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Page 1: OCCASIONAL PAPERS€¦ · OCCASIONAL PAPERS Relevance, Rhetoric And Reality National Development At The University Of Namibia Brian Joseph White 1998 CENTRE OF AFRICAN STUDIES

O C C A S I O N A L P A P E R S

Relevance, Rhetoric And Reality National Development At The University Of Namibia

Brian Joseph White

1998

C E N T R E O F A F R I C A N S T U D I E S

E d i n b u r g h U n i v e r s i t y

Price: f 6.00 or US $ 12.00

Page 2: OCCASIONAL PAPERS€¦ · OCCASIONAL PAPERS Relevance, Rhetoric And Reality National Development At The University Of Namibia Brian Joseph White 1998 CENTRE OF AFRICAN STUDIES

Relevance, Rhetoric and Reality National Development

at The University of Namibia

Brian Joseph White

Page 3: OCCASIONAL PAPERS€¦ · OCCASIONAL PAPERS Relevance, Rhetoric And Reality National Development At The University Of Namibia Brian Joseph White 1998 CENTRE OF AFRICAN STUDIES

RELEVANCE, RHETORIC & REALITY: NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT AT THE UNIVERSITY OF NAMIBIA

ABSTRACT

This dissertation is the product of, first, an exploration of the history of the concept of the Development University in Africa, and second, analysis of documents and a series of interviews in Namibia. The dissertation has the following goals:

To situate the University of Namibia's commitment to national development within the Development University tradition, as well as within the context of Namibia's unique domestic educational history and present climate;

To describe and analyse the formulation and implementation of the vision for UNAM's role in national development to date, highlighting successes and pointing out shortcomings and problems;

Finally, to raise issues which have not been adequately addressed thus far in the debate about higher education and national development in Namibia

The first chapter deals with the notion of the Development IJniversity, first looking at the origin of the concept, then moving on to the ways in which universities have been expected to contribute to development in Africa and the problems associated with those expectations. A new perspective on developmentalism within African universities will be suggested, within which the traditional notions of relevance, autonomy, and academic freedom must be re-examined.

In the second chapter, Namibia is situated within the context set forth in Chapter One. Although in many ways Namibia resembles other African countries in its experience of and need for university education, the ways in which it is unique will also be explored here. Because part of UNAM's commitment to national development includes a commitment to learn from the experience of other countries, the ways in which Namibia does and does not resemble her neighbours hold important lessons for the path UNAM will (and should) follow.

Chapters Three and Four are the products of the Namibian research. Chapter Three examines the formulation of the 'vision' of UNAM's role in national development., and proposes a model describing the three-part process of consensus building. decision making. and administration involved in the formulation and implementation of the viGon. Chapter Four is concerned with the practical implications of UNAM's commitment to national development. In particular, the focus will be on UNAM's development goals, on its new and restructured faculties, and major outreach projects.

The conclusion analyses the picture presented in Chapters Three and Four, within the context laid out in the first two chapters. Recommendations and observation - based on staff interviews, as well as on the new perspective on university developmentalism -are made here, with a view toward contributing to the ongoing debate on higher education in Namibia.

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First, I woultl like to thank all those in Namibia, both at LJNAM arid at the

Mir~istry li)r Iligher Educ;ition. Vocational Training, Science & Technology who took

time out o f their busy schedules to assist with this project. So many o f them were

li;lnk and open in providing information and expressing their opinions, and this was

grcittly appreciated. I n particular, I must thank UNAM's vice-chancellor, Peter

K;lt,javivi. both for agreeing to be interviewed, and for his overall support for the

pro,ject. which I believe gave Ine the legitimacy I needed to make the project succeed.

Special thanks must also go to Marie and Brian Harlech-Jones, for their hospitality,

;u~d particularly to Brian for the early morning rides to UNAM, which contributed as

much as anything else to my understanding o f the issues at hand during my stay in

Namibia!

Next, thanks go to my supervisors in the Centre o f African Studies, Professor

Kenneth King ant1 Dr. Simon McCrath. The feedback they provided on early drafts

ol'the chi~pters - ;~lw;~ys returned promptly despite busy schctlules and interniitional

travel -contributed invaluably to the final product.

Special thanks also to my f i~mi ly: my parents. Mary and Joe White, who have

man;~gcd to bridge the great distances between An11 Arbor, Edinhurgh and Windhoek

- t o support me in so many ways this year; to my late grandfather Ben Decker, whose

generosity made my trip to Namibia possible; and finally above all to my fiancke

Leisa. without whom very little indeed would be possible.

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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ..................................................................................... 1

ACRONYMS & ABBREVIATIONS ...................................................................... 4

INTRODUCTION ..................................................................................................... 5

METHODOLOGY ....................................................................................................... 7 Review of literature .............................................................................................. 7 Fieldwork Component .......................................................................................... 7

.................................................................................................. A PERSONAL NOTE 9 AN OVERVIEW ....................................................................................................... 1 1

Chapter One ................................................................................................ I I Chapter Two ...................................................................................................... I1 Chapter Three .................................................................................................... 12 Chapter Four ..................................................................................................... 12 Chapter Five ...................................................................................................... 13

CHAPTER ONE . THE DEVELOPMENT UNIVERSITY ................................. 14

INTRODUCTION ...................................................................................................... 14 THE COLONIAL MODEL AND THE DEVELOPMENT UNIVERSITY ................................ 15 THE CRISIS ............................................................................................................ 19 A NEW APPROACH TO 'DEVELOPMENTALISM' ........................................................ 21

The Challenge .................................................................................................... 21 The New Approach ............................................................................................ 22

CHAPTER TWO . UNAM IN THE AFRICAN CONTEXT ................................ 27

LEGACIES OF THE APARTHEID ERA ......................................................................... 28 General legacies ................................................................................................ 28

...................................................... Higher Education . UNIN and the Academy 32 ................................................................................................. UNAM IN CRISIS? 34

CHAPTER THREE . DEVELOPING THE VISION. OR. A VISION FOR DEVELOPMENT .................................................................................................. 36

...................................................................................................... INTRODUCTION 36 A NOTE ON PROCESS ............................................................................................. 38 HIGHER EDUCATION IN NAMIBIA: REPORT OFA PRESIDENTIAL COMMISSION .............. 42 TOWARD EDUCATION FOR ALL: A DEVELOPMENT BRIEF FOR EDUCATION. CULTURE AND

............................................................................................................... TRAINING 46 ................................................... FIRST FIVE YEAR DEVELOPMENT P~AN 1995-1 999 47

INVESTING IN PEOPLE. DEVELOPING A COUNTRY: HIGHER EDUCATION FOR

DEVELOPMENT IN NAMIBIA - PRELIMINARY DRAFT FOR DISCUSSION ....................... 48

CHAPTER FOUR . IMPLEMENTING THE VISION: NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT AT UNAM ............................................................................... 51

DEVELOPMENT GOALS ........................................................................................... 52 ...................................................................... Improving University governance 52

Promoting a balanced output ............................................................................. 52 ............................................................ Strengthening research and cons~rltancy 53

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........................................................................ Strengthening staff development 53 Strengthening Institutional Linkages Regionally and World-wide ...................... 54

.................................................................................... Attracting Talented Staff 54 Strengthening the Univers i~ Library and Student Support Services ................... 54 Finance and Divers$ving Sources of Finance .................................................... 56

FACULTIES ............................................................................................................ 56 .............................................................................................. Faculty of Science 57

Faculty of Agriculture and Natural Resources ................................................... 59 OUTREACH . CENTRE FOR EXTERNAL STUDIES (CES) AND THE 'NORTHERN PROJECT'

Centre for External Studies ................................................................................ 61 The Northern Project ......................................................................................... 62

CHAPTER FIVE . CONCLUSIONS .................................................................... 65

APPENDIX I .......................................................................................................... 71

SECTION I . PROFILE OF NAMIBIA'S EDUCATION SYSTEM ....................................... 71 SECTION 2 . INTERNAL STRUCTURE OF MHEVTST ................................................ 72

APPENDIX I1 . MISSION STATEMENT OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NAMIBIA ............................................................................................................... 73

APPENDIX 111 . ADMINISTRATIVE STRUCTURE OF UNAM ..................... 74

. ............................................................................. APPENDIX IV STATISTICS 75

SECTION 1 . FIRST-YEAR ENROLMENT BY FACULTY ............................................... 75 SECTION 2 . DEGREE STUDENTS & TOTAL ENROLMENT ( 1997) .............................. 77 SECTION 3 . DEGREES & DIPLOMAS CONFERRED ( 1995) ........................................ 79 SECTION 4 . STAFF DEVELOPMENT FELLOWS, LOCAL & EXPATRIATE STAFF BY FACULTY ............................................................................................................... 81

BIBLIOGRAPHY .................................................................................................. 83

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CES

MEC

MHEVTST

NDPl

UNAM

UNESCO

UNlN

Centre for External Studies, UNAM

Ministry of Education and Culture

Ministry of Higher Education, Vocational Training, Science & Technology

First National Development Plan (Republic of Namibia, 1995)

South West African People's Organisation

The University Centre for Studies in Namibia

University of Namibia

United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation

United Nations Institute for Namibia

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'Development' is a term that excites passions and provokes debate throughout

the world, and perhaps nowhere more so than in the countries of sub-Saharan Africa;

Namibia - Africa's 'last colony' before gaining independence in 1990 - is no

exception. Everyone, it seems -government official, administrator, civil servant,

business leader, expatriate 'development' worker, professor, student, ordinary woman

or man on the street -has his or her own notion of what 'development' means (or

should mean), both in Namibia and more generally. In the government's First

National Development Plan (NDPI), for example, development is defined in the

widest possible sense, from the diversification, expansion and restructuring of the

economy, to the promotion of sport, complete with targets in each area (Republic of

Namibia, 1995: 41 -2). The Ministry of Education and Culture (MEC), on the other

hand, speaks of achieving the broad ideals of 'access, equity, quality, and democracy'

in order to ensure that the education system contributes effectively to economic

growth and 'quality of life' (MEC. 1993: 18). Elsewhere. the emphasis is on the

development of science and technology (Mshigeni et al, 1995), the fostering of

national unity, or the promotion of a literary and arts culture (O'Callaghan, 1977:

159). all of which were neglected in Namibia during the colonial period.

Whatever the particular definition, though, of what in Namibia is usually

called 'national development', it is deemed essential for the country's future

prosperity. Indeed, the necessity of achieving national development is explicitly

expressed in the numerous policy documents, mission statements, annual reports, and

development plans produced by the Namibian government and leading national

institutions in the seven years since independence.

In order to understand what development means in this context, it is essential

to discover the actors involved in the formulation and implementation of a vision of

national development. As such, the following questions must be asked:

Who participates in and controls the debate that leads to a vision of national development? And what are the fundamental characteristics of their particular vision of what development should mean?

What are the consequences of this vision for policy making? In other words, what are the tangible results of the vision to be?

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What institutions are seen as important to achieving the goal of national development?

Within these institutions, who is responsible for the implementution of the vision?

As in other African countries, the University of Namibia (UNAM) is expected

to play a leading developmental role; furthermore, UNAM is committed to playing

such a role. This commitment is reflected in the motto of the University - 'education.

service, development', - and in its Mission Statement (see Appendix 11). The vision

set forth there has in turn informed many tangible changes in the University's

structure and curricuium since it was founded in its current form in 1992. In some

ways, these changes reflect UNAM's status as a 'Development University', a concept

I which in Africa had its origins in the 1960s and 1970s. the post-independence period

I for many African countries, but at which time Namibia was still under the control of

an illegal South African apartheid regime, and did not have a single higher education

institution of its own. Since that time, much has changed, both in Namibia, and in the

African higher education sector. However, the idea has persisted that the activities of

African universities - teaching, research, and consultancy, among others - must be

directly relevant to development needs

In many ways then, UNAM's developmental function continues to be defined

! and redefined, both within the domestic context, and as part of the broader trend

toward redefining the role of African universities in development. Indeed, the debate

about higher education, the role the sector is to play in national development, and the

proper sphere of activity for individual institutions, is still very much in progress in

Namibia. The current debate will lead to the publication of a White Paper on higher

education in late 1997 or early 1998 by the recently founded Ministry of Higher

Education, Vocational Training, Science and Technology (MHEVTST).

This dissertation is the product of, first, an exploration of the history of the

concept of the Develppment University in Africa, and second, analysis of documents

and a series of interviews in Namibia. In the five chapters to follow, I will do the

following:

situate the University of Namibia's commitment to national development within the Development University tradition, as well as within the context of Namibia's unique domestic educational history and present climate;

Page 10: OCCASIONAL PAPERS€¦ · OCCASIONAL PAPERS Relevance, Rhetoric And Reality National Development At The University Of Namibia Brian Joseph White 1998 CENTRE OF AFRICAN STUDIES

describe and analyse the formulation and implementation of the vision for UNAM's role in national development to date, highlighting successes and pointing out shortcomings and problems;

and finally, raise issues which have not been adequately addressed thus far in the debate about higher education and national development in Namibia

Methodology

As mentioned above, the research for this dissertation was carried out in three

stages:

Pre-departure review of literature;

'Fieldwork component'

Post-fieldwork analysis and distillation of documents and interview data

Review of literature

There is a substantial body of literature concerned, directly and indirectly,

with the concept o f the Development University in Africa. A large proportion of this

literature dates from the 1960s and early 1970s, although the concept survived into the

1980s and, with important modifications still exists today. Indeed, African scholars

and Western consultants alike have used the term as recently as 1996 (Ajayi et. al.,

1996: 199; Coleman and Court, 1993: 295). A review o f this literature was

undertaken, leading to an essay entitled 'Degrees o f relevance: Africa and the

Development University' (White, 1997a). which argued for an alternative perspective

to the World Bank's focus on the financial, rather than the qualitative, crisis in

African universities (World Bank, 1994).

A second, though smaller, body o f literature was also reviewed. This led to an

essay entitled 'Education for Namibians: a balance sheet' (White, 1997b), the subject

o f which was the history o f the Namibian education system under German and South

African control, as well as the international education opportunities for Namibians in

exile during the colonial period.

The relevant references for these two bodies of literature may be found in the

bibliography.

Fieldwork Component

The purpose of the fieldwork component of this project was twofold: first, to

gather information regarding the ways in which UNAM's commitment to national

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development are carried out in practice; a second, more qualitative goal, was to get a

sense of the attitudes of UNAM's staff toward the commitment to development.

The interviews and document collection took place during a four-week visit to

Namibia, from 8 June to 4 July 1997. Table I on the following page indicates the

scope of the interviews conducted. These include at least one representative from

each UNAM Faculty, as well as key figures from the University administration and

MHEVTST.

The interviews with academic staff at UNAM were semi-structured, with

similar questions being asked across the same range of issues.' The interview format

was chosen because, as Vale (1997: 9-10) points out:

The interview method is the most direct way of obtaining data about the respondent's views or experiences ...[ and the] interview can give a deeper knowledge of attitudes as it allows us to probe, to follow-up and to check our perceptions with the interviewee in a way that other methods, particularly the questionnaire, cannot.

The interviews were conducted either individually or in pairs, in every case but one in

the office of the interviewee (or one of the interviewees)'; in the case of pairs, both

interviewees were from the same faculty or directorate. Interviewees were told about

the exact nature of the project (i.e., that their interview was to contribute to a

dissertation in fulfilment of the requirements for a Master's degree in African studies,

and that the subject of the dissertation was the 'commitment of the University of

Namibia to National Development'). The interviews ranged in duration from thirty

minutes to two hours.

