In
a first posting “Africa’s Higher Education Deficit is Threatening its EconomicDevelopment”, I analyzed both the quantity and quality gap between Africa’s
Higher Education and the rest of the world.
In
this second posting I would like to suggest ten simple and basic principles
that could impact the quality of higher education. These principles do not
require significant investments. That does not mean however that they will not
require significant efforts from all stakeholders to be implemented.
First
I suggest three ideas to improve the quality of course content and teaching
methodology.
1)
Move up from rote learning
The Bloom’s Taxonomy of Educational Objectives [1] defines six
hierarchical cognitive levels of thinking complexity.
In many African universities, education only addresses the
first two levels: remembering and understanding. Often all that is required
from students is to be able to remember the content that was taught by the
instructor and repeat it to show understanding of what it means.
Faculty need to lead their students into the next levels:
applying, analyzing, evaluating, and creating. This is particularly important
for engineering studies where one expects them to come up with new inventions
and innovation leveraging their creativity. It implies to get students more
involved in creative work in their assignments, projects, and tests. Instead of
getting them to simply repeat (remember) what they learned in the course, instructors
must ask them to come up with their own ideas on how to address a problem by putting
the theory into practice, using knowledge in response to real circumstances.
For example in the “Business Strategy” course that I’m teaching, after understanding
the theory, students are required to apply it to a real business. In
collaboration with the business executive team of that enterprise, they analyze
their market collecting and organizing data from different sources. Then from
that analysis they evaluate the different strategic options and judging their
relative potential, they finally create a business strategy to be submitted to
the executive team of that enterprise. In doing so, the students acquire a much
better understanding of the theory by implementing it in a real world
situation.
Another valuable exercise is to ask students to present their
ideas in front of their fellow students, engaging in interactive discussions
about the ideas presented calling upon their critical and logical thinking.
While there is no financial cost in applying the Bloom’s
model in class, it will require significant work from the professors both by
adapting their teaching method and their evaluation process. It is more
difficult to evaluate a creative work from a student than grading answers to
questions about existing content.
The implementation of the Bloom model requires equipping the
students with the tools needed to succeed, i.e. non-technical soft skills like communication
skills including presentation and writing skills, teamwork and collaboration,
critical thinking and problem solving. This training needs to be added to the
curriculum to provide the students with the appropriate tools. To do so
professors must move away from reliance on knowledge transmission only and
accept to integrate these in their teaching.
2)
Use MOOCs to improve course content
While Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) have enrolled
students from developing countries pretty much from the start, there have not
yet been many attempts to systematically include MOOCs as part of targeted
education efforts in low income countries. The quality of their content could
be used by African professors to improve content of their courses and achieve a
better implementation of the Bloom’s cognitive levels. This is particularly
promising because teachers then pass what they learn on to their own students:
when they make use of MOOCs resources in their classrooms, they multiply the
effect.
3)
Get students feedback on courses
Aside from measuring students,
universities should develop mechanisms to measure the quality of the courses taught
by their faculty. Several websites exist that allow students to rate their
instructors, such as “rate my
professor”. Here we need to be cautious as it is difficult for those
websites to identify sincere from fake ratings. The last thing you want is for
a student to vindicate her/his (maybe rightfully) low grade by trashing the
grading professor on those sites.
Instead, we recommend for each university to introduce their
own private rating systems such that students registered for a course are automatically
given the opportunity to rate that course after its completion. What is
important here is that the result be used not to penalize professors but rather
to help them improve the quality of their teaching and learning through student
feedback. After several consecutive surveys, instructors can reflect on the feedback
and use it for performance and development reviews to make changes to their
course content and teaching method.
These surveys can also be used by academic committees to
promote outstanding professors and encourage others to improve their teaching
quality, potentially inviting them to “teaching excellence” seminars.
Next
I suggest encouraging hard work and providing benefits to those students who
are willing to make the extra effort.
