The Chief Executive Office of Centre for Excellence Consultancy has
disclosed that his institution has opened frontiers for Gambians to study in
English and Arabic languages at universities abroad.
Lamin Minteh who is also the general manager of the institution was
speaking to assembled journalists during a press briefing on Monday at their
head office in Red Cross building at Westfield.
He stated: “We are partnering with universities in Russia that has more
than 250,000 foreign students from about 200 countries that have chosen Russia
as their destination to obtain higher education because studying in Russia is
prestigious, accessible and in vogue while life there is interesting and versatile.
The country covers 12 percent of land area and one of the most multi-national
countries in the world with 160 nationalities and representatives of the entire
world’s co-existing together in peace.”
Minteh said the Russia Africa Centre for University Service (RACUS) has
representative offices in 61 countries and 9 cities around the world including
The Gambia.
He added: “Study in Russia is funded by the Russian government and
has an official representative in The Gambia and Senegal with the mandate to
scrutinise students’ documents and send them for scholarship programme whereas
students also need to meet the qualifications in order to acquire a scholarship
package to study abroad. Any student that wants a scholarship for a bachelor’s
degree in Russia should score 70 percent of grades in high school performance
which includes grade 10 to 12 results and WASSCE results while for the master’s
degree, students need to have a bachelor’s degree from a recognised institution
and a transcript of GPA 3 points above with a valid passport that lasts until
2017.”
He further revealed that they are partnering with over 200 universities
such as Russia, Gadez University of Turkey, Ajou University of South Korea,
China, Qatar, Kuwait, Romania India and a host of other countries that have
their criteria of selection for bachelors, masters and PhD levels.
“We have sent 27 students to the United States of America, 17 to the
United Kingdom and 4 to Spain and plans are under way to organise an
educational exhibition in May where 21 universities from Russia will be coming
to The Gambia and over 200 universities from Asia, Europe, America, Africa will
also converge in Senegal for another bigger educational exhibition which will
serve as a channel for students to discuss with lecturers and get direct
admission.”
He added that the centre helps to facilitate the scholarship package
with an attached service fee of 200 dollars (over D9, 000) for postage charges,
assistance for admission and licence.
Sambujang Dampha, programme officer of Centre for Excellence Consultancy
said the centre is not operating in a vacuum but has forged strategic partnership
with relevant organisations in and outside the country.
He further emphasised:”The more we go, the more everything gets
expensive; nothing gets cheap, and there has never been a time when a cup of
rice decreases in this country and that applies to all other commodities and
education stands out. In fact it is becoming the most expensive commodity.”
He added: “We have visited the Personnel Management Office (PMO) that
has the mandate for all related government trainings and management of the
civil service but we realised that they are also trying look at relevant
partners that will also facilitate trainings for them at that level. Even the
government doesn’t find training easy so it is good we partner with them for
various reasons.
“There is Vision 2020, the Poverty Reduction Strategic Paper, Vision
2016 and the Programme for Accelerated Growth and Employment are the
national policy documents that outline the policy of The Gambia government as
far as development is concerned. Key in all these documents is the public-private
partnership in education. There is no government on this planet that single-handedly
handles the educational challenges of its citizens. It is the partnership
between the private sector and the government sector that will revolutionise
relevant and quality education in this country.
“The Gambia needs more agronomists to advise the farmers if we
don’t want to import rice, it is just not merely tilling the land you can have
one million tractors but it does not give you what it takes to be self-sufficient
in rice. We need this core of people like all of us who will go out and read
areas that are relevant to development objectives of the country. That is
the way it goes because, if you go and study nuclear physics that has no
relevance to this country. So we should be selective in our career development.”
By Sise Sawaneh
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