The issues addressed in the interviews were as follows:

Relevance to national development needs in curriculum

Research and consultancy

Extension projects

Government-University links

Inter-university co-operation

Placement of graduates

These issues were chosen on the basis of the goals set forth in UNAM's First Five

Year Development Plan (Mshigeni et al, 1995). as well as the ways in which

' Because this was not a 'formal' research project, detailed discussion and comparison of the various social science research techniques will not be undertaken. To ignore it completely, however, would seem irresponsible; hence the brief discussion here.

The one exception to this was the interview with the dean of the Faculty of Law. which took place in a local restaurant.

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universities have been expected to contribute to development in other countries (see,

e.g., Coleman and Court, 1993). Several individuals were also singled out to provide

information on a specific issue; an example is UNAM's Pro vice-chancellor for

Administration and Finance, from whom I sought information about the proposed

funding formula for higher education. These interviews were also semi-structured,

and conformed to the criteria set out above.

A number of informal discussions also contributed invaluably to my

understanding of the issues at hand. Additionally, a wealth of material concerning

UNAM's role in national development and within the higher education sector

generally has been produced since independence by UNAM, the MEC, the

MHEVTST, and outside consultants. The most relevant of these documents, which

may be found in the bibliography, were reviewed.

A Personal Note

As noted above, the formulation of a vision for national development is a

continuously developing and ongoing process. Similarly, a university is a dynamic

institution characterised by the same individual and group relationships found in any

large organisation. To enter such an institution for a four-week period and come

away with a complete understanding of its commitment to a concept as broad as

national development would be an impossible task, and I do not claim to have such an

understanding. On the other hand, an outside researcher can often offer a perspective

not readily apparent to those entrenched in the system. Thus while the original

purpose of my visit to Namibia was to allow me to see a 'Development University in

practicelin the making', I have since come to see the process through which UNAM is

currently going as much less straightforward than that. This dissertation is the

product of that new understanding, and I hope it might be of value to those involved

in current debate on higher education in Namibia.

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DeatdDirector Interviewed

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

Number Interviewed

2

2

1

1

2

1

1

1

(I)*

1

1

1

2

1

17

in total)

I~tifution: Faeulrv, Centre, etc...

University of Namibia:

Centre for External Studies

- Faculty of Agriculture and Natural Resources

- Faculty of Economics and Management Science

- Faculty of Education

- Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences

- Faculty of Law

- Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences

- Faculty of Science

Justice Training Centre

Pro Vice-Chancellor (Adrnin & Finance)

Regstrar (Acting)

Vice-chancellor

Ministry of Higher Education, Vocational Training, Science and Technology (MHEVTST):

Directorate of Senior SecondaryIHigher Education and Human Resource Development Planning

Directorate of Vocational Education and Training

Total

* Duplicate from Faculty of Law

gat ion

WindhoeW Oshakati Windhoek

Windhoek

Windhoek

Windhoek

Windhoek

Oshakati

Windhoek

Windhoek

Windhoek

Windhoek

Windhoek

Windhoek

Windhoek

(not included

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Furthermore, within any dynamic system there are tensions and personal

sensitivities about which an outsider must be aware. The great majority of people

whom I interviewed at in Namibia were frank and open in sharing information and

their attitudes with me; this candour was greatly appreciated. In order not to betray

that openness, I will not use any personal names here; nor will I use titles that might

identify an individual in cases in which to do so would betray a confidence.

An Overview The dissertation is divided into the following five chapters:

Chapter One

The first chapter will deal with the notion of the Development University, first

looking at the origin of the concept, then moving on to the ways in which universities

have been expected to contribute to development in Africa and the problems

associated with those expectations. Although the Development University tradition

has at least three antecedents - the land-grant university tradition in the United States;

the role of the first national Japanese university in the modernisation of the late

nineteenth century; and the Soviet Union's use of universities, both for manpower

requirements and for socialisation - only the African tradition will be treated here.

Finally, a new perspective on developmentalism within African universities will be

suggested, within which the traditional notions of relevance, autonomy, and academic

freedom must be re-examined.

Chapter Two

Namibia will be situated within the context set forth in Chapter One.

Although in many ways Namibia resembles other African countries in its experience

of and need for university education, it is also unique in several ways. These include

a longer than average period of colonial rule, and the particularly repressive nature of

the period; a very small and geographically uneven population, including a relatively

high percentage of whites; a lingering South African influence, both economically and

in less visible ways like the high proportion of Namibians still being educated in

South Africa; and the absence of a large-scale World Bank programme in the country,

among others.

Because part of UNAM's commitment to national development includes a

commitment to learn from the experience of other countries, the ways in which

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Namibia does and does not resemble her neighbours hold important lessons for the

path UNAM will (and should) follow.

Chapter Three

This chapter and the next will be the products of the Namibian research. This

chapter will examine the formulation of the 'vision' of UNAM's role in national

development. Although the dissertation is not directly concerned with defining the

ambiguous, and therefore problematic, term 'development', it will be necessary to

address the issue in this chapter, if for no other reason than to point out what the term

does and does not mean in the Namibian context. Primarily, however, this chapter

will trace the vision through four documents: the 1991 Report of the Presidential

Commission on Higher Education (Turner, 1991). 1993's Toward Educutiorl for A11

(MEC, 1993) - a 'Development Brief which followed the 1990 World Conference on

Education for All, UNAM's Five Yeur Development Plan for 1995-1999 (Mshigeni et

al, 1995), and a draft of the forthcoming white paper on higher education

(MHEVTST, 1997).

Furthermore, a model will be proposed, describing the three-part process of

consensus building, decision making, and administration involved in the formulation

and implementation of the vision. The 'trickle-down' effect described in the model

serves to explain in part the discrepancy between the eloquently stated vision and

what is actually happening in the ordinary university activities of teaching and

research.

Chapter Four

This chapter will be concerned with the practical implications of UNAM's

commitment to national development. In particular, the focus will be on UNAM's

development goals, on the new and restructured Agriculture and Science Faculties,

and on UNAM's two major outreach projects - the Centre for External Studies and

the Northern Project. It is also in this chapter that the 'hard data' on student enrolment

trends and projections, and staff development (presented in Appendix 1V) will be

considered.

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Chapter Five

The final chapter will analyse the picture presented in Chapters Three and

Four, within the context laid out in the first two chapters. As noted above, it was

suggested in the course of my research that this dissertation could be a useful

contribution to the debate on higher education in Namibia, which is still very much in

progress. In this chapter, 1 will attempt to make such a contribution in two ways: first,

relevant concerns expressed by UNAM staff in interviews will be discussed; and

second, in making some recommendations, 1 will draw on the new perspective on

university developmentalism presented in the first chapter.

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CHAFI'ER ONE

'Can Africa afford, for the time being, universities at all - in the academics' sense of an institution committed, at least in part, to the pursuit of learning for its own sake?'

- Peter Marris, 1967: 7

Introduction

In the 1990s, it is said, there is a 'crisis' in higher education throughout the

world, and this crisis is thought to be particularly acute in African universities. The

World Bank, in its 1994 report Higher Education: The Lessons oj'Exprrience, defines

the crisis largely as a financial one. Although it is certainly the case that many

universities - and particularly those in Africa - do indeed face a financial crisis, the

problems facing the higher education sector in Africa cannot be expressed, explained,

or solved simply in terms of finance. Rather, the deeply rooted problems found at

many African universities - and most specifically the crisis in quality -stem from the

tensions inherent in the contradiction between the expectations placed upon

universities by certain constituencies, both inside and outside the university

community itself. Universities are expected to be relevant to specific national

development needs, and to concurrently achieve the international standards of

excellence characterising the traditional conception of the university as a 'centre of

academic learning' (Lauglo, 1984: 78-9). Significantly, these standards of excellence

continue to define universities in the popular imagination, and do in fact characterise

some northern universities, particularly the ones on which most African universities

were modelled. The parallel expectations have their origin in the post-independence

period of the 1960s and 1970s. and although approaches to higher education policy

and participants in the debate have changed over the past thirty years, the insistence

that the activities of African universities be directly relevant to development has

remained. A new perspective, therefore, is needed: a perspective from which

relevance is not seen as inimical to quality; from which autonomy is not synonymous

with the 'ivory tower'; from which the traditional, 'ordinary' university activities of

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teaching and research are not neglected, but are rather seen as the keys to a

university's contribution to development. In this chapter then, we will begin by

looking at the origin of the Development University in Africa, then move on to a brief

presentation of the salient features of the current crisis, before finally raising a number

of key issues which have yet to be adequately discussed or resolved in African

universities

At the outset, it is important to note the diversity of universities in Africa.

UNAM is an African university, but it is no more or less representative of 'the

African University' than the University of Edinburgh is of 'the European University'

or Stanford of 'the North American University'. In fact, as Coombe (I991 : 7) points

out,

Phrases like 'the African university' are wide o f the mark. Diversity reigns in the African university community, as i n African political economies, and what is needed are complex rather than unitary models o f African university systems and their roles in the rehahilitation, reconstruction and development of their communities, countries and region.

With that in mind, it is nevertheless the case that many African universities share

similar features, and face similar problems, because of their colonial origins and the

similar demands made on them. What is proposed here is not a 'unitary model', but

rather a call for a rethinking of some of the fundamental issues concerning higher

education policy, and particularly universities. in many African countries.

The Colonial Model and the Development University

In the interest of brevity, a detailed history of the Development University, its

antecedents and variations, cannot be undertaken here. It must suffice to say, then,

that the Development University, in its hypothetical, 'pure' form, differs in every

important way from the English model that was exported from the imperial centre to

its African colonies during the colonial period and just after their independence.3

Ashby (1964: 5-6) defines three essential characteristics of the English universities of

the 1 960s:

( i ) they are all self-governing corporations, jealously guarding their autonomy;

( i i ) they all aspire to grant degrees o f similar standard on curricula o f similar content

--

' The francophone and lusophone traditions, although sharing some characteristics with the British system, also exhihit important differences with regard to government-university relationships, university governance, admissions policies. etcetera. Because UNAM is, via South Africa, part of the Br~t ish inheritance, i t is with that system that we are most concerned here.

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(i i i) they all make similar assumptions about the function o f higher education in British s t ~ i e t y

The assumptions referred to in the third of these characteristics have essentially to do

with the elite nature of university education in 1960s Britain and the assumption that

universities are not only responsible for the dissemination of knowledge, but also for a

sort of moral education - the creation of 'men of character' (Ashby 1964: 9-12) in the

gendered language of the 1960s.

Among the leading advocates of a radical shift away from such a model was

Tanzania's President Nyerere. At the inauguration of the University of East Africa, of

which he was the first chancellor, Nyerere expressed his vision for the new

University:

IT]he University has not been established purely for prestige purposes. I t has a very definite role to play in development in this area, and to do this effectively, i t must be in. and of, the community i t has been established to serve ... East Africa cannot spend millions o f pounds, cannot beg and borrow for the University, unless i t plays a full and active part in the urgent tasks of East Africa. Even i f i t were desirable, we are t m poor in money and educated man-power to support an ivory tower existence for an intellectunl Clite (Nyerere. 1964: 310).

Three years later, in 1967, Nyerere expanded this vision in 'Education for self-

reliance', in which he put forth a narrowly utilitarian view of all post-primary

education in Tanzania.

Nyerere's sentiments were echoed at the 1972 Workshop of the Association of

African Universities (AAU), the subject of which was 'Creating the African

University'. This Workshop effectively marked the beginning of the Development

University era, in many ways '[setting] the agenda for African universities in

following two decades' (Ajayi et. al, 1996: 112). The picture painted by the

participants in the AAU Workshop is a familiar one. In his Report on the Workshop,

Yesufu (1973: 42) argues that,

lT]he emergcnt African university must, henceforth, be much more than an institution for teaching, research and dissemination of higher learning. I t n~ust be accountable to. and serve, the vast majority of thc people who live i n rural areas.

Here, the traditional conceptions of research and dissemination of knowledge are

turned on their heads, with the claim that in Africa these must be 'practical',

'fundamental', and 'applied'. Furthermore, Yesufu (1973:42-4) adds 'provision of

intellectual leadership', 'manpower development', 'promoting social and economic

modernization', and 'promoting inter-continental and international understanding' to

the more traditional functions of the university. In contrast to the metropolitan model,

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then, the Development University starts from the needs of society, usually as defined

by the state.

In some cases, this has meant that many of the academic staff in African

universities have come to conceive of their role very differently than do their

governments, or indeed than do their students. Although the interests of government

and society concerning universities are quite different, both of their interests may

clash at some point with those of many academics:

Though government sees the university primarily as an investment for the nation, and the student sees it as an investment for himself and his family, they are hoth judging its value by the profitable skills it trains (Marris. 1967: 6).

Academics, because of their extensive educational background, are accustomed to

feeling part of an international body of scholars, bound together, not by national

borders, but by the pursuit of knowledge. Many, therefore, 'resent the students'

career mindedness and government's preoccupation with useful manpower as

insensitivity to the meaning of scholarship' (Marris, 1967: 6).

In the face of the rhetoric, expectations and conflicting ideologies however,

the question remains as to whether any significant changes were brought about in

universities themselves as a result of the new ways in which their role was

understood. The case of the University of Dar es Salaam in Tanzania will be

instructive here. Conceived as a 'transplant' of the University of London in 1961, it

merged with Makerere and Nairobi (in Uganda and Kenya respectively) in 1963 to

form the University of East Africa. In these early years, the University College in Dar

es Salaam was staffed largely by expatriates, and both the structure and the

curriculum closely resembled that of the metropolitan universities. However, as the

vision of Tanzania's new socialist regime under Nyerere became more focused

through The Arusha Declaration, 'Education for Self-Reliance', and other policy

directives, the University had to respond. Although the process of change may have

begun at a conference held soon after the issuing of The Arusha Declaration in 1967,

the most visible changes took place after the University College was transformed into

the national University of Dar es Salaam in 1970.

Kimambo (1984: 62-69) divides the reshaping of the University of Dar es

Salaam after 1970 into structural (or administrative) and academic changes. On the

structural side, a more decentralised administration, a governing council which

included representatives from all stakeholders (including students, workers,

Parliament, etc.), and significant input from students, are all said to differentiate the

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University of Dar es Salaam from the colonial model. The significant changes on the

academic side included:

Curriculum review, leading to the introduction of 'a common course which would make all students aware of the developmental needs of the country' (Kimambo, 1984: 66). This course was the seed for the Institute of Development Studies which was introduced in 1973. Further changes included the reorganisation of courses in the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, the Faculty of Science, and the Agriculture programme, all of which were designed to produce the 'right' kind of students, as determined by estimates of national manpower needs.

'Applied research' -The attempt to produce research relevant to national needs took two forms: the definition of a university-wide research strategy and the creation of speciulised research institutions. Kimambo (1984: 68) indicates that the first of these was difficult to achieve, particularly in the absence of a well-defined national research strategy. The research institutes - specifically the Economic Research Bureau and the Bureau of Resources Assessment and Land Use Planning (BRALUP) - may have been more effective because of their clearly defined missions to 'do urgently needed developmental research projects required by Government ministries and parastatal organisations' (Kimambo, 1984: 68).

Finally, staff development and a decreased reliance on expatriate staff was deemed essential if the University was to contribute to national development. That university staff be sympathetic to the goals and principles of socialist Tanzania was seen as particularly important.

A further significant reform followed the Musoma Resolution of 1974. The

abolition of direct entry meant that students leaving secondary schools had to work

for a minimum of two years before entering university. Although some have seen the

changes instituted at the University of Dar es Salaam in the 1970s as progress, it

would be overstating the case to declare the transformation process a success. The

Musotnu Resolution itself was issued in 1974 because the government was unhappy

with the implementation of 'Education for Self-Reliance'. Later, the University failed

to reach its staff development goals in 1980, and was further forced to abandon the

delayed entry programme for science subjects, and for women in all disciplines

(Kimambo, 1984: 70).

