? Incontrovertible that in the “knowledge economy” the “knowledge institution” is being regarded as a “development driver” – empirically and ideologically

  5. The relationship between scientific excellence and economic development (R = 0.714, P = 0.218) (R = 0.961, P = 0.002)* Data source: Thomson Reuters InCitesTM (21 September 2010); The World Bank Group (2010)

  6. Participation rate and development indicators

  7. Economic Growth and Human Development A substantial body of academic and technical literature provides evidence of the relationship between informationalism, productivity and competitiveness for countries, regions and business firms. But, this relationship only operates under three conditions: information connectedness, organizational change in the form of networking; and enhancement of the quality of human labour, itself dependent on education and quality of life. (Castells and Cloete, 2011) The structural basis for the growing inequality, in spite of high GDP growth rates in many parts of the world, is the growth of a highly dynamic, knowledge-producing, technologically advanced sector that is connected to other similar sectors in a global network, but it excludes a significant segment of the economy and of the society in its own country. The lack of human development prevents what Manuel Castells calls the ‘virtuous cycle’, which constrains the dynamic economy. (Castells and Cloete, 2011) Connecting growth to human development – trickle down doesn’t work Key connectors are education (Higher Education) and ICT

  8. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita vs Human Development Index (HDI)

  9. Higher Education Research and Advocacy Network Africa • To use a set of analytical concepts to try and better understand the complex interactions between national economic/education policies and higher education system development • To learn from some OECD countries who had been successful in linking HE and economic growth • To use 8 African countries as contexts for the study • To develop an empirical methodology to operationalise the concepts • Do not assert that the primary/only role for higher education is development

  10. HERANA Structure HERANA Higher Education Research & Advocacy Network in Africa RESEARCH ADVOCACY The HERANA Gateway An internet portal to research on higher education in Africa Higher Education and Development Investigating the complex relationships between higher education and economic development, and student democratic attitudes in Africa University World News (Africa) Current news and in-depth investigations into higher education in Africa The Research-Policy Nexus Investigating the relationship between research evidence and policy-making in selected public policy sectors in South Africa Nordic Masters in Africa (NOMA) Collaborative research training by the Universities of Oslo, Makerere, Western Cape, and CHET FUNDERS Carnegie, Ford, Rockefeller, Kresge, DFID, Norad

  11. The Case Studies Three successful (OECD) systems investigated: • Finland (Europe), South Korea (Asia), North Carolina (US) Africa • Botswana – University of Botswana • Ghana – University of Ghana • Kenya – University of Nairobi • Mauritius – University of Mauritius • Mozambique – Eduardo Mondlane • South Africa – Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University • Tanzania – University of Dar es Salaam • Uganda – Makerere University

  12. Project team Higher Education Studies – Peter Maassen and Nico Cloete Development Economist – PundyPillay (UWC) Sociology of Knowledge – Jo Muller (UCT), Johann Mouton (US) Data analysis - Ian Bunting (DoE), Charles Sheppard (NMMU) Researchers– Tracey Bailey (CHET), Gerald Ouma (Kenya & UWC), Rumolo Pinhiero(Oslo), Patricia Langa (Mozambique & UCT), Samuel Fongwa (Cameroon, UWC) External Commentators Manuel Castells (USC, Open University, Barcelona) John Douglas (CHES, Berkeley) Ghana contributors Prof Ben Ahunu (Provost College of Agriculture) Mr Alfred Quartey (Director Planning) Dr Joseph Budu (Registrar) Dr Prof Esi Suthterland-Addey (Institute of African Studies)

  13. Some implications from 3 successful systems Finland, South Korea, North Carolina (USA) As part of reorganising their ‘mode of production’, they developed a (pact) around a knowledge economy model (high skills training, research and innovation) Close links between economic and education planning High participation rates with differentiation Strong ‘state’ steering (different methods) Higher education linked to regional development Responsive to the labour market Strong coordination and networks PundyPillay (2010): Linking higher education to economic development: Implications for Africa from three successful systems. (CHET)

  14. The analytical premises Higher education’s role in / contribution to development is influenced by three inter-related factors: The nature of the pactbetween the university leadership, political authorities, and society at large The nature, size and continuity of the academic core The connectedness and coordination of national and institutional knowledge policies to the academic core and to development projects is crucial

  15. The Pact

  16. Defining the ‘Pact’ A ‘pact’ is defined as a fairly long-term cultural, socio-economic and political understanding and commitment between universities, university leadership, political authorities and society at large of the identity or vision of universities, what is expected of universities, and what the rules and values of the universities are. Pacts are not only between society and higher education, but also important within the institution.

