November 20, 2012
"My elder siblings who finished before me had to wait three years because there was only one institute of higher learning, the University of Hargeisa," she told Sabahi.
Yonis is part of a rising generation of Somali students eager and able to further their education.
Technical Veterinary School students take part in a field activity April 18th in the Somaliland town of Sheikh |
He added that business administration, engineering, sharia law and medicine are among the most popular programmes.
According to the Somaliland Higher Education
Board, more than 60% of college students in Hargeisa are women.
To accommodate the influx of new
students, the school has rented three additional buildings and constructed a
fourth. In addition, the need for more qualified teachers has prompted the
university to recruit from Kenya.
The
impact of war
The protracted civil war that began
in 1991 and the lack of strong government institutions able to uniformly
regulate schools mean that degrees from local universities are often not
recognised internationally, according to Mohammed Nur, a retired school
administrator who consults with the government on education matters.
"The requirement to open
colleges or universities is minimal," he told Sabahi. "Important
things such as facilities are not checked and [universities] admit students
regardless of what they scored in secondary school."
Addressing these concerns, the
government says it began implementing measures to regulate higher education
when it set up the Higher Education Board in 2010.
According to Khadar Ahmed Diriye,
the board's director, 16 universities have been established across Somaliland
in the past 20 years.
"We found most [universities]
were easily registered previously without proper procedure," Diriye told
Sabahi. To establish a regional standard, the board recently required all
universities to re-register and issued them with temporary charters while their
credentials are reviewed.
Diriye said the government brought
in senior officials from Kenya's Higher Education Commission to help
re-organise the education sector in Somaliland.
Partnering
with universities in neighbouring countries
Universities in neighbouring
countries are partnering with local colleges on a wide range of specialised
programmes.
For example, thanks to a partnership
with Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology in Nairobi, Golis
University now offers a master's in business administration.
In addition, Ethiopia's Admas and
Alpha Universities, and Uganda's Fairland University have opened campuses in
the region.
Hassan of Golis University said
these collaborations provide local universities with the opportunity to adopt
best practices in management and curricula development, strengthening Somali
universities' capabilities and credibility.
Challenges
and opportunities ahead
University graduates are expected to
boost the highly depleted employment pool in Somaliland, said Mohamed Dahir, a
manager at Somaliland Civil Service, the recruitment arm of the regional
administration.
College graduates hired by the
administration in the past two years have already helped transform government
institutions, he told Sabahi. He said these professionally trained employees
have helped streamline the administration's revenue collection system and
improve efficiency at airports and other ports of entry.
"We have employed trained
accountants, clerks and immigration officers, among others, who are technology
savvy," he said. "We have recently witnessed very good results.
Previously, virtually all our personnel lacked proper education or training,
which affected service delivery."
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