The University of Dar es Salaam should be recognised as what it is: one

university in Africa, within a specific political, economic and social context. Keeping

in mind the diversity among countries and institutions however, the Tanzanian

experience does seem to reflect that of other countries, and particularly that of the

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former British colonies. The establishment of national universities in the 1970s. the

near obsession with manpower planning, and the general tightening of government

control over higher education4 led to increased expectations of that which universities

could and should achieve in terms of relevance (Ajayi et. al., 1996: 113). Looking

back at the Rockefeller Foundation's University Development Programme in Africa,

Coleman and Court (1993: 299) point out the four main ways in which universities

involved in the programme have attempted to, as they put it, 'enhance social

relevance':

(i) an expanded role in extension work and community service;

( i i ) a more considerable contribution to national policy;

( i i i ) effective fulfilment of manpower planning, particularly with regard to scientific and vocational careers;

(iv) the furtherance of national integration.

Surely these are worthwhile pursuits, and many universities have no doubt made

significant contributions to the improvement of community life, effective policy-

making, the much-needed training of high-level manpower, etc. But in the current

crisis, the ability of many African universities to provide even the minimum levels of

instruction and research is in jeopardy.

The Crisis

Few can doubt that African universities face serious problems in the 1990s.

The most apparent manifestations of the crisis may be divided into two equally

important parts: ( I ) the deteriorating physical facilities in many universities and the

resultant decline in standard of life for students and staff, and (2) the diminished

morale of academic staff.

It is on the first of these that the World Bank's 1994 report is focused. Despite

more than US$5.7 billion in lending to the higher education sector by the World Bank

alone since 1963, of which USS5.I billion has come since 1980 (World Bank 1994:

' There have several mtxlels proposed, which attempt to characterise the relationship between government and university. In their analysis of government-university relationships in Africa. Asia, and Latin America. Neave and van Vught (1994) distinguish hetween the 'state control' and 'state supervision' mcdels, the former characterised by a far lesser degree of university autonomy than the latter. In the four African case studies in the hook (Ghana. Kenya. Tanzania, and Uganda). the relationships are all defined either as 'state control' or as just recently having hegun a transition away liom such a model (Uganda).

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79), universities still face 'overcrowding, deteriorating physical facilities, and lack of

resources for nonsalary expenditures such as textbooks, educational materials,

laboratory consumabies, and maintenance' (World Bank 1994: 2). Clearly, the

improvement of the conditions described here must be a priority; indeed, the appalling

conditions in which many African students live are a threat to their physical and

mental health, to say nothing of the difficulties of learning in such an environment.

Second, the morale of African academics is described in many places as

having hit rock bottom. As Coombe (1991: 3) points out in a report to two leading

donors to higher education, despite the inconceivably low (to northern academics)

salaries at many African universities, the most common complaints from staff are not

about pay, but about 'their inability to do the job they are trained to do, hired to do

and want to do.' 'Of all the casualties of the years of austerity in the African

universities,' he says, 'the damage to morale is the most serious.' The most obvious

consequence of the darnage to morale is the inability of universities to retain staff.

But those staff who do stay suffer not only from the knowledge that their colleagues

have abandoned them for greener pastures, but also that they themselves are unlikely

either to advance in their field or to be rewarded for their loyalty to their institution

and to their country.

In the face of unavailable or inadequate facilities, desperate living conditions,

and rock bottom morale, the fact that so many universities continue to provide

education and service must be seen as remarkable in itself. Despite problems,

universities remain a valuable and valued African resource. On this point too,

Coornbe ( 199 1 : I) comments perceptively:

Despite the hrains that have drained out of them over the years, and compromises they have heen compelled to make with their own standards, the universities remain great national storehouses of trained, informed, inquiring and critical intellects, and the indispensable means of replenishing national talent. They have considerable reserves of leadership and commitment on which to draw. Impoverished, frustrated, dilapidated and overcrowded as they may he, they have no substitutes.

It would be overly optimistic, however, to assume that the universities will continue

indefinitely to overcome or push aside every obstacle, financial or otherwise, placed

in their path. The resuscitation of these valuable resources and the repayment of the

human cost over the years of decline will require nothing less than a full

reconsideration of the appropriate functions of universities in Africa.

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A New Approach to 'Developmentalism'

The Challenge

It seems clear that, despite the active and continuous debate about African

universities dating from the 1960s, fundamental problems have yet to be resolved, and

to return again to my original point, this cannot be seen solely, or even primarily, as

the result of a lack, or mismanagement, of financing. Rather, as three leading African

educationists have recently pointed out, most of the fundamental issues raised in the

debate of the 1960s and '70s on the developmental role of universities have yet to be

resolved (Ajayi et al 1996: 200).

In part, these fundamental issues - and particularly the fundamental issue of

how universities can best contribute to development and even whether or not they

should do so at all - have not been satisfactorily resolved because the arguments on

both sides of the debate are so compelling. Indeed, it seems clear that:

lagically and morally i t is difficult to challenge the proposition that such an extraordinarily high-cost structure, emhracing and concentrating most of the scientific and intellectual resources of the country, should he made maximally relevant to the practical problems of development (Coleman 1984: 84)

However, the case for African universities as 'centres of academic excellence' seems

equally incontrovertible:

Africa - perhaps more than other places - also needs institutions for 'unapplied' teaching, learning, reflection and research. l3is is hecause of the powerful and continuing sense of technological, intellectual and cultural dependence upon the West and the consequent need to think out its own course and model of development (Court 1995: 1 1 1).

Surely, a new approach to developmentalism must begin with the goal of reconciling

these differing - though, in my view, not incompatible -perspectives.

Perhaps the greatest difference between the African university community and

its northern observers is that, as a senior faculty member at UNAM points out, the

latter do not have to live with the consequences of their recommendations. This often

translates into long-term proposals, which are perhaps well founded, but of little help

to those involved in the immediate situation. And as African leaders have always

been quick to remind us (Nyerere 1964: 310). although the long run is important,

there is also the present to consider. In responding to the call to be more

developmental, however, many universities have become the victims of their own

noble intentions, sacrificing quality for relevance, because they have failed to

adequately address the issues involved in such a shift. The result has been that that

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universities' contributions to development have not been constant, systematic, or

efficient, but haphazard and sporadic.

The message is clear: a permanent, yet flexible, solution is needed; but long-

term planning must not preclude immediate action.

The New Approach

As noted, the first step in a new approach to 'developmentalism' must be to

address unresolved issues affecting universities and the abolition of the perceived

trade-off between international standards of quality on the one hand, and relevance on

the other. The fundamental issues that must be addressed are as follows:

autonomy, accountability, and academic freedom

'Development' as an appropriate mission for African universities

the designation of certain subjects as inherently 'developmental'

institution building as 'development'

Although I will return to these issues in the final chapter, they are briefly discussed

here in order that they may be kept in mind in the Namibian case study.

Autonomv, Accountabilitv and Academic Freedom

Much has been written about the twin concepts of autonomy and academic

freedom in recent years. Autonomy 'protects the corporate rights of self-regulation

which the state confers upon the university as an institution in the law setting it up',

while academic freedom 'refers to the immunities which the university teacher as a

professional needs to enjoy in order to function effectively' (Ajayi et al, 1996: 167).

The prevailing sense out of Africa seems to be that, although autonomy and academic

freedom are essential to the effective functioning of universities - including both

academic and administrative functions - they are only viable when paired with

accountability (Mamdani, 1993; Ajayi et al, 1996). The question 'accountability to

whom?' yields a virtual shopping list of responses: to the rural population, to the

market, to the private sector, to the state, to donors, to 'national needs', to students, to

'stakeholders'. In most cases, however, because it is the state that is the major or sole

source of funds to universities in the vast majority of African countries, it is to the

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state - and, via the state, to the community at large - to which universities are

expected to be accountable.

I t is indeed difficult to question the logic that, where nearly all university

funding comes from a particular source, the university must be accountable to and

serve the needs o f that source. This is particularly true in Africa, where

proportionally, universities demand more state resources than in other places. I n such

a case, it is clear that '[alutonomy can, therefore, not connote independence o f the

state and is best understood in the spirit o f partnership with the state' (Ajayi et al,

1996: 167). Equally, however, the state must recognise that, although the university

is a powerful resource, it can function best with less, rather than more direct

intervention by the state. The partnership o f autonomy must be a true partnership,

between equals. I n this regard, the World Bank (1994) is quite right to recommend

diversification o f funding, because even a small degree o f externally funded

programmes can give a university that sense o f independence vital t o a healthy

relationship with government. Similarly, although academic freedom must be

guarded within appropriate limits, it cannot mean that academic staff are free to do

whatever they choose. I t must not be seen as either a 'licence for incompetence' or a

'protection from quality control' (de Moor, 1993 cit. Ajayi et al, 1996: 168).

Which 'Development'? The Mission Reconsidered

As noted in the Introduction, 'development' is a term which is not easily

defined. This chapter has focused on the problems created when universities and their

communities fail to define the mission beyond citing the importance o f 'serving o f

national development needs' o r similar vague language. Thus, although contributing

to 'development' may not, in one situation, be too broad a goal for universities to

achieve, because o f the varying definitions o f the term across countries, institutions,

and even individuals, the term is often effectively useless. I t is essential therefore, for

universities to embark upon an explicit redefinition o f their missions. J F A Ajayi, L

H Goma, and G Ampah Johnson (1996: 189-90). three senior and distinguished

academics, all with extensive experience of African universities, point out that

universities must not continue to equate their missions with that o f the state, but must

recognise that their area o f specialisation is higher education. They go on to urge that

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the emphasis in African universities now be put on three key elements: qualify,

creativity, and relevance.

The key to their recommendation, of course, is not simply pointing out that

these are important goals, but in offering new definitions of them. Qualify must be

pursued at all levels of the university, by students, teachers and administrators, who

'must aim at the highest level they are capable of; they must not be afraid of the

elitism of merit.' Creativify must be in evidence in all university activities - research,

training, thinking, problem solving - and is defined as 'an aspect of quality that goes

beyond the established routine, to get at the solution that truly works.' Perhaps most

significantly, relevance must be measured 'not by how much the teacher and the

student share in the life of the village, but how much their ideas, the knowledge and

skills they produce, can transform the life of the village' (Ajayi et al, 1996: 190).

As opposed to the vague notion of 'development' then, these three goals (or

suitable variants in differing circumstances) provide a concrete starting point from

which African universities can construct a revised vision of their missions.

Developmental Subiects?

In the formulation of higher education policy, it has become quite usual to

define certain subjects as more inherently 'developmental' than others. In Namibia as

elsewhere the subjects most often identified as developmental per se are those in the

scientific disciplines. However, as King (1985: 14) points out, the ordinary teaching

of science subjects in universities is unlikely to be any more relevant to development

than that of other subjects. In fact, at undergraduate level, students are much more

likely to face development issues in humanities and social science courses than in the

hard sciences. Furthermore:

[Thel developmental applications of science and technology are dependent on post- university government policy decisions .... Apart therefore from the institutional or laculty development of science at the university itself, the development role of science will be conditional upon the science and technology policy of the stale, as will a developmental role for the social sciences .... Most universities have their work cut out in communicating effectively a rapidly changing corpus of knowledge in ways that make students reflective and critical about developments in literature or science (King 1985: 14-5).

It seems that many higher education policy makers assume that creating a faculty of

science, agriculture or medicine, or an increase in funding to an existing faculty (at

the expense of some other programme) will translate directly into applied science,

improvements in local farming skills and techniques, or great strides in community

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medicine. This is simply not the case, and those espousing this 'Development

University fallacy' are just as wrong today as the proponents of the 'Vocational

School fallacy' (Foster, 1963) were over three decades ago. This is a key issue for the

current debate in Namibia, and we will return to it in the following chapters.

Institution Buildina as Develooment

Often forgotten in the rush to exploit the developmental possibilities of

African universities is the essential first stage - that of nurturing the university as an

autonomous, high quality and high-capacity institution of higher learning.

Commentators have long recognised the necessity of the two-stage approach to social

relevance: 'The long road to education for development passes through the

development of educational institutions. No one has yet found a short cut or detour'

(Thompson 1971: 403 cit. Coleman and Court 1993: 306). Institution building itself

can take many forms - indeed, entire volumes have been written on the subject -but

among the essential activities involved in such a process for universities are: the

development of local staff; the divestiture of colonial legacy in the form of curriculum

reforms and restructuring of the administration; and provision of effective teaching

and promotion of research (Coleman and Court 1993: 307). And although many

universities continue to face problems in one or more of these areas, the very fact of

their continued existence and the maintenance of a degree of public legitimacy in the

face of unstable and sometimes violent political climates and the crisis described

above may be seen as a triumph in many cases. Any social relevance achieved in

such institutions a mere thirty five years (and in some cases, far less) after their

creation must be seen in this context as mere icing on a hot-out-of-the-oven and as yet

unsettled cake.

There is, it seems, also a historical precedent for this two-stage process of

development. Although the land-grant college tradition of the United States has not

figured in this discussion, it is often cited as an appropriate model for African

universities and offered as proof of the possibility of universities (or colleges)

contributing effectively to national development. However, as Johnson (1981: 341

cit. Coleman and Court 1993: 306) points out, the effective contribution of the land-

grant colleges to development did not begin until more than fifty years after they were

established:

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The colleges' own development had to precede their impact on national development. That is an oversight often found among admirers in the developing countries who are looking for importable ready-made lime-defying insmmenls of progress.

Because of the necessity of developing universities as institutions before expecting

them to contribute to national development, one of the major donors to higher

education in developing countries - the Rockefeller Foundation - has been guided by

the belief that institution building is a worthwhile goal in and of itself, and must be

accorded the highest priority (Coleman and Court, 1993). Unfortunately, many

governments, and some academics, have not seen things this way, and continue to

insist on immediate returns from - it must be said - a substantial investment.

All of this is not to say, of course, that nothing in the way of relevance can be

accomplished now, or that nothing should be accomplished now. Indeed, there is no

reason why, as research is being encouraged, that research cannot or should not be

relevant to national needs. But to return to the point made earlier, African universities

will best serve their communities in both the short and long ternls by focusing clearly

on what they do best -the provision of challenging, stimulating teaching, and

competent and thorough research, neither of which can be achieved without effective

institution building. Because of ;he University of Namibia is still only in the fifth

year of its present incarnation, this is a particularly important point to keep in mind

when examining UNAM's commitment to national development.

In the second chapter we will look at Namibia's unique characteristics, which

determine the ways in which UNAM does and does not fit into the Development

University tradition.

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CHAITER TWO

UNAM IN THE AFRICAN CONTEXT

Between the time of Namibian independence in 19905, and 1993, when

UNAM was officially founded, there was a period of transition, during which time the

'university component' of the apartheid-era Academy for Tertiary Education was

transformed into the national University of Namibia. Referring to the former

institution, an observer of the transition notes:

It is an 'open secret' that at the time the academic creature was horn prematurely and apparently paranoid, of poor apartheid parentage in 1980, it was suspected ... to have k e n hrought forth as a hastard and rival institution to the then already four-year-old Lusaka-hased United Nations Institute for Namibia (UNIN) .... Against the hackground of a backward 'old era' there emerged a growing feeling that the old institution was not adequately equipped to effectively deal with the overall higher educational needs of independent Namibia (Forsythe. 1992).

Closer examination of this brief observation will reveal that contained within it are the

essential aspects of Namibia's unique political, cultural and educational history which

both connect and distinguish the country from her African neighbours. In particular,

the protracted and repressive period of colonial rule by the illegal South African

apartheid regime has had severe and lasting consequences, which necessitate specific

remedies, and which distinguish Namibia from her African neighbours from the

perspective of higher education. Equally relevant to the current situation, however, are

the educational institutions and initiatives - of which UNIN is one example - built and

undertaken by SWAP0 (the current ruling party) with the support of the international

community during the colonial period. The recognition of these realities is essential

given the vice-chancellor's and others' (see, e.g. Dodds, 1996) explicit commitment to

learn from the experience of other countries in the region as part of their commitment

to institution building at UNAM, and indeed as part of their larger commitment to

national development.

