Reports on SLIP Education Conference March 2020

The following are reports on the Conference by two of the members of the SLIP committee:

At the outset it is necessary to acknowledge that SLIP was very fortunate in the timing of the conference as it happened before restrictions on travel and movement were put in place because of the Covid-19 virus.  SLIP greatly appreciates that our guests from SL travelled despite the pending threat of the virus, and are very thankful they returned from Ireland safely.

The conference was well attended with many groups represented.  Among the 65 people gathered were academics, activists, policy planners, and 12 NGOs from Ireland and Sierra Leone. The focus of the day was intense study of the issues being faced as Sierra Leone rebuilds its education system.

Among the aims of the day was to inform the participants on the facts and figures of provision and participation in education in Sierra Leone, and also to learn of how the Irish Aid development contribution supports that education policy. This was achieved to a large extent by the detailed and very informative speeches of the keynote speakers.

In addition there were many great ripple effects that contributed to the success of the day, and I highlight 3 significant ones.

Firstly, there was the meeting of the NGOS and other participants who all have a focus and interest in events and developments in Sierra Leone, the poster event enhanced this greatly. It was also a time for Bishop Henry Aruna and Dr. Staneala Beckley to meet informally and discuss relevant and important issues arising in their roles as education providers.

A second ripple effect was the opportunity for the department of international development in Maynooth University to share some experiences of education with representatives of the SL education community. The well qualified and experienced educators from both SL and Ireland allowed for well-informed and focused rich discussion.

Thirdly, a strong ripple effect has been the continuation of the initial contact made between the Teaching Council in Ireland and the Teaching Service Commission of Sierra Leone.  Already one zoom meeting has taken place and another one is due to take place in early December. It is clear that both organisations have much to share. There is also a willingness on the part of the TC Irl  to consider supporting and offering guidance to TSC of SL in a similar manner to which Scotland supported Ireland when the TC was in its infancy. This on-going link could make a very valuable contribution to strengthening equality of quality educational opportunities for all students in SL.

Geraldine Horgan

 

‘Strengthening Education in Sierra Leone’ was the subject of a major conference jointly organised by the Sierra Leone Ireland Partnership (SLIP) and Maynooth University Department of International Development. It took place at Renehan Hall, Maynooth University on Thursday 5th of March 2020.

The event brought together 65 academics, activists, policy planners, and NGOs, from Ireland and Sierra Leone. It was a day of intense study of the issues being faced as Sierra Leone rebuilds its education system, and the decisions required of those who want to grow solidarity with that process.

The NGOs represented were,  Concern Worldwide, Irish League of Credit Unions Foundation, Global Schoolroom, Don Bosco Network, Sight Savers Ireland, Afri-action from Ireland, and Plan International -Ireland,

The Gambia Ireland Volunteers in Education, Sisters of St Joseph of Cluny, and  The Liberia Solidarity Group joined Yengema Secondary School Old Boys, and the Sierra Leone Ireland Partnership in the reflection.

The day was led by lectures from Dr Staneala Beckley, Chair of the Teaching Service Commission of Sierra Leone, Most Rev Dr Henry Aruna, Bishop of Kenema, Sierra Leone and Ms Carol Hannon, Global Education Policy Specialist at Irish Aid.

The university sector was led by Maynooth University Departments of Education, International Development,  Adult and Community Education, and Applied Social Studies. They were joined by academics and researchers from, Technical University Dublin Blanchardstown, University College Dublin, Athlone Institute of Technology, Dublin City University-St Patrick’s College and the faith based development organisation Misean Cara.

The morning and afternoon sessions were chaired by Dr Seán Farren, former Northern Ireland Minister for Further and Higher Education and later Minister for Finance, and Ms Nora Owen former Minister for Justice in the Republic of Ireland.

In opening the conference Professor Aidan Mulkeen, Registrar Maynooth University emphasised how much of a priority the topic of the conference is in his own research and professional experience in teacher policy in sub-Sahara Africa. The common themes he has come across in his work are shortage of teachers, poorly qualified teachers, the difficulty of finding teachers to work in remote locations, and the consequences of these for access to good quality education for the most disadvantaged young people in the world.

The speeches of Dr Beckley and Bishop Aruna are available in full, elsewhere on the SLIP website.

The event put us in the presence of key actors in education in Sierra Leone at State and Church level. They presented carefully researched, forward looking ambitions for education in the country. The ‘tragic Salone’ theme of the last thirty years of the work of the Sierra Leone Ireland Partnership was finally behind us. We were surrounded by the architecture of Maynooth University which was put there over two centuries ago to enhance its educational project. Its momentum carried through to this day.

Notions of African exceptionalism, if they ever had any credibility, quickly evaporated under the intellectual rigour of the speakers and the participants. The structural and economic building blocks of an educational system are familiar and so are the terms of the challenges to them and the debate about them. This conference could have been about Ireland, Iceland, or India, as well as Sierra Leone.

The display of engagement by Irish NGOs was a very moving element of the day and a dynamic background to the discussion. SLIP has long cherished the ambition that in some public space we would experience the kaleidoscope of these varied commitments and projects. This was the fulfilment of that ambition with all it’s straining to do more, to construct new systems of involvement, and to find new participants.

The three main speakers dealt extensively with the question of equal and inclusive education for girls and young women in Sierra Leone. Since the time of the Ebola epidemic, the exclusion from school of girls who are pregnant has been a headline issue and it was the concern which guided the formulation of the agenda of this conference. The speakers brought us up to date with legislation, practice, and provision on this issue. They identified, too, the structural and ideological adjustments that need to be made in order for the educational process to be a more sympathetic and humanising building place for young women, and men. Dr Beckley suggested that girls’ education has been substituted for gender in education. Reversing that direction would be key to fulfilling the aim of the conference.

The 2004 Education Act seems to give almost complete control to the Minister for Education over the governorship of schools and this is a disturbing reality for the faith based schools sector. One speaker from the floor said the Act sounded like it was formulated by an army general. It gives lots of responsibility and little authority to the patron body, while leaving it with many of the bills. The promised revision and redrafting of this legislation would help towards greater democracy and inclusiveness in an educational system in which over 50% of schools are Catholic schools.

Irish Aid provides the financial and policy context for much of what happens between Ireland and Sierra Leone. The contribution of Ms Carol Hannon on this subject was very important for the conference. This is the twentieth year of diplomatic relations between the two countries and it is a growing and deepening relationship.

The fact that  a conference on this topic happened in Ireland, and was attended by so many with a serious stake in that country, suggests that Sierra Leone has transitioned to a new development agenda. This is the first time that a clear path ahead has been visible since the outbreak of the civil war there twenty nine years ago yesterday. The relief and excitement of that new prospect gave the conference a landmark status.

Martin Rowan.

 

 

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