Myths and Realities of Higher Education as a Vehicle for Nation Building in Developing Countries:
The Culture of the University and the New African Diaspora
Seth A. Agbo
Pacific University
Oregon, U.S.A.
Abstract
The thesis of this paper is that the African university, like its counterpart in the advanced developed world, has maintained a stubborn resistance to change in spite of external pressures and internal transformations.
The university strives to remain protected from external interference from the local community and it is unwilling to break the cultural mystique and behavioral codes built over time since the birth of universities in twelfth century Italy and France. When colonies in the Third World started clamoring for political independence, politicians of the West demonstrated to the world that newly independent countries could sustain development if they adopted Western strategies. Two of the strategies, the “human capital” and
“modernization” theories became so attractive that since independence in the late 1950s and 1960s, developing nations have placed much emphasis on education as a vehicle for modernization and socioeconomic development. Because the movement to expand educational opportunities in the developing world was strongly tied to economic development and technocratic visions of societal reconstruction, higher education has remained an area in which most developing countries maintain a strong commitment although it continues to fail to produce the desired results. Changes in political and economic environments do not deter governments from continuing to invest in higher education. There is a belief that such an investment would generate direct benefits to the state in the form of providing the necessary high-level manpower and carrying out development-oriented research. Investment in higher education would also in many ways serve the needs of society by rendering various services and advice to policy-makers.
References: Ahmed, R. (1985). Scientific and Technological Education in Developing Countries. Altbach, P. G. (1990). Higher Education and Scientific Development. New Education, Vol. XII, No. 1. Aziz, Sartaj (1990). Agricultural Policies for the 1990’s--Development Centre Studies. Paris: OECD. Beard R. and Hartley, J. (1984). Teaching and Learning in Higher Education. London: Harper and Row. Becker, G. S. (1964). Human Capital: A Theoretical and Empirical Analysis, with Special Reference to Education Blackburn, D.J. and Pletsch, D.H. (1989). Needs Assessment and Evaluation. In W. Van den Bor et al. Blaug, M. (1985). Where Are We Now in the Economics of Education? Economics of Education Review, 4(1): 17-28. Denison, E. F. (1967). The Sources of Economic Growth in the United States and the Alternatives Before Us Denison, E. F. (1979). Accounting for Slower Economic Growth: The United States in the 1970s. De Souza, A. R. and Porter, P. W. (1974). The Underdevelopment and Modernization of the Third World. Djamba, Y.K. (1999). African immigrants in the United States: A socio-demographic profile in comparison with the Native Balcks Fagerlind, I. & Saha, L.J. (1989). Education and National Development – A Comparative Perspective (2nd ed.) Frank, A. G. (1972). Lumpenbourgeoisie: Lumpendevelopment – Dependence, Class, and Politics in Latin America Harrison, D. (1988). The Sociology of Modernization and Development. London: Unwin Hyman. Head, I. L. (1991). On a Hinge of History – The Mutual Vulnerability of South and North. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. Hetland, A. (1984). A University for Development: How Should that Be? In A. Hetland (Ed.) Universities and National Development – A Report of the Nordic Association for the Study of Education in Hettne, B. (1990). Development Theory and Three Worlds. New York: John Wiley & Sons. Huq, M. S. (1975). Education, Manpower and Development in South and Southeast Asia. New York: Praeger Publishers. Inkeles, A. & Smith, D.H. (1974). Becoming Modern – Individual Change in Six Developing Countries. McClelland, D. C. (1961). The Achieving Society. New York: van Nostrand. Michaelowa, K. (2000). Returns to education in low income countries: Evidence for Africa. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Committee on Developing Countries of the German Myrdal, G. (1972). Asian drama: An inquiry into the poverty of nations. New York: Random House. Okpewho. I. (1999). Introduction. In Okpewho, I, C.B. Davies & A.A. Mazrrui (ed.), The African diaspora: African origins and new world identities Psacharopoulos, George (1980). Higher Education in Developing Countries – A Cost Benefit Analysis. Rostow, W. W. (1990). The Stages of Economic Growth – A Non Communist Manifesto (3rd Edition). Saha, L. J. (1991). Universities and National Development – Issues and Problems in Developing Countries Santos, T. (1973). The Crisis of Development Theory and the Problem of Development in Latin America. Shepperson, G. (1993). African diaspora: Concept and context. In Harris, J.E. (ed.), Global dimensions of the African diaspora (2nd ed.) Sherman, M. A. B. (1990). The University in Modern Africa – Toward the Twenty-First Century. The Journal of Higher Education, 61(4): 363-385. Schultz, T. W. (1961). Education and Economic Growth in N. B. Henry (Ed.), Social Forces Influencing American Education Schultz, T. W. (1980). Nobel Lecture: The Economics of Being Poor. Journal of Political Economy, 88(4) (August): 639-652. Schultz, T. W. (1981). Investing In People – The Economics of Population Quality. Berkeley: University of California Press. UN (1971). International Development Strategy: United Nations Action Program of the General Assembly for Second UN Development Decade Webster, A. (1984). Introduction to the Sociology of Development. Basingstoke: Macmillan.