This purpose of this chapter then, is to examine the brief history of higher

education in Namibia, with specific reference to the inheritance of the Academy, and

' In 1989, following more than 100 years of colonial rule - first by Germany until 1920, and then by South Africa - Namibia (formerly known by its colonisers as South West Africa) came under a transitional United Nations administration, which was in place until elections were held in the following year. On 21 March 1990, Namihia became a sovereign republic.

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to highlight those aspects of Namibia's political, cultural, and demographic realities

with specific ramifications for higher education, and UNAM in particular. The

purpose in doing so is twofold: first, to point out those areas where UNAM fits into

the context described in Chapter One, and can therefore benefit from the experience of

other African universities; and second, to underline the uniqueness of Namibia's higher

educational needs in many spheres, and the consequent need for UNAM to find its

own path in such areas. More specific comparison between the current state of

UNAM's financial, structural, and human resources and the more general situation

described in the previous chapter will also be made.

Legacies of the Apartheid Era

Because of the pervasive and complex nature of the apartheid system of rule in

Namibia, it is often neither possible nor desirable to make clear distinctions with

regard to the debilitating effects the colonial period had on the country. For the

purposes of this chapter, however, it will be useful (and, I think, possible) to

distinguish between those aspects of the colonial experience specific to higher

education, and those more general factors which, although they may fall outside the

specific realm of higher education, are nevertheless crucial to an understanding of that

which Namibia needs and expects of its university.

General legacies

As we are often reminded in policy documents and UNAM publications, the

University does not operate in a vacuum, but as part of the larger Namibian education

system. There are two principal reasons for this: first, the outputs of the school

system (graduating pupils) are received as input (incoming students) by UNAM;

second, UNAM is the main source of secondary-level teachers and, with the four

Colleges of Education, major supplier of teacher training in Namibia. This means that

the efficiency and quality of the schools have an impact on the quality of learning at

UNAM and vice-versa. Furthermore, because many current teachers were trained

under the former regime and because many of UNAM's current crop of students

began their education under that regime, the pre-independence schooling options for

Namibians continue to impact upon UNAM today.

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For non-white Namibian in the pre-independence period, there were

essentially four pre-tertiary educational paths, two for those remaining in the country,

and two for the thousands of Namibians who fled the country beginning in the early

Domestic

I. State schools - The state schools were dominated by the racist and sexist curriculum of the South African Bantu education syllabus. By the late 980s. the black schools of war-torn northern Namibia had become both physical and ideological battlegrounds, with South African soldiers acting as teachers, and the schools acting as focal points for pro- independence student groups (WUS, 1987). Thus, although both sides reluctantly continued to participate in the school system, it is doubtful that much learning could take place in such an environment (Dept. of National Education, 1987).

2. Domestic alternatives - These consisted primarily of two secondary schools, Martin Luther King High School and the Gibeon School, which did not adopt the official South African syllabus, choosing instead to teach that of Botswana, Lesotho and Swaziland (Ellis, 1984: 40).

International

3. Refugee settlements - As the number of Namibian children in SWAPO's refugee camps in Angola and Zambia increased rapidly in the early 1970s. SWAPO developed its own curriculum, which was taught to school-age children in the camps 'basic education schools'. Despite major shortages of teachers, materials and classrooms, the SWAPO schools provided accessible education of standards 'vastly overshadowing those attained during decades of South African occupation' (Ndiluia, 1988: 401).

4. Secondary/tertiary/university education abroad - By 1984, approximately 5,000 Namibian had pursued post-basic education abroad, either in other African countries, in Europe or North America, or in the secondary schools maintained by SWAPO on the Isle of Youth in Cuba. The desperately low quality of the state schools was revealed as many Namibians educated to secondary level at home were unable to cope with university or even secondary education abroad without remedial or 'bridging' courses (Ellis, 1984: 58).

The implications of this situation for the University of Namibia are clear. First, the

educational background of UNAM's potential students, at independence and for the

foreseeable future until the last vestiges of the old system are erased, will be of

extremely mixed quality, and many of them will be unable to undertake university-

level study without remedial work. Second, with some exceptions, very few

Namibians were able to obtain undergraduate degrees (much less higher

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qualifications) during the colonial period; this means that UNAM will have to rely

heavily on expatriate staff.

A second legacy of the apartheid era with implications for UNAM can only be

described as the attempted, and partially successful, eradication of Namibian culture.

In 1977, the authors of a UNESCO study on the effects of apartheid on education and

culture in Namibia noted:

Traditional culture has been broken, first by the onslaught of settlement and occupation. and second by the creation of a fictitious tribalism to holster the structure of the Bantustans. There is no firm base for the development of a modern culture for either blacks or whites (O'Callaghan. 1977: 159).

Efforts have been made since that time to encourage an arts culture in Namibia, and it

seems that these have been particularly successful in the visual arts. Additionally, the

struggle for independence has in some ways been translated into cultural symbols.

However, more than seven years after independence, it is still difficult to find more

than a small handful of novels by Namibian authors, or recordings by Namibian

musicians. Of all the consequences of the apartheid era, the suppression of cultural

life may prove to be the most difficult to reverse.

In this context, 'national development' must mean something significantly

broader than economic development. From this perspective, 'national development'

may, in the first instance, have to be understood literally - developing the diverse and

divided peoples of Namibia into a nation. And in this respect, UNAM's Centre for

Visual and Performing Arts may be of even greater importance to 'national

development' than its faculties of science or agriculture.

A final point to consider is Namibia's unique demography. Map 1 on the

following page reveals the highly uneven nature of Namibia's small population of

approximately 1.8 nlillion. So although Windhoek, in the centre of the country, may

be the administrative capital and, as UNAM's home, the academic centre, the northern

region is home to the majority of Namibia's people. In effect, and as a result of the

uneven development of the apartheid era, the veterinary control checkpoint dividing

the northern regions from the rest of the country - the 'red line' as it is popularly

known - marks the boundary between two worlds. Indeed, it is difficult to believe

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ones of NAMIBIA

FAO ,OOq - - 2 SADC md FAOfGIEWS I997b

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that southern Namibia, with the wide open spaces of white-owned farms, and the well

paved, tree-lined streets of Windhoek could be found on the same continent - much

less in the same country as the crowded and poverty stricken towns of Owamboland.

The north-south divide clearly facilitated the efforts of the colonial regime to deny

basic social services to the majority non-white population, and inevitably this

situation has persisted to a certain degree since independence. Not surprisingly, the

major population centres of the north also coincide with Namibia's main crop zones

(Map II), making it unlikely that the demographic picture will change in the

foreseeable future.

For UNAM, Namibia's unique demographic situation means facing the

challenge of providing higher education to the highly populated northern population - which has been particularly deprived of a decent basic education - from a remote,

sparsely populated centre. This is an issue which, as we will see in Chapters three and

four, has provoked much discussion at UNAM, and is reflected in the mission of the

University.

Higher Education - UNlN and the Academy

Although the broader political, cultural and educational contexts are relevant

to UNAM's relative place in the regional context, the legacy of UNAM's antecedent

institution, the Academy for Tertiary Education, is clearly the single most important

factor in any consideration of the University's current situation. Indeed, the reversal

of the Academy's many shortcomings has been widely perceived to be the most

important task facing UNAM since its inception in 1993.

As noted, the Academy was created by the South African regime in 1980, as a

not-so-well-veiled response to the United Nations Institute for Namibia (UNIN),

which had been set up four years earlier by the United Nations, in close partnership

with SWAPO, in Lusaka, Zambia (Cohen, 1994: 171). Arguably, UNIN was the

single most important institution in preparing Namibians for independence.

According to its charter, the Institute was explicitly committed to this goal (UNIN,

1985: 20), and as Paul Lusaka, the president of the United Nations Council for

Namibia, stated in his address to UNINS first graduating class:

The work of the Institute is in the field of education but i t must, of necessity, support our overall objective, which is to enable the people of Namibia to exercise their right to self-determination, freedom and independence in a united Namibia (United Nations, 1980: 4).

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This goal was reflected in UNIN's English medium of instruction, and its courses in

Development Studies and Management, ~ a ~ i s t r a t e i Training, Teacher

TraininglUpgrading, and Secretarial Training, all specifically tailored to meet the

needs of an independent Namibia. Although UNIN experienced some problems -

most notably because many of its students were ill-equipped to benefit from post-

secondary education - it nevertheless 'played a crucial role in the development of

Namibia's human resources, providing the largest pool of educated Namibians from

any single institution' - providing training for roughly 1,427 students between 1976

and 1989 (Cohen. 1994: 284).

In stark contrast to this model, when the Academy for Tertiary education was

established in 1980, it was in association with the University of South Africa (UNISA)

which associated it in the perception of many Namibians with the ideology of their

South African colonisers. In contrast to UNIN, the Academy '[played] an important

role in the South African educational strategy for Namibia' (Ellis, 1984: 44). First, the

Academy was meant to attract those who might otherwise have left the country to

pursue the SWAP0 and UN-sponsored programmes of UNIN. Second, many

graduates of the Academy came to form a small, well-paid black middle class - made

up of teachers, low level government officials, and managers - from whom the

colonial regime sought collaboration.

The Afrikaans medium of instruction at the Academy - which persisted until

1988 when student protests led to a decision in favour of English - also perpetuated

the negative image. The junior academics from the South African Afrikaans-medium

universities who made up many of the Academy's academic staff further contributed to

both the political suspicions about the Academy, and the highly uneven quality of the

tuition offered. Harlech-Jones (I 989: 5-6) points out several other factors contributing

to the negative public image of the Academy on the eve of independence in 1989: the

confusing structure of the cade em^^; the lack of any previous universities in Namibia,

resulting in a lack of understanding on the part of the public about the typical

operation of such an institution; the lack of any clear national priorities or

development plans; and the low proportion of indigenous staff.

"rcm 1985, the Academy consisted of three components: the University of Namihia. the Technikon Namihia, and the College for Out of School Training. As Harlech-Jones (1989: 6) points out, the pcxxly delined distinctions hetween the three led to confusion: 'How can a university offer courses in hairdressing? How can a university register students who have not matriculated?'

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In addition to the Academy's negative image, independent Namibia also

inherited an institution whose capacity was grossly inadequate to the meet both its

needs and the growing demand for higher education. The student body exhibited gross

imbalances with respect to geographic regions and ethnic groups, and the faculty and

course structures were heavily skewed toward teacher training, nursing and the

humanities and social sciences, with extremely low enrolment in the Faculty of

Science (see Table 11; Mshigeni et al, 1995: 2-3).

TABLE I1 STUDENT ENROLMENT BY FACULTY DURING ACADEMY PERIOD (1989

ACADEMIC YEAR)

Humanities and Social Sciences Nursing and Medical Sciences Science

Economics and Management Science Education

143 446

UNAM in Crisis?

Total

As noted above, undoing the legacy of the Academy has been a high priority

since independence, and since that time, significant efforts have been made with

regard to the issues addressed above. In particular, the creation of national and

university development plans, clear distinctions between the Academy's component

parts, the rationalisation of course structures, a pro-active push toward the sciences,

efforts at increasing capacity, and a staff development programme have all figured

high on UNAM's list of priorities for its first five years. Inevitably, UNAM continues

to face problems of crowded classrooms in some areas, lack of space and funmng for

laboratories and materials, an over-reliance on expatriate staff, and a shortage in

student and staffhousing which could accurately be described as a crisis. Overall,

however - although there i? little hard data to compare - UNAM compares extremely

1342 Source: Mshigeni et a1 (1995), First Five-Year Developmenl Plan 1995-1999.

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favourably when compared with the dilapidated facilities and disenchanted academics

in other parts o f the continent. Indeed, UNAM's new campus, to which it moved in

1993, and staff morale appear excellent in comparison with many other universities.

One way in which UNAM does resemble other African universities, however,

i q in !ts relationship to government. Because o f the poor quality o f the institution

inherited at independence, coupled with the current government's extremely high

expectations with regard to the University's developmental role, U N A M currently

faces the dual development imperative o f increasing quality and relevance

si~nultaneously, which as noted in the previous chapter, can be problematic if not

impossible. Furthermore, as in many other countries, Namibia's head o f state is also

chancellor o f its university. I t would seem that this situation could be particularly

problematic when the ruling party is closely associated with a particular ethnic group,

as it is in Namibia. And although this situation may be acceptable at present, the

~'ormrirrl for dissatisfaction among other constituencies within the university

community is apparent. The maintenance of a separate identity for the University and

an inclusive process o f decision making are therefore essential if the university is to

maintain and improve its current level o f quality and efficiency.

I t is clear then, that although U N A M may resemble other African universities

with regard to a number o f issues with which it is confronted in the 1990s, it is also a

unique institution in a unique situation, and it must therefore chart its own course

towards both its own development and its contribution to national development. I t is

to the process o f developing the vision which has thus far informed that process in

Namibia that we turn our attention in Chapter Three.

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CHAPTER THREE

DEVELOPING THE VISION, OR, A VISION FOR DEVELOPMENT

Introduction

In the debate on education in Namibia since independence, and in the effort to

right the wrongs of the colonial period, perhaps nothing has been so emphasised as

the necessity of developing and maintaining a vision, along with the further

imperative of an inclusive process in the formulation and implementation of that

vision. Reflecting on the efforts to democratise decision-making processes during the

first five years of independence, the former Minister for Education and Culture (now

Minister for Higher Education, Vocational Training, Science and ~ e c h n o l o ~ ~ ' )

asserts:

In the view of senior ministry officials, the undoing of apartheid legacies in education requires a clear vision ahout the future, a consultative process to articulate such a vision. and a national consensus on the modalities of carrying such a vision forward (Angula and Lewis. 1997: 241).

As part of this process, a number of key documents have been produced by the

ministries, and by other governmental and associated bodies, which serve as

benchmarks, periodic manifestations of the ongoing process. UNAM has often been

involved in the process of formulating and articulating this vision for the nation and

for the education system as a whole, with itself at the apex. But as an autonomous

institution, it has also undergone its own process of consensus building and decision-

making in order to develop a vision specific to its own development, both as an

institution and as a contributor to national development. This is the dual development

imperative mentioned in the previous chapter. Here we have also another kind of dual

development, in which the development of a vision for national education is also a

vision for the role of education in national development, or education as national

development.

' As part of a restructuring of the cahinet. Namibia's Ministry of Education and Culture was divided in March 1995 to form the Ministry of Basic Education and Culture and the Ministry of Higher Education. Vocational Training. Science and Technology (MHEVTST). For diagrams of the structure of Namihia's education system and of the MHEVTST, see Appendix I.

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The vision of UNAM's role in national development has been expressed in

several different ways, and UNAM's place in the process of developing and

implementing the vision might be described in terms of four decreasing circles:

( i ) UNAM as a key player in the overarching plan for national development, as defined in the first National Development Plan (NDPI; Republic of Namibia, 1995);

( i i ) UNAM at the apex of the national education system, as the institution offering the most advanced level of education available in Namibia;

(iii) UNAM as part of Namibia's higher education sector, which maintains a partially distinct identity because of the splitting of the ministries;

(iv) UNAM as an autonomous institution, defining its own agenda within the context of (i), (ii) and (iii).

These distinctions are in some ways artificial, having more to do with the ways in

which the vision is expressed than with the vision itself; put differently, the

articulation of UNAM's role in national development depends in large part on the

ownership of the particular document being considered and may therefore appear

more or less important dependant upon context, while - in theory, at least - its

evolution within the larger vision is significantly more gradual. Still, although the

distinctions may be somewhat artificial, they will be useful in tracing the vision

through specific documents.