4)
Increase the passing grade level
In most African universities,
students can get their degree with 50% of the grades. We suggest increasing
that to a minimum of 60%. At Carnegie Mellon University (CMU), you must have a 75%
average of the grades (B grade) to get your master degree. The objective here
is to change the “good enough” mentality that often permeates students.
Obviously one would hope that professors don’t change their grading schema
accordingly to allow students to pass. Robust
standard grading methodologies need to be implemented.
5)
Develop a Dean’s List program for the best students
Based on their results after the first year of their
bachelor degree, the best students are invited to join the Dean’s List program
on a voluntary basis. They are personally introduced to the Dean of the School
upon their selection. For the remaining three years of their bachelor degree
and if they continue performing at a top level, the following benefits are
offered to Dean’s List students:
1.
Smaller classes and better
instructors.
Classes have a much lower student/instructor ratio with
smaller class size which makes discussion easier and allows for more group
work, class presentations, and other high impact pedagogical practices. Inspiring
faculty are selected for Dean’s List classes where they can develop more
innovative teaching practices in these courses which they can then bring into
their regular sections. Being in a Dean’s List class does not imply that it
will be easier for students, at the contrary. The pace is faster and more
challenging, since students are surrounded by other students of the same
caliber and, often, the same interests. Students are offered with deeper
opportunities to explore and understand the material. It is the quality of
intellectual work that those students seek out.
2.
Paid internships.
Getting paid for internship is another benefit for Dean’s
List students. These better students are probably those that should be
recommended for paid internships, another principle discussed later (principle 9).
3.
Better dorms.
Dean’s List students are lodging together in usually better
dorms integrating more space where they can interact and continue the group
learning process.
While some will criticize the Dean’s List as an elitist
approach, we see it rather as a way to encourage hard working students. It is
the student’s decision to work hard to be a Dean’s List student and to accept
being in the Dean’s List section when their performance gives them that
opportunity.
In
order to address the common complaint that there is a profound mismatch between
the degrees offered and the skills required by the labor market in Africa, I
suggest three principles involving closer relationship between industries and
the university.
6)
Establish a board of industry advisors
University departments usually have a curriculum review
committee who determines course offerings (the Curriculum) for any given
academic program. These review committees are comprised of professors and
department heads who usually review program and course criteria from a solely
academic perspective.
The objective of this principle is to get the private sector
involved in university curriculum overview by establishing a “board of industry
advisors” comprising business people selected by the university department and working
in industry areas related to the department’s curriculum. For example a
computer science department could invite representatives from the IT industry:
IT vendors, software vendors, telecommunication companies, internet service
providers, etc. This board meets with the department faculty once a year during
a one day meeting to discuss the curriculum content. The only cost to the
department is the organization of that meeting. Usually board members pay for
their own travel expenses, and are proud adding their board membership to their
resume.
There are several benefits to such a board:
1) Its members (usually industry senior
executives or middle management) have a good understanding of their industry
and can advise the department about industry trends they see and the resulting
skills that will be needed by the industry. This can help the department adapting
the curriculum accordingly;
2) The board members are the people who
ultimately would recruit the students. Getting them to participate in the department’s
curriculum definition will give them more confidence that the department will
deliver the right skills.
It is worth noting here, however, the ongoing discussion on
whether higher education institutions (both in the developed and developing
world) is beholden to meet the needs of industry, or should remain above the
marketplace and perpetuate the quest of knowledge and pure academics for
"the greater good". We will refrain from engaging that discussion and
instead explore ways in which tertiary education in Africa may sustain
market-driven growth.
7)
Offer visiting professor positions to industry professionals
A common complaint from students is that their professors do
not have practical experience about what they are teaching. The university
should make it easy for departments to provide visiting professor positions for
people from the industry with experience in the field. Industry people like
sharing their passion and experience with young people by teaching at
universities. They rarely do it for pure financial reasons, some may even teach
for free. Therefore, the cost of a visiting professor is usually lower than the
regular professor. But the experience they will bring and share with students
can be invaluable.
Another alternative to a visiting professor teaching an
entire course is to invite industry guest speakers in the course to share
practical experience with the students.