  17. Conceptual Framework: Government – Institutions -- Market Government Pact Academic Core Connectedness External Groupings University

  18. The pact: National-level indicators • Narrative, intent and structures for the Role of HE in development • Visions and plans, i.e. Development Visions (2025-2035) • Policies – development, science and technology, higher education • Methods and structures for co-ordination

  19. Mauritius and Ghana: Role for knowledge in development Key:

  20. Coordination of knowledge policies

  21. Notions of the role of higher education in development

  22. Four notions of the role of the university Higher education is an ancillary: Assumes that there is no need for an (active or direct) role for the university in national development. Higher education as self-governing institutions: University is important in national development, but there is no need for a direct role in national development – academics must decide who is trained and with what skills. Higher education as instrumentfor development agendas: University important for national development by providing expertise to reduce poverty, improve agriculture and assist business, particularly SMEs. Higher education is the enginefor development: The university is a core institution in national development; it can provide an adequate foundation for the complexities of the emerging knowledge economy in terms of relevant skills, competencies, research and innovation.

  23. The university and knowledge in development University not part of development strategy Ancillary Self-governing Central role for new knowledge in development strategy No or marginal role for newknowledge in development strategy Instrument Engine University part of development strategy

  24. National and institutional notions of the role of the university in development

  25. The Pact in Ghana At both national and Intuitional levels only sporadic mention of knowledge economy No broad agreement (pact) about a development model No general agreement that, and by implication higher education, is key to development (as is case in across the continent, HE is mainly for mobility and a job Regarding notions of the role of university in development, at national level considerable ambiguity, at institutional, strong leaning towards self governance (traditional teaching, research ‘outreach’ model) Surprisingly low support (mention) for knowledge economy (engine of development)

  26. The Academic Core

  27. The academic core Burton Clarke refers to the ‘academic heartland’ and a ‘stronger steering core’ The universities in the HERANA sample are public and ‘flagship’ universities which claim in mission statements that they: • have high academic ratings, • are centres of academic excellence engaged in high quality research and teaching • and contribute to development These are the key “knowledge institutions” in these countries Assumption: For a university to contribute to development it needs a strong academic core

  28. Input indicators Increased enrolments in science, engineering and technology (SET) – AU regards SET as a development driver Increased postgraduate (PG) enrolments – knowledge economy requires increasing numbers of workers with PG qualifications Favourable academic staff to student ratio – workload should allow for research and PhD supervision High proportion of academic staff with PhDs – high correlation (0.82 in South Africa) between doctorates and research output Adequate research funding per academic – and from multiple sources

  29. Output indicators High graduation rates in SET fields – not only must enrolments increase, but also graduate output Increased knowledge production (doctoral graduates) – for reproduction of academic core, to produce academics for other universities and for demand in other fields Increased knowledge production – research publications in ISI peer-reviewed journals

  30. Academic core indicators (standardised data): Four selected universities Cape Town Mauritius Ghana Dar es Salaam

  31. Indicator 4: Qualification level of permanent academic staff members

  32. Indicator 5: Research Funding • Research funding resources (in US$) available in 2007 to the academic staff members of each university.

  33. Findings: Academic core (1) None of the universities (except Cape Town) seem to have moved from their traditional undergraduate teaching role Considerable diversity amongst input indicators, with postgraduate enrolments and inadequate research funds the weakest The strongest input indicators are manageable student-staff ratios (Except Ghana) and staff with doctorates On the output side, SET graduation rates are positive, but all institutions (except Cape Town) have low knowledge production From the weak knowledge production output indicators it seems the academic cores are not strong enough to make a sustainable contribution to development

