NAIROBI, Oct. 28 (Xinhua) -- African countries, with
the help of international community, have invested heavily in the development of
education, as more and more people in the continent realize that education is
the key to economic growth and poverty reduction.
A report by the United Nations Educational,
Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) showed that primary-school
enrollment had gone up sharply in sub-Saharan Africa with nearly 20 million new
students going to school this year.
Kenya, for example, after canceling tuition fee in
2003, saw its primary-school enrollment increase by 1 million students. The same
measure has made Ghana's primary-school enrollment rise 14 percent. In Niger,
the primary-school enrollment went up 61 percent between 1998 and 2003.
In May this year, Nigeria announced a 10-year plan on
its educational development program at all levels. Also in Nigeria, parents and
guardians who fail to take a child of school age to school under the Universal
Basic Education scheme stand the risk of being sanctioned.
African governments, though often ridden with fiscal
deficiency, are quite generous on the budget for education. In some central
African countries, lectures in universities can be paid 600 thousand to 700
thousand African francs (about 1,200 U.S. dollars to 1,400 dollars) each month,
while salary for professors can reach 1 million francs (about 2,000 dollars) a
month.
The Gabonese government has always attached great
importance to the training of teachers. Besides regular training program, the
government selects excellent teachers each year to further study abroad,
providing them with stipend.
In the Republic of Congo, the government employs
foreign teachers to teach in the country and sends almost 1,000 students to
study abroad each year.
Vocational education has just been unfolding in
Africa. There are six middle-level vocational schools in the west African
country of Togo, providing courses which involve hotel service, business,
architecture, and etc. The graduates from these schools are favored by
employers.
In recent years, African Development Bank has
extended credit or loans to African countries like Burkina Faso, Tanzania, and
Mali to help them develop vocational education.
COOPERATION WITH CHINA
African countries have also strengthened cooperation
with other parts of the world in the educational sector.
According to China's Ministry of Education, more than
50 African countries have established educational cooperation with China.
Cen Jianjun, deputy director of the ministry's
international cooperation office, said at a news briefing on the upcoming
China-Africa Cooperation Forum that efforts put into Sino-African educational
exchanges and cooperation in recent years had paid off.
Under the Beijing Declaration signed at the
Sino-African Education Minister Forum held in Beijing last November, China has
committed running training programs for 1,000 African government officials,
school heads and teachers over a period of three years.
China provides about 1,200 government scholarships to
African students every year. By the end of 2005, a total of 18,919 scholarships
had been granted to students from 50 African countries.
Also several Confucius Institutes, the nonprofit
school specializing in Chinese language education and cultural communication,
have been set up in some African countries.
So far, through nearly 60 assistance programs, China
has helped25 African countries to develop neglected disciplines and train
science and technological talents.
China has also dispatched 530 professional teachers
to 35 African countries to assist them in developing higher and middle school
education, according to the Chinese education ministry.