Higher Education Quality Assurance in Sub-Saharan Africa: Status, Challenges, Opportunities and Promising Practices

Front Cover
World Bank Publications, 2007 - 80 pages
This report assesses the status and practice of higher education quality assurance in Sub - Sahara Africa, focusing on degree - granting tertiary institutions. A main finding is that structured national - level quality assurance processes in African higher education are a very recent phenomenon and that most countries face major capacity constrains. Only about a third of them have established structured national quality assurance mechanism, often only as recently as during the last ten years. Activities differ in their scope and rigor, ranging from simple licensing of institutions by the minister responsible for higher education, to comprehensive system - wide program accreditation and ranking of institutions. Within institutions of higher learning, self assessment and academic audits are gradually being adopted to supplement traditional quality assurance methods. However, knowledge about and experience with self - assessments are limited. The main challenges to quality assurance system in Africa are cost and human capacity requirements. For countries with large tertiary systems, the report recommends institutional, rather than program accreditation as a cost - effective option. However, where tertiary systems are small and underdeveloped, a less formal self - assessment for each institution may be necessary until the capacity could be strengthened to support a more formal nation quality assurance agency in the long run.
 

Selected pages

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page 2 - Terms used in quality assurance are employed in a variety of ways and have different meanings in different parts of the world. For example, in the United States the term "accreditation...
Page 3 - Quality assurance is a planned and systematic review process of an institution or program to determine whether or not acceptable standards of education, scholarship, and infrastructure are being met, maintained and enhanced.
Page 38 - Network is to collect and disseminate information on current and developing theory and practice in the assessment, improvement and maintenance of quality in higher education.
Page 38 - At the global level, the International Network for Quality Assurance Agencies in Higher Education (INQAAHE) was established in 1991...
Page 8 - ... reduces the productivity of tertiary-educated workers and dampens the overall incentives for education investments (Ramcharan 2004).
Page 9 - Since the late 1980s, the global market for tertiary education has been growing at an average rate of 7 percent per annum.
Page 60 - The case of the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology in Kumasi, Ghana is an excellent example.
Page 55 - QA agencies is to insist on greater institutional participation in covering the cost of accreditation (as South Africa, Nigeria and GAMES do to some extent).
Page 38 - European cooperation in quality assurance, and the promotion of a European dimension in higher education.

Bibliographic information