  34. Findings: Academic core (2) Despite dramatic increases in masters enrolments and graduations, PhD enrolment is growing very slowly (Nairobi – masters grew 3900 to 6100; doctorates decreased 190-62) Some institutions like Makerere have doubled PhD graduates and research output, but from a low base Incentive structure (double and triple teaching, consultancies) may not reward knowledge production Urgent need to improve data definition, systematic institution-wide capturing and processing, and strengthen evidence-based strategic planning and leadership

  35. Connectedness

  36. Connectedness: Development activities and the academic core (1) ‘Connectedness’ operationalised along two dimensions: • ‘Articulation’: • Extent to which aims and objectives articulate with national development priorities and the university’s strategic objectives • Linkages with government and external stakeholders • Number of funding sources and financial sustainability • Link to implementation agency • ‘Strengthening the academic core’ – development activities: • Feed into teaching, curriculum development and the formal training of students • Generate new knowledge • Result in academic publications • Link to international academic networks

  37. Plotting the development activities

  38. University Ghana Projects Noguchi Memorial Institute for Medical Research West African Centre for International Parasite Control (WACIPAC) Gates Institute Partnership Projects for Population, Family and Reproductive Health, School of Public Health West Africa Centre for Crop Improvement (WACCI), Faculty of Agriculture Enhancing child nutrition through animal source food management Food Science Institute of Statistical Social & Economic Research (ISSER)

  39. Ghana Development Projects Six selected development projects/activities:

  40. Finding: Connectedness In none of the countries is there a coordinated effort between government, external stakeholders and the university to systematically strengthen the contribution the university can make to development. At each of the universities there are exemplary development projects that connect strongly to external stakeholders and strengthen the academic core – the challenge is to increase the number and scale of these projects.

  41. Implications

  42. Some Implications: Pact formation University leadership seminars are bound to continue to disappoint as long as there is not more agreement about the role of higher education in development, and relevant government officials and key members of higher education governance structures are not part of the discussion and capacity building It is important to clarify the roles and functions of higher education commissions/councils, and to consider how they can play a role in promoting greater agreement (pact formation) and coordination

  43. Implications: Academic core A focus should be to strengthen the academic cores of the ‘flagship’ universities Key areas to improve are: • masters throughput to PhDs • doctoral enrolments and graduation, with scholarships and post docs • research funding and the conditionality's around research funding Examine incentives and address perverse incentives Consider an Africa Research Fund with some of the features of the European Research Fund Funders and governments must build conditions into consultancies that strengthen rather than weaken the academic core

  44. Implications: Evidence-based improvements There is a clearly identified need to improve and strengthen the definition of performance indicators, as well as the systematic, institution-wide capturing and processing (institutionalisation) of key indicators Capacity needs to be built about the analysis of data at planning, management and leadership levels, and linking these analyses to planned reforms – at institutional and national levels Revitalising African higher education is, amongst other things, going to require more comparative, evidence-based approaches than declarative missions and intentions

  45. HERANA Publications HE and Economic Development Books and reports Linking Higher Education and Economic Development: Implications for Africa from three successful systems (Pillay) Universities and Economic Development in Africa: Pact, academic core and coordination (Cloete, Bailey, Maassen) Universities and Economic Development in Africa: Key findings (Cloete, Bailey, Bunting & Maassen) Country and University Case Studies: Botswana (Bailey, Cloete, Pillay) Country and University Case Studies: Ghana (Bailey, Cloete, Pillay) Country and University Case Studies: Kenya (Bailey, Cloete, Pillay) Country and University Case Studies: Mauritius (Bailey, Cloete, Pillay) Country and University Case Studies: Mozambique (Bailey, Cloete, Pillay) Country and University Case Studies: South Africa (Bailey, Cloete, Pillay) Country and University Case Studies: Tanzania (Bailey, Cloete, Pillay) Country and University Case Studies: Uganda (Bailey, Cloete, Pillay)

  46. HERANA Phase 2 There is a clearly identified need to improve and strengthen the definition of performance indicators, as well as the systematic, institution wide capturing and processing (institutionalisation) of key indicators Capacity needs to be built about the analysis of data at both planning, management and leadership levels, and linking these analyses to planned reforms – at institutional and national levels Revitalising African higher education is amongst other things going to require more comparative, evidence based approaches than declarative missions and intentions Important role of National Commissions Role of Incentives in Knowledge Production

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