Reflecting the multi-tiered context within which UNAM's role is defined, this

chapter will trace the evolution of the vision of UNAM's role in national development

through four key documents, of which one deals with the entire national education

system, two with the higher education sector, and one specific to UNAM:

the 1991 Report of the Presidential Commission on Higher Education (Turner, 1991) Towurd Educarionji)r All ( 1993).

UNAM's Five Yeiir Developtnent Plan for 1995-1999,

and finally, a draft of the forthcoming white paper on Higher Education (MHEVTST, 1997).

The First National Development Plan (NDPI; Republic of Namibia, 1995) will not be

discussed in detail, but because its more general vision of national development is

intended to inform the sector- and institution-specific visions, it will be referred to in

the context of the other documents. Significantly, however, because NDPI was not

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finalised until 1995 (it was preceded by a three-year, Transitional National

Development Plan (TNDP)), the vision for education set forth there is informed to a

significant degree by the education-specific documents preceding it.

A Note on Process

As noted, an inclusive process of consultation and consensus building is

generally felt in Namibia to be an essential part of the process of developing and

maintaining a vision; this feeling is reflected in the four documents to be examined.

Each document states explicitly that it is the product of a larger process, and in the

case of the draft white paper, it is asserted that 'the process of preparing the White

Paper may be as important as its final text' (MHEVTST, 1997: vii). This point has

also been reiterated by senior UNAM administrators, who indicate the importance of

a forum held near the time of UNAM's founding with the purposes of developing the

role of planning and involving all stakeholders - including UNAM staff, and

representatives from both the public and private sectors. The vice-chancellor points

to two crucial functions of the forum and of continuing efforts to involve stakeholders

in university planning: first, the consultative process ensures that the University does

not work in a vacuum; and second, it brings staff closer together and creates a sense

of ownership.

This sense of 'owning the vision' is certainly essential if the vision is to be

carried through to practical completion. To paraphrase a more cynical observer at

UNAM, however, an excessive emphasis on inclusion in the debate on higher

education and national development has had the result that 'national development

never happens; it is only a question of which constituencies control the debate.' This

is almost certainly overstating the case - not least because there are considerably

more factors affecting 'development' than higher education. Nevertheless, there

clearly comes a time when the consultative process must come-at least temporarily-to

an end, and the process of decision-making and implementation must begin. As

Angula and Lewis (1997: 247) point out:

It has been found that participation cannot be open-ended. I t is essential to understand people's definition of the problem but leaders must propose a solution for them to react to ... A solulion cannot he found at a rally or in conferences ... It is possible lo consult and build consensus on the vision and on proposals for carrying that vision forward. An assessment of progress on initiatives is also possible through consultative modes. But identifying solutions and working out the practicalities. in Namibia's experience, are not possible through large-scale consullation.

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This has been recognised to a degree at UNAM, and as we will see in the following

chapter, there have already been significant efforts made to implement the vision

cultivated since independence.

Inevitably, however, there are discrepancies between the macro level of the

vision and the micro level of ordinary university activities. These can be ascribed in

part to the multiple filters -administrative, financial, and personal - through which the

vision must pass before reaching 'the ground'. The diagram on the following page

presents an idealised model of this process in five steps, from consensus building to

implementation:

First, consensus building requires a consultative process including all

stakeholders. In the case of UNAM, stakeholders include University staff,

both academic and administrative, students, potential students, and

representatives from ministries and from the private sector. This process will

build on earlier expressions of the vision, and input from an external consultant

might also be utilised.

After consensus has been reached on the vision, decisions on its practical

implications must be made by senior administrators. Appropriate solutions

must be identified in accordance with relevant constraints, including a suitable

time scale, and financial limitations. As noted, although this process should

build on the consensus reached through mass consultation, it must be a

separate process, and should involve co-operation between UNAM,

MHEVTST, and any other relevant ministries or funding bodies.

After identification of feasible solutions, the vision and its practical

implications must be articulated and disseminated as widely as possible,

either in the form of a document or through renewed consultation if additional

input from stakeholders is sought. On the diagram, V1, V2, VJ, etc. represent

the articulation of the vision, and each corresponds roughly to one of the

documents to be reviewed in the next section.

Following articulation of the vision, implementation takes place through the

administrative structures of UNAM and the relevant ministries, and could

include: appropriate redirection of financing; implementation of new courses,

programmes and curricula, or restructuring of existing ones; and

reconfiguration of administrative and academic staff structures.

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Implementation then requires adjustment in university activities on 'the ground'

-at the level of the individual teacher, researcher or student.

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, v, , , ... - .- - - i v* - .-..-............ + ; v3 " v4 vs b ; ; . b

I

I' I ' I ' I ' I \

I '\ ', '\ \ '-. ----_____--

B '', I

\ '\ v * v v v

UNIVERSITY ACTIVITIES: TEACHING, RESEARCH, CONSULTANCY, EXTENSION PROJECTS, ETC ...

udmmr.ttrufivr

Implem

structures.

zntntion

1 N.4hI und hlmr! rw stuff

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Finally, feedback is necessary at every level; to be effective, this must be

encouraged and internalised rather than simply accepted. Thus we come full

circle to the ongoing process of building consensus on the vision.

This is, of course, an idealised model, and there are several factors - including an

insufficiently inclusive consultative process, lack of finance, inefficient or ineffective

administrative structures, and apathy or disenchantment on the part of some members

of staff - which could disrupt the relatively smooth route from vision to

implementation described here. Even where the influence of these individual factors

seems inconsequential when viewed from micro level, the total effect can be

substantial as problems are compounded at each level.

Perhaps the most insuperable problem other universities have faced when

attempting to produce change is conservatism on the part of academic staff. Although

many academics prefer to view themselves as 'liberal' or even 'radical' (Kerr. 1994).

and though many undoubtedly recognise the need for general change, they are less

likely to recognise that need within their own department, their own lectures, or their

own research. And one might speculate that this would be increasingly the case

among more senior-and therefore more influential-faculty members, who have

longstanding reputations to protect.

Finally, in spite of efforts to gather and utilise input from as many stakeholders

as possible, in the end each statement of the vision will be controlled to a substantial

degree by the commission, ministry, or institution responsible for it. As we trace the

vision through these key documents then, ownership will be a crucial factor in the way

in which UNAM and its role in national development are portrayed.

Higher Education in Namibia: Report of A Presidential Commission (Turner, 1991)

The Presidential Commission on Higher Education was appointed in 1991

under the chairmanship of Professor John Turner of the University of Manchester.

The Commission was international in composition, and its terms of reference are

identified in the box on the following page. Because of the Commission's broad

remit, and the urgent need to establish a new system of higher education suited to the

needs of an independent Namibia, the Report gives considerable attention to

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procedural and practical matters in its recommendations. Certainly the most

important recommendation made by the Commission for the future University of

TERMS OF REFERENCE FOR THE PRESIDENTIAL COMMISSION ON

HIGHER EDUCATION (1 991)

(a) establish the needs, demands and scope of higher education [HE];

(b) determine the organization and structure of the HE system, including the nature and location of HE institutions;

(c) analyse the funding of HE, both recurrent and capital; (d) determine the qualifications for admission to and the

duration of the various HE courses; (e) define the control of HE and its relationship with the

(f) determine the range and level of programmes in the HE

(g) determine the extent of the HE system in the medium and long term, in relation to national human resource needs

(h) consider the financial support of students at Namibian and foreign HE institutions; and

(I) analyse the promotion, conduct, management and financing of the nation's research.

2. To report to the President on its findings and advise the Government on the cost, management, organization and administration of higher education.

3. To make comprehensive recommendations to the President on the matters referred to in paragraph 1.

ource: Turner (1991) cation in Namibia: Repwr of a Presidential Commission

Namibia - then still part of the Academy - was that the Academy be dissolved and

replaced by a National University of Namibia and a Polytechnic of Namibia.

The further recommendation that the new National University occupy the

campus of the Windhoek College of Education - the teacher training college for

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whites under the colonial administration -rather than remain on the grounds of the

former Academy, has had two significant consequences. First, the location of all of

UNAM's primary faculties and programmes in the capital, rather than in the more

populous northern regions, means that for the foreseeable future Windhoek will

remain the focal point for research and higher learning in the country. With regard to

the possibility of decentralisation, the Commission concedes that it 'has strong appeal.

It links with ideas of outreach and extension, avoidance of ivory-towerism, and

promoting developmental growth points in the smaller centres of the country' (Turner,

1991: 74). However, the lack of appropriate facilities in other pans of the country and

a desire for the University to develop 'a coherent personality' proved more compelling

than the appeal of decentralisation:

For one thing, the institution will he fairly small for many years. and to fragment it through deliherate decentralisation would ensure that as a functioning entity each part would he even smaller. For anolher, the National University has an exceptionally important role to play in stimulating the intellectual culture of the nation, and it is no1 self-evident that this would he done best lhrough a process of distributing single bcul~ies in different parts of the country (Turner, 1991: 74).

Second, although the facilities of the College of Education were not clearly superior to

those of the Academy, the powerful symbolism of the National University taking over

an institution that represented the white privilege of the colonial period cannot be

overlooked. The Windhoek College of Education operated significantly below its

capacity during apartheid, despite the desperate need for teachers in other parts of the

country. Thus, as symbols of the new administration's commitment to stamping out

the legacies of apartheid and building the higher education system afresh, the

dissolution of the Academy and the image of a new, integrated National University

occupying the formerly white institution are powerful indeed.

The Commission's principal contribution at the vision level, however, comes in

its discussions of university governance, access and entry to UNAM, and its

recommendations regarding UNAM's faculties and programmes. In particular, careful

consideration is given to academic freedom, which is seen as essential for effective

teaching, learning, research and publication, but also 'inseparable from obligations' of

teachers to help students to learn, and of researchers to undertake responsible research

and to 'tolerate and even stimulate dissent' and debate (Turner, 1991: 76-7). Although

much space is dedicated to the role of administrative bodies and senior positions

within UNAM, the general picture of autonomy that emerges from the Report is of a

partnership between university and state, as discussed in Chapter One.

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I n keeping with the general theme o f addressing the legacies o f apartheid, the

Report concludes that because so few Namibians received a decent primary or

secondary education under apartheid, entry to the university can not be reserved to

those who had passed in the normal way through the school system. Accordingly.

intensive 'access courses' are recommended in all subject areas for the following

twelve to eighteen months, while the need for 'bridging courses' in science is seen as

necessary for many years to come (Turner, 1991: 87-9).

With regard to specific U N A M faculties, the Commission recommends the

establishment o f the following:

Faculty o f Arts

Faculty o f Science

Faculty o f Social and Economic Studies

Faculty o f Education

Faculty o f Medical and Health Sciences

Faculty o f Agriculture

With several exceptions, these correspond to the current U N A M Faculty structure.'

Since its publication, the Report has played a key role in the development o f a

vision for higher education in Namibia; indeed, it is referred to in nearly every

subsequent document. The vision that emerges o f the university is on the whole

carefully considered and balances the need for long-term institutional development

with recognition o f the need for immediate action to reverse colonial legacies. And

although in many ways it would be impossible to conceive o f such a vision in the

absence o f the Development University tradition, in at least one passage the authors

flatly reject a purely functional view o f the University:

We reject any notion that the university is concerned merely with training individuals to do specific johs. Universities need to teach in such a way that the students in each particular discipline have an adequate grasp o f the theoretical concepts of the suhject to he ahle to solve new problems and adjust to new situations as these arise.. .. The time has gone i n virtually every area of work where one can assume that the skills and knowledge acquired during a first degree programme will he sufficient to guide the professional through his (a her entire working life (Turner, 1991: 93).

The proposed Faculty of Arts has hecome the Faculty o f Humanities and Social Sciences, and the Faculty o f Social and Economic Studies has hecome the Faculty o f Economics and Management Science. Additionally. a Faculty o f Law was established in 1994, and the Faculty o f Agriculture and Natural Resources came into k i n g in 1996. Faculties o f mining, engineering, medicine and veterinary sciences were not recommended and have not heen set up because o f the extremely high cost o f building and maintaining the necessary facilities for these disciplines and the relatively low prospective enrolment. Consequently, i t was deemed more appropriate to make provision for Namihians to he educated in these disciplines ahroad. (Turner. 1991: 103) See Appendix 111 for a diagram of UNAM's administrative structure.

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Toward Education for All: A Development Brief for Education, Culture and Training (MEC, 1993)

Unlike similar documents in some other countries, Toward Education for All - which followed the 1990 World Conference on Education for All in Jomtien,

Thailand - devotes significant space to higher education and to university education

in particular.' This reflects an inclusive and lifelong conception of Education for All

(EFA) as encompassing all levels of education, as opposed to the more narrow view

of EFA as provision of some minimum level of education for everyone.

Running throughout the brief are the four major goals of access, equity,

quality and democracy (MEC, 1993: 32-44). These are identified as the top priorities

at every level of the education system. Again, a recurring theme is the legacy of

apartheid, and the consequent need for 'multiple entry paths'to the University.

Additionally, and significantly, there is explicit recognition here of UNAM's potential

contribution to cultural development: 'Education beyond secondary school is intended

to develop skilled human resources for our society, but also to help develop our

culture, our artistic and musical skills' (MEC, 1993: 109).

It is perhaps not surprising in a document which is, in a sense, 'owned' by the

education system as a whole, that there should be particular emphasis here on

UNAM's responsibilities to other education sectors - specifically the development of

materials and curriculum, shaping of educational philosophy, and the training of

teachers. Further importance is attached to the indigenisation of university staff and

to developing an effective programme of distance education (for further discussion of

these priorities, see Chapter Four). The discussion of university governance draws

largely upon the 1991 Report, stressing in particular the necessity of openness in

university governance, and UNAM's responsibility for the dissemination of

knowledge to society at large. It further calls upon UNAM to be accountable to

ministries, learners, and academic and professional communities.

However, although Toward Education for All raises many of the key issues

facing the higher education in the early years of Namibia's independence - the

' Educutiotl for All in Botswana (1993), for example, is dedicated almost exclusively to what is called 'hasic educaticn'. And although much is said about the conuibution of education to Development. the dtzun~enl makes little if any reference to the National University, either its function within the education system as a whole, or orher possihle contributions lo Development.

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appropriate model for university-government relations, the debate over which

university programmes should be accorded the highest priority, the question of

responsibility for research - the document ultimately proposes more questions than

answers, offering only general recommendations to promote a 'continuing, open and

spirited debate' and to recognise that resources are limited and that therefore choices

will have to be made (MEC, 1993: 115). Nevertheless, Toward Education forAll

remains the strongest and most coherent statement on Namibian education to date,

and as such its influence continues to be felt at every level, including at UNAM.

First Five Year Development Plan 1995-1999 (Mshigeni et 81, 1995)

Like the other documents, the Development Plan is the product of a

consultative process, with the difference that it is concerned solely with UNAM and is

largely a distillation of detailed contributions from individual faculties and centres,

together with input from the 1994 Consultative Conference (Mshigeni et al. 1995).

Consequently, the Plan presents more specific and concrete data and plans for

UNAM's faculties, centres and programmes than the three other documents; we will

look more closely at some of these in Chapter Four.

At the broader level of the vision, the starting point is the University's mission

statement (see Appendix 11). The Plan places UNAM firmly within the Development

University tradition, pointing in its opening section to the potential contributions of

universities to national development (Mshigeni et al, 1995: 1-2). Specifically, the

scientific capabilities and contributions to economic growth of universities are

stressed, an emphasis which carries through the entire document:

Together with the student population (undergraduate and postgraduate), the lecturers and professors at the Universities constitute a powerful battalion of men and women who can help to: improve national. regional. international economic performance; alleviate and even eradicate disease. malnutrition. hunger and poverty; promote sustainahle development, management, and wise use of resources; and arrest the steepening curve of environmental degradation. the loss of biodiversity and vital genetic resources (Mshigeni et a4 1995: I ) .

