{"title":"Students' Perceptions Of Ethnicity and Learning: A case study of the United States International University (USIU)","authors":"K. Nakamura","doi":"10.4314/JOLTE.V1I2.41773","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Kenya is an ethnically diverse country comprising over forty ethnic groups. While\nthe diversity should make up the richness of culture and ways of life, the ‘tribe'\nmentality is the root cause of many problems that Sub-Sahara African nations face.\nIn Africa, different ethnic groups compete for national resource such as “land, political\npower, natural resources, social and economic power” (Osore 2008), and “tribalism\nstill infuses all aspects of society” (Wax 2005). Sadly, higher education does not seem\nto be an exception.\nThat could be the reason why in the past, the Kenyan Government used to exercise\na lot of control over the public universities in terms of contents of curriculum, hiring\nand firing of staff and lecturers, approving conference and seminars, among many\nothers, in order to meet its own political ends, thus curtailing academic freedom\n(Mwiria 2001). After the introduction of multipartism in 1992, the situation began\nchanging with the State and other political formations now competing to influence\nthe educational sector.\nFor instance, some months before the general election in December 2007, many of\nthe student bodies of the public universities' were reportedly re-aligned to one of\nthree major political forces of the time, which were aligned to some ethnic groups.\n“Tribalism and ethnicity have almost become the second name for the student body,”\nand “the tribal politics being played out between the ODM and the PNU1 groupings\nhave been extended wholesale to the student community”2. During the last General\nElection, the two leading political parties of the time approached the Students Affairs\nCouncil, the students' Affairs body at United States International University (USIU),\na private university, but the student officials declined to be associated with any of\nthe political parties, as it was against the policy of the university3. Consequently,\nthere was no election campaign that took place on the USIU campus.\nThis paper attempts to investigate whether or not ethnicity is a determinant of\nstudent learning at university in a country like Kenya that is rocked by ethnic\nviolence. Journal of Language, Technology & Entrepreneurship in Africa Vol. 1 (2) 2009: pp. 76-89","PeriodicalId":447944,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Language, Technology & Entrepreneurship in Africa","volume":"321 6","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2009-03-26","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Language, Technology & Entrepreneurship in Africa","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.4314/JOLTE.V1I2.41773","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
Kenya is an ethnically diverse country comprising over forty ethnic groups. While
the diversity should make up the richness of culture and ways of life, the ‘tribe'
mentality is the root cause of many problems that Sub-Sahara African nations face.
In Africa, different ethnic groups compete for national resource such as “land, political
power, natural resources, social and economic power” (Osore 2008), and “tribalism
still infuses all aspects of society” (Wax 2005). Sadly, higher education does not seem
to be an exception.
That could be the reason why in the past, the Kenyan Government used to exercise
a lot of control over the public universities in terms of contents of curriculum, hiring
and firing of staff and lecturers, approving conference and seminars, among many
others, in order to meet its own political ends, thus curtailing academic freedom
(Mwiria 2001). After the introduction of multipartism in 1992, the situation began
changing with the State and other political formations now competing to influence
the educational sector.
For instance, some months before the general election in December 2007, many of
the student bodies of the public universities' were reportedly re-aligned to one of
three major political forces of the time, which were aligned to some ethnic groups.
“Tribalism and ethnicity have almost become the second name for the student body,”
and “the tribal politics being played out between the ODM and the PNU1 groupings
have been extended wholesale to the student community”2. During the last General
Election, the two leading political parties of the time approached the Students Affairs
Council, the students' Affairs body at United States International University (USIU),
a private university, but the student officials declined to be associated with any of
the political parties, as it was against the policy of the university3. Consequently,
there was no election campaign that took place on the USIU campus.
This paper attempts to investigate whether or not ethnicity is a determinant of
student learning at university in a country like Kenya that is rocked by ethnic
violence. Journal of Language, Technology & Entrepreneurship in Africa Vol. 1 (2) 2009: pp. 76-89