Sunday 30 April 2017

“We engage parents in learning processes and change school cultures



-Co-founder, Educate a Child in Africa.



ECA, Educate a Child in Africa, Inc. is the brain child of two Co-Founders. Gideon A. Asaah is a co-founder and chief operating officer. He is a Social Entrepreneur with over ten years of experience working with young people in Cameroon. He’s an Ashoka Fellow and a passionate advocate for Education in Africa.
  Divine Gordon Asaah is the second co-founder and Executive Director. He is an American citizen of Cameroonian origin based in Cambridge, Massachusetts and Philadelphia, New York. He is a Researcher at Havard School of Education. The Chief Operating Officer Gideon A. Asaah was interviewed in his Limbe office by EDEV’s Francis Ekongang Nzante. His revelations provide interesting reading.
Excerpts:


What pushed Assah Gideon into his present humanitarian activities?
I was inspired by my parents. My dad is an administrator but before being an administrator he was a teacher. My mother has been a primary school teacher for over 30 years and I saw the tireless efforts she put in. It was a kind of education that kids were not given the opportunity get hands on learning. This pushed me to create an association called educate a child in Africa. I did this in collaboration with my elder brother Divine Gordon Assah who’d lived in the US for over ten years and had worked with one of the biggest theatre houses in the world decided to create this organization. In 2010 when our association was created, he resigned from his job just like I had done. He then went to the Havard School of Education after which he threw his weight behind our activities.


What road have you so far covered with Educate a child in Africa?


ECA Mission is a non-profit organization that supports student
achievement and school improvement through Play and Learn games and activities, Family Engagement and Community Engagement.
We equally believe that everyone benefits when community members are involved in their children’s education. For our play and learn activities we create games for children as well as spaces in schools and communities where kids learn almost 90% of what they study in school but in the form of play. In these spaces kids learn and coordinate activities and even go as far as creating games. Basically we have been working in the Northwest and Southwest Regions of Cameroon but our focus more recently has actually been the Southwest Region because of the shaky situation in Cameroon recently. Because of the absence of school due to strike actions we have been creating spaces in communities.



Can you outline the modus operandi of ECA in a much more specific manner?
There is Play and Learn | Leadership. Educate a Child in Africa, Inc.'s Play and Learn | Leadership club activities inspires the passion for consequential formal education; teach children basic lessons on diverse subjects while building their confidence, team building and leadership skills. Children love to have fun. So we incorporate playfulness in education. We make education enjoyable for children by weaving lessons into lively activities. We create original games that help pupils in Science, hTechnology, Engineering and Math.
 ECA's Play and Learn | Leadership club activities fosters lifelong learning opportunities for all children. Family Engagement: Most parents have disengaged themselves from their children's education. We change the culture of public institutions by training teachers on how to intentionally and systematically forge sustainable mutually beneficial partnerships with parents. When schools develop strong partnerships with parents, families and communities, the pupils achieve at a higher level and are better equipped for lifelong success.
Know Your Children: It is a fun-game show between children and their parents/guardians. The goal of this initiative is to assuage the different frictions that exist within families and communities and identify the most essential needs of children. Children ask their parents pertinent questions about them. This lively activity falls in line with Article 18 of the Convention of the Rights of the Child, which states that 'both parents share responsibility for bringing up their child and should always consider what is best for the child'

Gideon A. Asaah


So what is the way forward?

We want to be all over the continent. When we started we did a couple of things in Nigeria but we thought that it wasn’t time for us to scale so we decided to come back and focus on the areas where we started. So in 2017 we will be putting in place a strategy to scale to other African countries.
Any message to some stakeholders?
My message is directed to policy makers, educational authorities and those in decision making positions. I call on the Cameroonian Government to be involved in initiatives like this. This is the case in some West African countries and in Uganda, a country that I visited recently.

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Friday 21 April 2017

More than 20 Million FCFA raised for development projects in Akum





More than 20 million FCFA has been raised for development projects in Akum. This revelation was made by Pius Nji Tumasang, the1st Vice President General of the Akum Welfare Association deputising for the President General Donatus Fombarrh unavoidably absent during the 74th Annual General Meeting of the Association which took place on Saturday April 15 in Akum.
Fon Ndikum George III of Akum and Patron of AWA


The First Vice President General said the contributions that came in from the various branches for development projects in the village were close to 16 million FCFA. “We equally raised close to 6 million FCFA for the Palace Project. So if we have succeeded to raise more than 20.000.000 FCFA for development projects in the village then I think it is a positive point.”
Pius Nji Tumasang: Vice President General Akum Welfare Association


The 74th Annual Convention he said had been very successful. “Before the convention we had some challenging issues and in the village there was a problem between the Fon and his notables but before the convention, with the directives from my President we were able to convene a meeting between the Fon and the notables and we agreed on the way forward. You must have noticed that the Fon attended the meeting today with his notables meanwhile for the past one year or so the Fon has not been attending meetings with his notables” the vice President explained.

He further explained that in the past AWA was accused of embracing so many projects at a time but that now they had agreed to focus on two main projects; the rehabilitation of the Palace road and the rehabilitation of the Akum Community hall.  

Ntumfor Martin Tumasang, a retired School Principal of GHS Akum and Vice Patron of the Akum Welfare Association AWA said he was very delighted to have seen the way that this day had passed. “There have been a few things worrying the cohesion of this community called Akum. 

Ntumfor Martin Tumasang
You will bear with me that the Fon has just addressed the community and has given a new hope to the people that he is bringing everything under control. Evidence of this is the fact that you have seen all our nobles who for a short while have been at loggerheads with the Fon over a number of issues.” If this is the only thing we have achieved here today, then I think the days ahead are even more promising and come this time next year when we will be celebrating the 75th anniversary, I think everything shall have been put together for good.”