The justification for the increased provision of resources for science and technology

education is twofold. On the one hand, as reflected in the above, there is the question

'What can science do for us? There is also however, a feeling that the historical

neglect of the scientific disciplines at the Academy and in the country more generally

needs to be redressed. This is reflected particularly in the mission of the Faculty of

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Science, part of which is to 'address the historical problems created by colonial

regimes' (Mshigeni et al. 1995: 26).

As might be expected in a document produced by UNAM, there is significant

importance attached to institutional development. Whereas the documents produced by

other constituencies tend to emphasise the responsibilities incumbent upon the

University, UNAM itself points to the necessity of developing new faculties and

programmes, strengthening existing ones, and staff development, which are essential if

the University is to achieve its ultimate goal of contributing effectively to national

development.

Finally, although UNAM's Centre for Visual and Performing Arts (CVPA)

continues to contribute to the development of an arts culture in the country, Toward

Educationfor All's strong endorsement of the importance of cultural development

seems unfortunately to have suffered a significant demotion in the context of the

vision set forth here.

Investing in People, Developing a Country: Higher Education for Development in Namibia - Preliminary Draft for Discussion (MHEVTST, 1997)

The white paper, which is expected to be published in late 1997 or early 1998,

will be the first major statement by the new Ministry of Higher Education, Vocational

Training, Science and Technology since the division of the Ministry of Education and

Culture in 1995. That split, and the placing of higher education, vocational training,

science and technology on equal footing at the titular level, seem to indicate that -at

least at the level of the vision - tertiary education will not be synonymous with

university education, as it has largely become in the international context.1°

There is a sense that one gets from discussing the forthcoming white paper

with representatives from UNAM and MHEVTST, that this could be a key document

for the future development of all higher education in Namibia. On the other hand,

lo In general, when most commentators, agencies and scholars speak of higher education in Ahica, they are rel'erring almost exclusively to universities. and not to the other, and mae numerous tertiary institutions in Africa. As King (1991: 267) puts it, most sowces

[usel tertiary, higher and university educalion as if they were the same thing. Thwe has accordingly been too little attention given to analysing change and development in the suh-university sector. The polytechnics and technical colleges, for example, tend not to he treated in a donor study of technical and vocational education, n a do they feature in most studies of higher education.

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there is a considerable amount of disagreement over the process of developing the

white paper, and if the final document is not based on true consensus, or does not take

divergent views into account, it will have minimal impact, and could lead to

ideological discord between the University and the government.

It should be emphasised that the document referred to here is a preliminary

draft for discussion, and not a policy statement as such - a 'green paper' in British

political parlance. This has both advantages and disadvantages for our purposes. On

the one hand, as it will no doubt appear considerably different in its published form, it

cannot be seen as a definitive statement, and therefore no firm conclusions can be

drawn from it; on the other, this preliminary draft lays out 'issues to address' -

unresolved issues or conflicts of opinion which will most likely be resolved or glossed

over in the final draft - which allow for a better understanding of the process at work

in the development of the white paper.

For UNAM, two of the more significant unresolved issues discussed in this

draft are (I ) national research policy and co-ordination, and (2) the 'northern question'

- the most appropriate means of providing higher education to the populous northern

region. On both of these issues, the predominant UNAM view seems to be at odds

with the MHEVTST view. With regard to the issue of research policy and co-

ordination, the draft white paper states:

While MHEVTST apparently envisions a [National Research) Council created hy and attached and accountable to the Ministry. UNAM proposes a high-status Council external to individual ministries.. .(MHEVTST, 1997: 58).

As for the northern question, UNAM is currently working toward establishing a

satellite campus in the northern town of Oshakati, while the alternate view sees a place

for a new university. possibly a University of Technology, in the north.

Like UNAM's Five Year Development Plan, this draft of the white paper is

largely a distillation of inputs from all corners of the higher education sector. As such,

the sections relevant to the University are essentially written by UNAM staff and thus

reflect for the most part that earlier document. There are, however, some new inputs

to the white paper, including the options set forth in the 'Distance and Open Learning'

section - which will be discussed in the next chapter - and the section on UNAM

Costs and Finance.

One of the distinguishing characteristics of Namibia when compared to many

other African countries is that it has no significant, long-term World Bank programme

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(Williams, 1995). Somewhat surprisingly then, many of the Bank's recommendations

from its 1994 repon on Higher Education seem to have been taken on board in the

UNAM Costs and Finance section of this draft. The Bank's proposals of cost-sharing

with students, diversification of inputs and institutions, and redefining the role of

government in higher education in particular receive prominence (MHEVTST. 1997:

24-5). The observation of one senior UNAM figure that the World Bank's advice - regardless of its consequences -can be 'very seductive' to governments and

universities looking to save money, seems to be borne out here. Finally, and

regrettably, the previously mentioned demotion of cultural development as a priority

for higher education in Namibia is compounded almost to the point of extinction in

this draft of the white paper.

Thus although the documents reviewed here have clearly built upon one

another, there has nevertheless been a noticeable shift since independence to a more

utilitarian view of higher education and of the University in particular. It should be

ernphasised that this is not a sea change; but rather a more gradual shift. On the

whole, the carefully considered balance of the earlier documents is less present in the

later ones. Specifically, the apparent adoption of the World Bank's line in the current

draft of the white paper brings up the very real danger of losing sight of the important

distinction between an inclusive concept of national development and a much

narrower view of development as economic growth. The question remains however:

How does this vision affect what is happening on 'the ground? It appears that the

forthcoming white paper will raise many of the major implementation issues facing

UNAM at present. In the following chapter, we will examine some of the more

tangible changes that have already taken place, and look in more detail at the northern

question and other challenges for the future.

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CHAPTER FOUR

IMPLEMENTING THE VISION: NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT AT UNAM

Up to now, we have been concerned primarily with placing the University of

Namibia in context - first in the context of the Development University tradition, then

within Namibia's unique political, economic and educational context, and finally

within the vision for national development as it has evolved in Namibia since

independence. We have seen that the University has made an explicit commitment to

contribute to national development, but the question remains of how that commitment

plays out in practice. Significantly, Namibia's unique colonial history leaves UNAM

with a difficult dual development imperative - the need for institution building

coupled with the commitment to national development. The importance and difficulty

of 'bringing life to the mission' cannot therefore be underestimated, and this is

recognised by the UNAM community:

The magnitude of this (ask is enonnous, and, subsequently. is the responsibility taken by the University community to serve the Namibian citizens and develop the nation through education, teaching, learning and research at tertiary level in cogeration with all constituency groups in the educational arena. Obviously many more challenges lie ahead as we move into the next millennium (UNAM. 1996h: 58).

As we have seen in Chapters Two and Three, undoing the legacies of apartheid has

been a major theme in Namibia's vision of national development. At UNAM, this has

led to changes in faculties and programmes, with a strong push toward the sciences

and the challenge of providing education to Namibia's scattered population through

outreach programmes. In this chapter, we will look at the changes brought about as a

result of this focus in the past five years, as well as those changes which are currently

underway or planned for the future. Specifically, we will look first at UNAM's

development goals, then at the University's new and restructured faculties - particularly the Faculty of Agriculture and Natural Resources and the Faculty of

Science - and finally at UNAM's two major outreach projects -the Centre for

External Studies (CES) and the Northern Project.

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Development Goals

Just as development cannot happen without a clearly defined vision, it equally

cannot happen without effective implementation of that vision, and implementation in

turn requires clear goals. The following goals, which have been identified by UNAM

in the Five Year Developtnenr Plan (Mshigeni et al, 1995: 67-72) and in other

documents (see, e.g. 1996b: 12-43), include both institutional development and

national development, reflecting the dual development imperative. We will look

briefly at each of these - indicating that which has already been achieved, as well as

future prospects - before considering more closely the changes in UNAM's faculties

and programmes.

Improving University governance

The major changes to UNAM's administration include the addition of the two

Pro-Vice Chancellors (one for academic affairs and one for administration and

finance, see Appendix 111). and the appointment of a strategic planner and an

international relations officer. Future goals include improving information base and

flow through technological upgrading, training of administrative staff, along with

some decentralisation in order to 'short-circuit the bureaucracy' (UNAM, 1996b: 12-

5). It is unclear exactly what decentralisation might entail; one might speculate,

however, that as the regional centres (see 'Northern Project' discussion, below) grow

in stature, they would come to exercise a degree of autonomy in terms of their course

offerings and administration.

Promoting a balanced output

This goal is primarily aimed at redressing the colonial bias against science

subjects, and is thus closely linked to the changes in faculties and programmes to be

discussed in the next section. UNAM also points to the Centre for Public Service

Training (in the Faculty of Economics and Management Science) and the Justice

Training Centre (in the Faculty of Law) as examples of theu commitment to

upgrading the skills of those already in the workplace.

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Strengthening research and consultancy

UNAM's Multi-disciplinary Research Centre and Human Rights

Documentation Centre (within the Faculty of Law) have been instituted to undertake

applied research and to disseminate research findings to the public. However,

research efforts, particularly within the faculties, seem to have been hampered thus far

both by a lack of funding and a shortage of highly qualified academic staff. Again,

we will return to this issue in the following section, but it seems that improvements in

research and consultancy are intimately tied to issues of staff development and

attracting external funding, both of which are identified as separate goals (see below).

Strengthening staff development

As noted, staff development links with a number of other goals - including the

strengthening of research and the overarching goal of redressing historical inadequacy

in the tertiary level education of Namibians - and has thus been accorded high priority

at UNAM. The recently introduced staff development programme has the following

objectives (UNAM, 1996b: 26-7):

(i) To create a pool o f well qualified staff to man the various sectors of the university, hoth academic and administrative.

(ii) To correct the present historical imbalance in the University's staffing pattern hetween the races and sexes in the country.

(ii i) To urgently create. through further training. attachment, understudy. and other relevant experiences, opportunities for Namibians who have heen historically disadvantaged, to attain positions of responsibility, and influence, within the hierarchy of the University.

(iv) To identify potential academic staff from among the undergraduates of this or other Universities. as well as from other sectors in the country.

As can be seen from the table in Appendix IV. Section 4, there exist already a

significant number of staff development fellows. Futhermore, as at Dares Salaam and

elsewhere in the 1960s and 1970s, the expatriate staff taken on at UNAM since

independence have not been given permanent contracts, but 3-year appointments, with

the ultimate goal of replacing the majority of these foreign staff with qualified

Namibians. However, because UNAM has very few post-graduate programmes of its

own, most staff development fellows must pursue their studies outside the country.

This means that staff development is a time-consuming and extremely costly

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undertaking, and as a result UNAM will retain for the foreseeable future a significant

proportion of expatriate staff. "

Strengthening Institutional Linkages Regionally and World-wide

A number of regional and international linkages with foreign institutions are

already in place at UNAM. Some of these are the 'built-in' ties resulting from the

University's many expatriate staff, who retain formal or informal links with their

institutions at home. Other linkages include UNITWIN arrangements, a UNESCO-

sponsored chair in Democracy and Human Rights, in addition to faculty-specific

programmes. These latter include split-site master's programmes in the Humanities

and Economics faculties, in which students enrol both at UNAM and at northern

(usually European) universities. Such linkages are seen as essential in promoting

capacity building, enhancement of leadership qualities, and the establishment and

maintenance of academic credibility in the international academic community through

joint research and publication (UNAM, 1996b: 27-8).

Attracting Talented Staff

Attracting well-qualified and talented staff clearly links with issues of staff

development and indigenisation, but it is an area in which little progress has been

made. UNAM cites inadequate provision of funds for academic salaries as the reason

for their inability to attract the best and brightest Namibian candidates, who can earn

far more in other sectors, or in foreign universities. Indeed, a recent comparison

reveals that, on the whole, the average salaries offered by UNAM are between 19 and

30% lower than the market averages, the exact difference being determined by rank

(UNAM, 1996b: 33).

Strengthening the University Library and Student Support Services

For the UNAM library, the colonial legacy has presented yet another

challenge. By all accounts, the library inherited from the Academy was grossly

inadequate for the needs of a national university. In addition to acquiring many new

volumes, UNAM has made the enhancement of the library's technological capacity a

' I Although the tahle in Appendix IV, Section 4, appears to indicate a significant percentage of local staff, the percentage is reduced considerably when the staff of the Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences - who teach mainly ntm-degree level courses - are not considered.

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priority. To this end, the University is now connected to the Internet, enabling it to

access significant international resources previously unavailable.

Given Namibia's poor information resource base and unique demographic

picture, information technology will be crucial to effective provision of higher

education for all Namibians. And although it is important to recognise the folly in

visions of putting a laptop into the hands of every rural Namibian, it is easy to

imagine the role IT could play in linking UNAM's regional centres to the central

campus, and from there to the rest of the 'connected' world. This is the key to

UNAM's vision of their library as a national, as opposed to a university, resource. A

part of this vision is the Human Resources Development Project (UNAM, 1996b: 33-

4), through which the University seeks to train information professionals, trainers, as

well as general users - both within and outside the University community - in the use

of information resources.

Although student support services may seem quite distant from the outreach

programmes, contributions to national policy, and fulfilment of manpower planning

usually associated with universities and national development, the effective provision

of student support is essential if UNAM is to be accessible for all segments of

Namibian society. In particular, UNAM currently faces a severe shortage of

accommodation, unable to provide adequate housing for even 40% of those requesting

it (UNAM, 1996b: 35). Without immediate action, a crisis is foreseen for the next

academic year (1 99718). When we recognise that private accommodation in

Windhoek is clearly beyond the reach of most rural Namibians, we can see that a

long-term accommodation shortage could mean that poor students would be forced to

abandon their university places, turning UNAM into the sort of elite institution that it

is struggling so hard not to be.

Work experience, and career planning and placement are further areas of

student support with implications for UNAM's development goals. For above all else,

the major impact of any university is through its graduates. UNAM's Placement

Office has been created specifically to deal with the task of linking students with the

job market, as well as providing guidance to familiarise students with the world of

work.

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Finance and Diversifying Sources of Finance

As noted in Chapter One, for a university to participate as an equal partner in

its relationship with government, a degree of independence through external funding

is necessary. UNAM has recognised this, and although it currently receives the vast

majority - up to 97% including student bursaries (UNAM, 1996a: 40) -of its funding

from government, it is currently working to diversify sources of funding, including

cost sharing with students through a new loan scheme, being developed in partnership

with MHEVTST. Over the long term, UNAM proposes to increase the student

contribution to up to 25% of total revenue, with an additional 5% coming from the

private sector and contributions from international and external organisations

(UNAM, 1996b: 47-8). In order to achieve the desired end effectively and without

fostering Clitisrn however, the new scheme must include a grant component for the

poorest students, and its payback plan must be both realistic and enforceable.

UNAM, along with the rest of Namibia's higher education sector, is currently

moving away from negotiated budgets to formula funding. Although this move has

the advantage of rationalising and de-personalising the budget process, there is some

concern among UNAM staff that the move to formula funding may be premature. We

will return to this issue in the final chapter.

Faculties

None of UNAM's faculties has been left untouched by the process of change

that has taken place since independence. However, the limits of this project make a

detailed presentation of all the changes made to UNAM's faculties and programmes

since 1992 impossible. Furthermore, as noted in Chapter One, it is often neither

possible nor desirable to distinguish between institution building and national

development. While recognising that change has been pervasive, it will be necessary

for the purposes of this discussion to single out those faculties or programmes which

have experienced the most significant changes as a result of the vision expressed

since indel>endence, and which are thus seen by the UNAM communify as most

important to UNAM's revised mission.

