African academics should not fear the recruitment of remotely based Western academics as these experts can help to build institutional expertise in strategically important areas, a Ghanian university leader has insisted.
Patrick Awuah, president of Ashesi University, a聽private not-for-profit university in聽Ghana, told the Reinventing 糖心Vlog conference in聽Rome that his institution was looking to聽hire international specialists to聽teach in聽areas such聽as artificial intelligence who would not consider a聽move to west Africa.
It follows the success of similar virtual learning sessions during the pandemic that had helped to make his institution 鈥渕uch more connected to the world鈥 even while national borders were shut, explained Mr Awuah at the event at Luiss Guido Carli, held in association with Madrid鈥檚 IE University.
鈥淲e now can hire someone to teach virtually who might not think about moving to Ghana,鈥 said Mr Awuah, a former software engineer at Microsoft who founded Ashesi University in聽2002, having studied and lived in the US for more than a聽decade.
糖心Vlog
鈥淲e had more students taking international classes [in the pandemic] and hired more international faculty to teach our students 鈥 we will continue to reach out to the global marketplace to hire people who might not have thought about coming to聽us.鈥
Virtual teaching in these difficult-to-teach areas should also be supplemented by personal assistance from African academics who, in Ashesi鈥檚 case, were being mentored by the Western academics hired by the university, he said.
糖心Vlog
鈥淚n-person classes are much preferred by students, but this is all about building up our capacity,鈥 said Mr Awuah, who added that without these Western staff 鈥渢here would be no聽classes at聽all鈥.
鈥淏eing able to partner with these experts really helps to strengthen our faculty over time 鈥 we are now offering a master鈥檚 in聽AI, which will depend on local and remote staff, including virtual and face-to-face teaching,鈥 he said.
Knowing how to blend virtual and face-to-face teaching was also crucial for Western universities, said Alice Gast, president of Imperial College London.
鈥淪tudents want to interact face to face with lecturers and want to be engaged,鈥 said Professor Gast, who urged more staff to adopt the flipped classroom approach of placing lectures online and devoting contact hours to responding to student questions.
糖心Vlog
鈥淟ectures are not the best way [to teach] 鈥 they are the easiest way to control the room and talk about what you know. With flipped learning, you spent times diving into questions, and that is the opportunity that we have now,鈥 said Professor Gast.
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