With regards to very useful suggestions that were made, he said he had already conferred with the Fon and that he was already buying the idea of taking loans for development projects. “By the time the next Central Working Committee meets, we will be putting through these suggestions. It is a thing that we can do and do very well.  My message to the Akum people is that they should remain the united and respectful people that they have always been.”

Hon Chief Paul Nji Tumasang, Member of Parliament at the National Assembly for Mezam South, Santa Special Constituency summarised the AWA convention in the following words. 


Hon Chief Paul Nji Tumasang
 “AWA has been doing much in terms of Community Development and I am very happy that today’s session has been very successful. I have been at the helm of the association for over 12 years. For 6 years I was the Vice President General and about 6 years the President General. You heard the Fon talking about the Palace project which is very dear to us. The Palace was really an eye sore and if you go there now you will see that we have at least modernised the Palace.  This started within my reign and it has continued. There are many other things that we plan to do. You heard the Fon talking about roads. Every quarter in Akum is accessible by roads and we just need to put in a little more effort and these roads will be accessible all the year round.  

I call on the Akum people to continue to stick together due to the love for their village and country. I expect that every time there is a clarion call they should come and put hands together like they have done with the Palace Project and some school projects. That’s my advice to Akum people in the village, in Cameroon and the Diaspora.” 

edevnews.blogspot.com/ Tel: +237696896001/+237678401408/Email: francoeko@gmail.com

Saturday 15 April 2017

NW and SW held hostage by extremists and greedy self interest protectors in Cameroon.




A look at the evolution of the Anglophone crises from its onset till date reveals a sequence of fruitless efforts by two parties each one deliberately refusing to give ground to the other and as the two protagonists occupy centre stage many have failed to see the drummers who are actually dictating the pace of the dance. The victims of this stalemate have been the populations of the Northwest and Southwest Regions.
On the one hand there was the Anglophone Lawyers with very plausible demands related to legal practice in Cameroon. Briefly, they wanted the practice to reflect the two legal systems of the country and they felt that this could be feasible in a two federal state system. Among other things they were protective towards an English Common Law System which they felt was being deliberately adulterated not only by the French Law but also by the French Language which was increasingly being used in the two English speaking Regions; the Northwest and the Southwest. To achieve their requests, they went on strike and have since then kept the courts in English speaking Cameroon empty.
The teachers of the English Educational Sub system eventually joined in with equally plausible demands similar to those of the lawyers and even more and subsequently paralysed the school year in English Schools in Cameroon.
The strikes of these two groups took things nowhere and dialogue void of good fate brought no results and in their frustrations coupled with the arrests of some within their ranks, the two twinned and formed the consortium together with other English speaking Cameroonians home and abroad. The Consortium then pressed on with its demands through the organisation of ghost towns.
Since then, in the absence of sincere dialogue, the banning of the Consortium and the arrests of its leaders and other activists has pushed the requests for secession to take center stage. This request is pushed by extremist secessionists who will stop at nothing short of secession banking their arguments on the fact that requests for a two state federation with equal status has failed.
The leverage that the outlawed Consortium has used is the permanent ghost towns on Mondays and Tuesdays (now reduced to Mondays) and operation dead school campus. While the average Cameroonian in the Northwest and Southwest Region is toiling under the weight of ghost towns and its consequences, instructions are continuously being given by faces behind the scenes dominantly from the Diaspora. The interest group being served here is that of diehard secessionists prepared to listen to nothing else. The questions begging for answers are as follows; -is secession the best choice for Anglophone Cameroonians? Is a two state federation on equal status acceptable in a country where the English speaking segment of the population constitute only two of the ten regions that make up the country? Can’t there be a two or a four state federation with defined conditions that are acceptable to all parties permitting the country to remain as one Cameroon?  
Another interest group that is being served by the suffering masses is the authorities of the Republic of Cameroon and to an extent its French Colonial Masters France who have never really relinquished its hold on its colonies in French Africa.
Just like the extreme secessionists, Cameroonian authorities have responded in ways that demonstrate either a complete misunderstanding of the situation or a deliberate attempt to misunderstand the problems being presented by a segment of the population. Clearly, the interests of this party completely contrast with those of extreme secessionists. Satisfying the needs of the Republic of Cameroon would mean not satisfying the needs of extreme secessionists.
While the two extremes continue to hold their grounds protecting their ultimate interests, myopic political misfits have been playing to the gallery in a bid to protect their own petit and egoistic self interests. Some have carried out peaceful demonstrations dubbed Peace March in Limbe and Kumba maybe with an intention of sending customized signals to certain quarters for personal reasons. Some have even resorted to utterances tailored on tribal lines to send equally customized signals. The Police et al have brutalized, raped and arrested to no avail.
On the other hand, some have master minded the burning of Markets in Bamenda (Nkwen and Food Market), Fundong and Limbe New Market maybe for disobeying the sit down strike action.
All this drama completely misses the point. If attention has to be shifted for one minute from the warring forces and their various interests to the plight of the populations at the receiving end then the desire to end the stalemate should be paramount in the minds of those who truly have Cameroonians at heart. Attention has not yet been shifted to the people and as such no immediate way forward has been prescribed because none of the parties (the secessionists on the one hand and authorities of the Republic of Cameroon on the other hand) truly have Cameroonians at heart for if that were the case then a middle ground should have already been found. For the way forward to be traced, the questions above and many more must be answered. For example; is a centralized system with attempts to decentralize competences like the one in Cameroon at the moment the ideal set up for Cameroon? Is it normal that just prior to the crises in Cameroon there was an attempt to harmonize higher education in Cameroon despite the existence of two sub education systems? Time to stop playing to the gallery is now if Cameroon has to move forward.