As noted above, the primary goal of the faculty restructuring that has taken

place in the last five years is the promotion of certain subject areas which were

neglected during the Academy days. In a recent document, the promotion of the

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science subjects -both pure and applied - is identified as the key lo achieving a more

'balanced output':

U N A M is currently striving towards attaining a hetter balance of her gaduate outputs. by introducing new subject areas, by increasing enrolments in the natural sciences and technology related fields, including establishing a new Faculty of Agriculture and Natural Resources. We are expanding laboratory facilities in our Faculty of Science. and huilding new laboratories for the new Agriculture Faculty ( W A M . 1996h: 17).

In many ways, science and technology have become synonymous with 'development'

at UNAM, and although it is often stressed that the new focus should not come at the

expense of other subjects, inevitably this is sometimes the case. Likewise, by

focusing on the science faculties here, we run the risk of overemphasising that which

could be considered 'developmental' at the expense of the more ordinary, more

'traditional' university disciplines and activities - which, of course, also happen at

UNAM. I think, though, that this emphasis is justified by UNAM's own focus on the

sciences, which is reflected in the vision examined in the previous chapter. If there is

change in UNAM's other, more traditional programmes - and there clearly is - it is

for the most part aimed at doing what they have always done, but doing it better. By

contrast, what we will see here are those activities and programmes which have come

into being or been radically altered as a result of the new vision.

With that in mind, the emphasis on the promotion of science at UNAM is

twofold: on the one hand, the Faculty of Science is charged with creating a 'science

culture' in the country, while on the other, the newly created Faculty of Agriculture

and Natural Resources is concerned with teaching 'applied' science and undertaking

'applied' research. However, despite the substantial attention focused upon them, for a

number of reasons these faculties are struggling in their early years to make the

contribution that is expected of them.

Faculty of Science

The foregoing quote points to the University's efforts to establish new

laboratories for the Faculty of Science as part of the new focus on the sciences. The

expansion of laboratory space and acquisition of materials alone however, are not

sufficient to fulfil the Faculty's mission. An explicit part of that mission is to 'address

the historical problems created by colonial regimes, which did not encourage and

promote effective teaching of science and mathematics, especially in the formerly

disadvantaged communities' (Mshigeni et al, 1995: 26). A product of this legacy is

the shortage of suitable candidates for degree studies in the sciences. and this has

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resulted in first-year failure rates of 50% and more in some cases. The severity of the

problem - which can be seen in Table 111 - has made upgrading of knowledge and

skills at entry level the Faculty's highest priority at present.

As can be seen above, the difference between first and third-year enrolments is

significant, and is attributable almost exclusively to the high attrition rate (and not to

the rise in first-year enrolment figures, which, although real, has been far too small in

the years under consideration to explain the discrepancy seen here).

Efforts to retain students have taken three forms. First, as part of a University-

wide move from three to four-year courses in 1996 (after the graduation of most

students who had enrolled for the Academy's three-year courses), the Faculty of

Science added its extra year of instruction at the beginning of the four years.

effectively lowering admission requirements. It was hoped that this would both boost

enrolment in the Faculty - whose numbers still lag behind the more popular

Humanities Faculty (see Appendix IV) - and enable more students to complete their

courses. Second, an in-service teacher training programme has begun in conjunction

with the Faculty of Education to upgrade the teaching of science in schools, thereby

increasing the science knowledge and skills of students entering university. It will

clearly be some time before the effects of this project, for which European Union

funding is currently being sought, are felt at UNAM because of the time involved in

upgrading teacher's skills, as well as the time it will take for the students taught by the

newly upgraded teachers to reach university. Finally, the Faculty's dean believes that

many more students would ultimately complete their courses if they were allowed to

Total

124

92

32

Year l

Year 11

Year I11

Source: Mshigeni et al(1995), First Five Year Development Plan 1995-1999

Male

76

59

22

Female

48

33

10

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repeat a failed first year. The bursaries scheme has not allowed this in the past, but

negotiations are currently under way with MHEVTST to change the policy.

Faculty of Agriculture and Natural Resources

UNAM's Faculty of Agriculture and Natural Resources was set up in 1995196

with an initial intake of 28 students. As noted, the Faculty's mission is very different

from that of the Faculty of Science. Among its objectives are the provision of

'advisory, consultancy and extension services on the proper and sustainable use of

Namibia's agricultural and natural resources to the communities,' the catalysis of

'increased production and productivity of Namibia's natural resources through

integrated farming systems,' and the creation of 'meaningful employment in both the

public and private sector including self-employment' (UNAM, Faculty of Agriculture

and Natural Resources, 1997: 3). Whereas the Faculty of Science is concerned with

the creation of a 'science culture' and promoting the teaching of science subjects in

schools, this Faculty is much more clearly focused on the relevant application of

science and technology to promote sustainable growth. This may be seen as a

consequence of the Faculty's ties to the Ministry of Agriculture, from which it

receives the majority of its funding, and which is likely to absorb many of the

Faculty's graduates.

The emphasis on relevance is reflected in the Faculty's curriculum. In the

process of developing the curriculum, a workshop was held with participants from the

Ministry and the private sector. and traditional leaders, resulting in a curriculum that

focuses on country-specific issues. The Faculty's leadership also point to the

emphasis on 'hand-skills' in the curriculum, reflected in mandatory student field

attachments of six weeks at the end of the second year and eight weeks at the end of

the third, in addition to student participation in ministry-funded projects.

Some at UNAM have questioned the need for programmes in agriculture and

natural resources at undergraduate level, suggesting that postgraduate programmes in

these areas for science graduates might be more appropriate. Those within the

Agriculture Faculty argue that it is needed in order to provide a national vision and to

lead the country in promoting agricultural progress; this, they say, cannot be done in

Namibia's agricultural colleges, which are simply responsible for training technicians

at sub-degree level. The Faculty has been forced to recognise, however, the poor

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scientific knowledge of their incoming students, with the consequence that students

are normally required to complete a one-year bridging course in science at The

University Centre for Studies in Namibia (TUCSIN).

With the first intake of students only in their second year, it is of course far too

early to draw any conclusions about the Faculty's success in achieving its objectives.

However, the Faculty has experienced problems in attracting top students; despite the

initial intake of 28 students in the first year, only 15 of those passed into their second

year. This is attributed within the Faculty to the fact that until now, agriculture has

been seen in Namibia as a vocational, and not a degree, field. Efforts to attract quality

degree candidates include school visits, and negotiations with the private sector to

obtain scholarships. Additionally, although applied research is to be the major thrust

of the Faculty, research efforts have been hampered thus far by low staff numbers - only 10 including the dean at present - and lack of funding. Consequently, only one

project, the Zero Emissions Research Initiative (ZEN), is currently underway.

Finally, the involvement of the Ministry of Agriculture in funding, curriculum

development, and research initiatives in the Faculty of Agriculture and Natural

Resources clearly raises issues of institutional autonomy. The production of

independent and unbiased research and the maintenance of relations with the rest of

the UNAM community will necessitate a constant and vigilant pursuit of autonomy on

the part of the Faculty's leadership.

Outreach - Centre for External Studies (CES) and the 'Northern Project'

We have seen in Chapter Two that Namibia's unique demographics present

UNAM with the challenge of providing higher education to a scattered and uneven

population from a sparsely populated centre. UNAM is responding to that challenge

in two ways: first, by offering distance education through the Centre for External

Studies, and second, by establishing regional centres around the country. These

regional centres are currently little more than administrative outposts, their primary

purpose being to raise awareness about the University and provide information about

course offerings. Eventually, however, a network of 'satellite campuses' is

envisioned; the 'northern project' aims to establish the first of these in the northern

town of Oshakati.

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Centre for External Studies

The Academy's Department of Distance Education was an administrative unit

within the Registrar's office which offered UNISA's 'pure and old-fashioned

correspondence courses' (Dodds, 1996: 1). When the department was inherited by

UNAM, it was renamed the Centre for External Studies (CES), at which point it was

theoretically given academic status and responsibility. However, '[i]n practiy it has

largely continued to offer the old-style courses, all at pre-degree level' (Dodds,

1996: 1). With the appointment of a new director in 1996, this is beginning to change.

CES's Distance Education Department is currently launching a new B.A. (Nursing

Science), and proposals call for the development of further B.Ed., B.A., B.Sc.,

B.Admin.. and B.Econ. distance degree programmes.

Distance education has clear advantages for Namibia. In particular, because

UNAM will be unable to meet the growing demand for higher education at its

Windhoek campus, the development of high quality distance education courses could

compensate for UNAM's relatively low capacity. Furthermore, because many

Namibians were unable to obtain tertiary education during the colonial period. many

potential students are adults who are now unable or unwilling to bear the expense or

devote the full-time attention required by a residential degree programme; the

distance of UNAM's central campus from the populous northern regions compounds

this burden.

However, there are also problems associated with distance education in

Namibia. The small population means that economies of scale are difficult to come

by in the development of new programmes; CES's director estimates that there will be

no more than 2000 distance learners by the start of the next millennium - '2000 by

2000'.12 The high cost of developing new programmes for such a small group of

students means that programmes are developed according to national needs, and there

will therefore be little choice among courses for the foreseeable future. For example,

the new nursing curriculum has been developed for distance mode because the

northern hospitals could not afford to give up nurses to go to Windhoek to obtain a

degree. Second, the CES has only a skeleton staff, forcing it to rely on the goodwill

of regular academic staff from other faculties, who are not obligated contractually to

'I This figure includes those students enrolled in UNAM and Polytechnic programmes, which until 1996 were all operated 0111 of UNAM's CES.

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do any distance teaching. In many cases, this leads to the short-changing of distance

learners, who are presented with the 'challenge model' of distance education, with

little or no interaction or support from tutors. Given financial realities, CES will

remain primarily an administrative centre. So if any system of distance education is

to be effective at UNAM, individual faculties must take responsibility for the students

following courses in their disciplines.

The second component of CES is its Continuing Education Department. The

Department is charged with fulfilling UNAM's mission to disseminate knowledge

widely to all sectors of Namibian society. The department's major project to date has

been 'UNAM on Air', a weekly radio programme on 'topics of national and public

interest' (Dodds, 1996: 4). The department hopes to branch out in the near future,

providing 'lectures, debates, seminars and workshops' for the general public, both in

Windhoek and at UNAM's regional centres.

The Northern Project

The northern project links closely with CES's vision of outreach and distance

learning. As noted, UNAM's regional centre in Oshakati is to be transformed into a

satellite campus. Although conclusions about the centre's functions have not yet been

reached by the Northern Project Task Force, a recent 'vision paper' (Dodds, 1997: 1-4)

proposes the following activities:

Bridging and access courses - in English, maths and natural sciences, the purpose of which would be to prepare students for entry into UNAM's regular degree programmes;

External studies student support programmes - including two or three- times yearly week-long residential or vacation schools taught by Windhoek- based staff, in addition to more regular tutorial sessions with local tutors;

Flexible mixed-mode degree programmes - in which students would spend equal periods pursuing residential (either at Windhoek or Oshakati) and distance study;

Short specialised 'face-to-face' courses - these one-week intensive courses would be offered by all UNAM faculties, but especially by the 'key development faculties such as education, agriculture, medical and health science, and science' (Dodds, 1996: 3). It is further suggested that these might be combined with the External Studies support programmes;

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Continuing education activities - these are the seminars, workshops, and lectures referred to in the CES section, along with locally-broadcast radio programmes;

Full-time UNAM courses - the full-time Nursing programmes which are currently run in the Oshakati and Onandjokwe hospitals would be moved to the regional centre, with the possibility of further full-time courses being offered in the future.

The Oshakati campus would thus offer a flexible and mixed range of services,

reflecting the diverse educational needs of the northern population. As noted in the

previous chapter, however, this vision for the delivery of university education to the

north has a rival. The MHEVTST apparently envisions a new University of

Technology in the north. Little is known about this proposal, and there seems to be

little support for the idea outside of the Ministry. It remains to be seen whether the

conflicting visions are resolved. However, many at UNAM feel that such an

institution would attract more students away from the Windhoek-based Polytechnic of

Namibia than from UNAM.

We have seen in this chapter some of the ways in which UNAM's commitment

to national development have been translated into real changes to the University's

faculties and programmes. It should be clear that, with the University only in its fifth

post-Academy year, it is still far too early to draw conclusions with regard to the

success of these changes. At this stage it is perhaps easier to say what national

development does not mean at UNAM. For example, it does not mean - as at Dares

Salaam - an Institute of Development Studies; neither does it mean a sort of

developmental 'holy spirit' meant to inform every lecture and every assignment. To

the extent that it is possible to judge at this point, the principal definition of national

development seems to be the undoing of colonial legacies. As we have seen, this has

primarily meant ( I ) an increased focus on the sciences, and (2) attempts to expand the

provision of higher education to Namibia's scattered population. However, as can be

seen from the statistics in Appendix IV, Section 1, the number of first year enrolments

in the science faculties has still not caught up with that in the other disciplines. As we

have seen, the real problem is not in attracting students, but in retaining them. Thus

while the number of first-year enrolments in the Faculty of Science may compare

favourably with that in the Humanities and Social Sciences. the total enrolment

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figures for 1997 (Appendix IV, Section 2). and the number of degrees and diplomas

conferred for the 1995 academic year (Appendix IV, Section 3) reveal the result of the

Science Faculty's high failure rates.

Importantly, there also seems to be recognition at UNAM of the importance of

institutional development; to the extent that the University is obliged to produce

inttnrdiiite results, that pressure comes largely from outside the University

community. This is not to say that the process of change has been without

controversy, however. Clearly, no such process can be unproblematic, and there are

those at UNAM who feel that much has been left out of the debate on higher

education in Namibia. It is to these concerns that we turn our attention in the final

chapter.

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CHAPTER FIVE

As noted at the outset, it was suggested in the course of my research that this

dissertation could contribute to the debate on higher education in Namibia, which is

still very much in progress. The recent formation of the MHEVTST, and the

forthcoming white paper mark a significant rethinking in the administration of, and

vision for Namibia's higher education sector. It seems, therefore, that any effective

contribution an outside observer could make would ( I ) address unresolved or

controversial issues identified in the latest draft of the white paper, and (2) raise issues

which have either been ignored or inadequately dealt with thus far. Furthermore, in

order that the contribution be maximally relevant, it will also be important to take into

account concerns raised by stakeholders themselves, from inside the ongoing debate.

To these ends, I will do the following in this final chapter: first, raise staff concerns

based on the interviews conducted at UNAM; and second, make a number

observations, drawing particularly on the context and perspective set forth in Chapters

One and Two.

Staff Concerns

To ask UNAM's academic staff for their thoughts either on the white paper or

on national development more generally, is somewhat akin to opening a floodgate - it r

produces a virtual torrent of opinions, concerns and recommendations. We have

already noted the divergence of views on the northern project, but while UNAM and

MHEVTST seem clearly divided on that issue, others are less clear-cut. Four points

in particular, stand out as especially pertinent: the first of these represents

dissatisfaction with the way in which the debate on the white paper has been

conducted, the second and third have to do with more specific issues identified in the

draft of the white paper itself, while the fourth is an observation, which was never

discussed explicitly in interviews, but was implicit in the comments of many

interviewees.

First, several senior UNAM figures expressed concern that the debate on

national development in Namibia has been too simplistic, that important voices have

been left out of the debate, and that the resulting vision has not taken into account

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what the future society of Namibia will look like. Two examples will illustrate this

point. As noted in Chapter Two, Namibia has a small but ethnically diverse

population. During the colonial period, the South African regime sought not only to

divide white from non-white, but also to destroy any sense. of unity among non-whites

through the apartheid policy of separate development. And although the struggle

against apartheid did become a unifying force in many ways, inevitably there were

also divisions in the movement. Furthermore, the post-independence SWAP0

government - which is widely associated with the Owambo, Namibia's largest ethnic

group - has not always been sensitive to local concerns; the recent Okavango delta

controversy involving the Himba in northern Namibia is but one example of this.