We have to ensure that these visiting lectures aren’t
supplementary to the ‘usual’ teaching but complementary and become an
established part of course delivery e.g. 1 in every 4 lectures.
8)
Invite enterprises to submit industry problems
Traditionally graduate programs allow students to choose
their own final thesis subject (sometimes not related with real industry
problems) or have them to choose from a list submitted by professors with little
industry experience. Instead thesis subjects could be selected from a list of industry problems submitted by local or regional enterprises. Students then work in teams of two-three students to solve these problems under the supervision of the enterprise itself. The work of the students to
solve the submitted industry problem is free for the submitting business but
results are usually not guaranteed as it is considered as an academic exercise.
Nevertheless enterprises are interested by this free labor that often provides
them with interesting outside views for solution to their problems. This may
take some time to develop as the university needs to break the distrust from
the industry for them to submit their problems. But as soon as students can
show good performance, the word will spread. At CMU-Rwanda we receive three
times more problems submitted by industry than we can actually handle.
9)
Get paid internships from local and regional enterprises
In Africa (and in some European countries) the tradition is
that students’ internships are not paid for. As a result, those internships are
often useless as there is no real commitment from the hosting company to mentor
and provide the student with a meaningful work experience during the
internship. That is completely different when they pay for the internship.
Again this requires the business to believe that the students will be able to perform
the job proposed. This is also a way for the private sector to contribute to
improving Higher Education by financing internships for the best students who
can be potential future employees.
Here I recommend this option for Dean’s List students only
(see principle 5). The university could grant academic credits for the students
who do well during their internship.
When
implementing principles 7, 8, and 9 for graduate programs, it will offer
students the possibility to spend at least 30-40% of their graduate program in
direct contact with industry. This should reduce the gap identified earlier and
guarantee better employment of the graduating students.
Finally
I suggest using alumni network to monitor students’ employment.
10) Organize
and mobilize alumni networks
Alumni organizations are well developed at American
universities. They serve many purposes: develop a network of alumni that can be
tapped into by graduating students for employment support, by the university
for fund raising, and for other purposes.
Alumni organizations were not possible in Africa in the past
due to the high cost of communication but free e-mail and social networks have
now reduced that cost to almost zero.
Africa cannot afford to continue investing in universities
that deliver students that are unprepared to work in the country or regional
economy. Alumni networks can be used to track the employment of students after
they graduate. Statistical data can then easily be collected showing the
percentage of students finding jobs over
the years after graduation, the level of income they earn, and the types of
jobs they are hired for. This, in turn, can be made publicly available in an
anonymous statistical form granting some monitoring of the data to prevent
fraud. That data will indicate how successful a university is measured by the
career data of their students, allowing students and their families to select
the best universities and encouraging the other universities to improve their
quality of education if they want to survive.
Student alumni should also be used as University Ambassadors
in their communities to help with student’s recruitment.
Each
principle described here and applied by university departments can be monitored
for progress. For principles one and two, the department can monitor the number
of faculty applying the full Bloom model in their courses and using MOOCs
content to improve their course content. For principle 3, survey results can be
monitored over time and be used as a quality indicator of courses in the
department. Principle 4 can be implemented at the department level (and better
at the university level). The number of students engaged in the Dean’s List
program is another quality indicator that should progress over time. The number
of industry visiting professors, the number of problems submitted by industry
and the number of paid internships offered are all indicators of a better
integration with the regional industry that will surely attract more students
to the department. Careful monitoring of those indicators should be used for
setting goals for the department and encourage all stakeholders to contribute
to the general improvement of the quality of education delivered.
These
principles are not magic bullets, but the advantage of these ideas is that they
have no or small cost associated with them. They “only” require sustained
efforts by the department faculty motivated to improve the quality of the
education they deliver.
[1] Bloom,
B. S.; Engelhart, M. D.; Furst, E. J.; Hill, W. H.; Krathwohl,
D. R. (1956). Taxonomy of educational
objectives: The classification of educational goals. Handbook I: Cognitive
domain. New York: David McKay Company.