Given this lack of unity, there is concern on the part of some UNAM staff that the

public debate has focused too much on 'national development' and too little on the

development of Namibia as a nation. The former, it is thought, is impossible without

the latter.

A second and somewhat related example was pointed out by a senior member

of staff in the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences. It has to do with tourism.

Recent figures have shown that tourism is becoming one of Namibia's leading

industries, and has already surpassed manufacturing in income (Cablevision, 1996).

Furthermore. the government is actively encouraging tourism, particularly by

Europeans and North Americans in the most profitable sectors. The potential for

Namibia's previously disadvantaged communities to profit from the tourism trade is

therefore enormous. Despite this, little attention has been given to the training of

Namibians for employment in this sector. Such training would seem especially

important given Namibia's diverse ethnic groups. Although evidence is only

anecdotal on this point, there seems to be a danger that some of Namibia's formerly

disadvantaged groups could lose out to the country's large white population in

obtaining jobs in the tourist industry, because of generally lower levels of education

and international experience among now-whites. And though the desire on the part of

white tourists to 'feel at home' wherever they go in the world may signal racism - conscious or sub-conscious -on their part, the need to cater for the cultural demands

of foreign tourists is also a consequence of Namibia's desire to develop the upmarket

tourism industry, and that requires training.

A second area of concern for UNAM staff is related to the funding formula

being developed by UNAM and MHEVTST. On this issue, the University and the

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Ministry agree on the desirability of moving 'away from annual negotiated budgets to

a rational formula approach within the framework of long term financial planning'

(UNAM, 1996b: 48). The funding formula would be applicable across the higher

education sector, and would encourage adjustments in student intake in various

disciplines based on 'the human resource needs of the nation' (UNAM, 1996b: 49).

Although formula funding does have clear advantages (and although its proponents

insist the system will be flexible), some UNAM staff have expressed concern that it

may be too early in UNAM's development as an institution to introduce what they see

as a less tractable system. In particular, the dean of the Faculty of Law (and former

vice-chancellor of the University of Zimbabwe) points out that in the early years of a

university's development, a disproportionate amount of money must be spent -

especially on staff development - in order to achieve a certain level of quality. This

level must be achieved before locking into formula funding, which is designed to

produce slower growth over a long period. Others, too, have expressed concern that

UNAM has not yet 'plateaued' in terms of quality.

The third area of concern expressed by UNAM staff has to do with the control

of research policy in the country. As noted in Chapter Three. UNAM and MHEVTST

have presented different proposals for the creation of a Research Council. The

Council would possess a wide range of functions, but in general would be responsible

for defining national research priorities and co-ordinating research across institutions.

Such a council is important in Namibia ( I ) because the research tradition in the

country is underdeveloped, with much of the research carried out by visiting

international students, scholars and scientists, and (2) because research into specific

areas by government ministries and departments are not generally linked in any way, - hampering sharing of data and co-operation (UNAM, 1996b: 53). We noted in

Chapter Three that the chief difference between the two proposals arises from the

question of ownership:

While MHEVTST apparently envisions a Council created hy and attached and accountable to the Ministry. UNAM proposes a high-status Council external to individual ministries ... (MHEVTST. 1997: 58).

Clearly, this is an issue that links with issues of autonomy and academic freedom.

UNAM's proposal of an independent body - made up of professional researchers and

administrators along with policy makers and representatives from the public and

private sectors - would seem to safeguard institutional autonomy and academic

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freedom of researchers, while maintaining relevance through links with various

sectors of society. It is possible, however, that the call for an independent Research

Council on the part of UNAM's senior staff is driven at least in part by a simple

desire to keep control of research policy out of the hands of MHEVTST. Given the

generally difficult relationship between university and ministry, this must be seen as a

possibility.

This brings up a final point. We have repeatedly noted Namibia's unique

dernographics, and particularly its small population. Indeed, this is perhaps

Namibia's niost immediately obvious characteristic to a foreign visitor. Windhoek is

home to approximately 150,000 people, making it the size of a largish North

American or European town, but only a small fraction the size of most of the world's

capital cities. One result of this is the personal and informal nature of many

relationships which in other places would be formal or even non-existent. Again and

again, when asked about consultancy or contributions to policy making, UNAM staff

would indicate informal visits by former students (now working in the private sector

or the ministries), but few formal or official links. Where the personal relationship is

a good or friendly one then, this situation has clear benefits in terms of efficiency.

Where the relationship is antagonistic, however, it can become an obstacle to co-

operation and, in extreme cases, lead to a complete breakdown of communication

between institutions. Several UNAM staff indicated that personal antagonisms have

led at times to a lack of communication between the University and MHEVTST. As

relationships between institutions become more complex then, and in order to

facilitate communication in some current situations, it may be necessary to formalise

some links which have hitherto been informal. As we have noted, the positive

characteristic of the inpending funding formula is the replacement of face-to-face

negotiation with a more objective approach.

Conclusions

In Chapter One, we looked at the evolution of the notion that universities in

Africa must be particularly relevant to the societies in which they operate and of

which they are a part. We noted that many African universities share similar

characteristics and face similar issues and problems because of their common origins,

the metropolitan models on which they are based. We also noted however, the

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diversity among African universities. In the following chapters we looked at UNAM.

one African university, and we have seen that it is indeed like its neighbours in some

ways; but it is also unique because o f Namibia's history and its current political,

cultural and educational context. Perhaps the most accurate point that can be made

about UNAM's development - including the commitment to national development -

is that it is an institution which is still very much in transition; the same is true of

higher education policy in Namibia more generally. As such it is difficult to draw

firm conclusions.

However, given what we have said earlier about the future o f African

universities requiring a new approach to university developmentalism and the need to

address unresolved issues, several key points can be made regarding UNAM's current

and future development:

We have seen that to a large extent national development in Namibia means addressing and undoing the legacies of apartheid. In the pre-independence period and in the several years following independence - up to and including the publication o f Toward Educationfor All in 1993 - there was important recognition in policy documents and briefs o f the importance o f including a cultural component in the vision for national development, including a substantial role for UNAM in the development o f cultural, artistic and musical skills (MEC, 1993: 109). Because of Namibia's unique historv and the active suppression o f cultural expression during the colonial period, the encouragement o f the 'arts' - defined as broadlv as ~ossible - must be seen as < .

crucial to Namibia's growth as a nation. I n UNAM's Five Year Development Plan and in the current discussion draft of MHEVTST's forthcoming white paper, however, this cultural component of national development seems regrettably to have suffered a significant demotion. The vision presented in these later documents marks a shift toward a more utilitarian view o f university education, with an emphasis on the promotion of science and technology. Even more recently, significant attention has been focused upon distance and open learning through UNAM's Centre for External Studies and the Northern Project.

Autonomy and academic freedom link with a number of other issues at UNAM. I n general, university autonomy in Namibia may be seen as the partnership between university and state, discussed in Chapter One. To paraphrase once again the dean o f UNAM's Faculty o f Law, the University has significant freedom to develop its own courses and programmes, but a lesser degree o f autonomy in choosing and creating new ones. In a number of areas - including the new Faculty of Agriculture and Natural Resources, and the control of research policy - the maintenance of a reasonable degree of autonomy and academic freedom will require the vigilant pursuit of independence by UNAM's staff.

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UNAM's youth as an institution means that institution building - including btaff development, designing and implementing new faculties, courses and programmes, and the re-organisation of administrative and staff structures - has been a key priority, and will continue to be important. Significantly, however, UNAM is faced with a dual development imperative: because the institution inherited at independence - the Academy for Tertiary Education - was of generally sub-standard quality, UNAM must develop into a high- quality institution of international standard, while subsequently fulfilling the expectation that it contribute to national development, a goal to which it is committed in its mission statement.

Finally, we noted in Chapter One the fallacy of designating certain subjects as more inherently 'developmental' than others. In the 1960s Foster (1963) refuted the 'Vocational School Fallacy', pointing out that training people in certain fields does not necessarily create growth or jobs in those sectors. UNAM's growing emphasis on the promotion of science and technology places it in danger of falling into the same trap. Although the colonial legacy does necessitate an improvement in the teaching of science subjects, the avoidance of this Development University Fallacy will require recognition that the mere creation of a new Faculty of Agriculture, or the redirection of funds to the Faculty of Science will not be sufficient to create economic growth or to develop a 'science culture' in the country. As King (1985) points out, the developmental role of science will depend much more on government policy than on the ways in which science subjects are taught in universities.

Thus while it is difficult at this point to draw firm conclusions about UNAM's success

in translating its commitment to national development into visible change, we have

been able to identify the key issues involved in the ongoing process of bringing about

that change. By focusing on this process within a single institution in a unique

context, we have been able to understand the ways in which the issues facing many

African universities over the past three decades currently apply at the local level.

Finally, given that the debate on higher education is still in progress in Namibia, and

that there seems to be a genuine desire to learn from and build upon the experience of

other countries - as well as the experience gained in exile during the colonial period - it is hoped that the exploration of the issues undertaken here will be of more than just

academic interest, and will in fact contribute to more effective policy-making in

Namibia's higher education sector.

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APPENDIX 1, SECTION f

The following diagrams are taken fiom the Ministry of Higher Education,

Vocational Training, Science and Technology's Mission Statement and Investment

Plan (1995). The first depicts the relationshjps between the various levels of the

education system. The institutions and sectors under the direction of the MHEVTST

are shown in blue.

ClNAhl

POLYTECHNIC TEACHER EDUCATION COLLEGES A

t A t t t

VOCATIONAL EDUCATION SENIOR SECONDARY AND TRAINING LEVEL

ADULT, CONTINUING

AND NON- FORMAL SYSTEM

A

L r 1 T

~n - 0 - !a - 7 - - c.

5 - A - 1 - 7 - 1

I

A

f 3

MASS SKILLS DEVELOPMENT

I i ?-------------------------------------------------l

BASIC EDUCATION SYSTEM GRADES 1 - 10

,--------------------------------- I

I

I I

/ SPECIALEDUCATION I I 1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - n

Entry Points EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION

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APPENDIX I, SECTION 2

INTERNAL STRUCTURE OF MHEVTST

The Ministry of Higher Education, Vocational Training, Science and

Technology was established in 1995 with the following structure:

,------------- OFFICE OF THE ------------- I MINISTER I

I

I I

I

, !

OFFICE OF THE PERMANENT SECRETARY

I

1

v

+ DIRECTORATE OF

HIGHER EDUCATION

D I R ~ R A T E OF SC WCE AND TECHNOLOGY

DIRECTORATE OF VOCATIONAL

EDUCATION AND TRAINING

BURSARIES AND QUALIFICATION^

UNIT

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APPENDIX I1

MISSION STATEMENT OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NAMIBIA

' At the installation ceremony, on April 23. 1993, the Founding Chancellor of UNAM, 1 His Excellency Dr. Sam Nujoma, made the following statement:

... I see the University of Namibia as a centre of higher lwning, served by dedicated men and women of quality, and producing @uatw determined to uplitt the standard of living of our pcopie. I sce the Univmity of Namibia taking its righffil place in Southern mca in particular. Africa in general, and the world at large, and making its contribution in every area of the world body of knowledge.. .

This statement encapsulates the motto of UNAM: education, service and development.

Within the broad framework of this motto, and the general roles of University institutions, the broad mission of the University of Namibia is to:

* sene u a centre ol hlgher laming and research, and to train high levd rpcclalirb in critical areas necessary for national development;

t provide hciiitiea which are appropriate to a Unlvenity characterized by standards of excelkncc, and edncation which b responsive to the n 4 r of the counhy; and abo which are accwribk to ail the people, mgardiwr of their ethnk background, gender, nwd religion, social statuh or physical condition;

r r v e a8 a repository for the pmervation, development, and articulation of Namibian v d u u m d culture, through the promotion of Namibian history, vduer, and languages;

I t undertake baric ard applied rwurch. with a view to eonbibuting to the social, economic, crltuml. .ad political dwelopment of tbe people of Namibia; I

4 enconrap and promote the endogenous development of mcience and technology &n the country;

t r w e both rural and urban communitier, and provide extension and advisory rrvices to the communitk. with a v i m to up!Uting their education a d technical know-how;

t promote national, regional, and international unity a d undentanding;

+ promote and dercnd democraq, scsdemlc M o m , a culture of excellence, debate and coarimctive criticism, and regular self-evaluation and peer aarmmeat; and to

t safeguard and promote the principle of Univenity rutonomy, with a v i m to providing the appropriate r h n ~ p h e n and opportunitkr for schohn to punue the development of their intellectual potential to the highrat level.

Thus the UNAM community has a crucial role to play in national, regional, and international development activities.

Source: Mshigeni et a1 (1995) First Fiw Yeor Dewlqpmcnt P h 1995-1999 (Windhoek).

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APPENDIX 111

ADMINISTRATIVE STRUCTURE OF UNAM

OFFICE OF THE VICE-CHANCELLOR

V I C E - C W C E ~ ~ R

PRO VIC&-CHANCELU)R

UNAM FOUNDATION FACULTY OF ACRICULT. & BOARD OF TRUSTEES NAT. RESOURCES

DEAN I -

CE OF THE BURSAR I FACULTY OF ECONOMICS & MCMT SCIENCE

Centre for Public Service Tnining

I DEAN

CENTRE FOR

CENTRE FOR VISUAL & PERFOUIING ARTS

7, I-

COMPUTER CENTRE

-

FACULTY OF EDUCATION

I DEAN I FACULTY OF HUMANITIU &

SOCIAL SCIENCES Fhmenicdl Institute for Namibia

I DEAN I

-

-

7 1 LANGUAGE CENTRE

I-

-

-

FACULTY OF LAW Human Righta & Doaunenttn Centre

Justice Training Centre

DEAN I FACULTY OF MEDICAL &

-

MULTIDISCIPLINARY RESEARCH CENTRE

HEALTH SCIENCES

I DEAN

e YearDevelopmenf Plan IS 16)

74

FACULTY OF SCIENCE

I DEAN d

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APPENDIX IV, SECIlON 1

F'IRST-YEAR ENROLMENT BY FACULTY

Agriculture 8 Natural Resources NIA NIA NIA 52

Economics 8 Management Science 178 193 235 208

Education 249 294 373 339

Humanities 8 Social Sciences 206 181 21 5 119

Law NIA 23 26 43

Medical 8 HeaCth Sciences 244 208 167 328

Science 75 67 82 121 -- - - - - - - - - --

Total 952 966 1098 1210

Source: UNAM Registrar's Office

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First-Year Enrolment by Faculty (1997)

400

350

~. - I,- _ - .. .....

. . . ~. ~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

~L

- .*.7..~.> . - .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

. . ... - . - < . . - - . - . . . . . . -. . : -= -

. . _ : . . - . . --. ~. . . . . .

. . . . - . . . . . . . . . -. - . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . - .. - .x . - . - . . - . . . . . . . . . . . .... ....... , , > : 3. ...:. ,-; -;-..- < .......... .*.. - . : .:.. 2: . - - . . - . - . . . .

- ..: - : . . . . .->--*.. -- .> . - . .,: . - >& -;, < < -. :-: =.<:

. . . . . . . . . . : ..... . ....:.. 8 . . . . - . . . . . . : - -. . .~ -. - - . _ . . . - . -%-?<- .- :; - -:-; .- . . - -. . . -1 +Agriarnum 6 Natural

R m m s

+Economics B Manwmnt

-t EducPtion

' - . +Medcsl6HsalthScienms

. +science

. .

. ..... 1 I I

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Economics & Management Science 55

Education 45

Humanities & Social Sciences 100

Medical & Health Sciences 23

Law

Science 18

Centre for Vmual& Performing Arts

Total 241 354 2466

Source: WAMAmual Report 1995 &INAM, 1996a).

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