Kenya tops Africa with students to prestigious Yale University, USA

MK254

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May 11, 2013
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Inabidi tuongoze kwa kila kitu Afrika hii...

lupita.jpg


Actress Lupita Nyong’o is a graduate of Yale. FILE PHOTO | NMG

Kenya has cemented its position as the top African country with the largest number of students admitted yearly to the prestigious Yale University in the United States.

Data from the university indicates that 24 Kenyan students have been accepted to study at the institution this year, ahead of Nigeria’s 23, Zimbabwe (18), Ghana (17) and South Africa (16).

Last year Kenya held the top position in the continent with 23 admissions.

The university, where Kenyan-born Oscar Awards winner Lupita Nyong’o graduated with a Master’s degree in acting, offers courses in nursing, law, medicine, arts, music, management, environment and architecture.

“Kenyans continue to hold the largest share of admissions to Yale from Africa, which shows the premium the country puts on quality education,” Yale director for Africa Eddie Mandhry said on the sidelines of the Africa CEOs forum in Geneva, Switzerland.

Central Bank of Kenya Governor Patrick Njoroge is yet another key alumnus of the university, having earned his PhD in Economics from the institution, according to Mr Mandhry.

Kenyans are increasingly placing priority on education with most sending their children to top colleges as a passport to a better future.

Quality concerns

This comes amid concerns over the quality of university education in Kenya faced with a shortage of lecturers and facilities as well as cash for research.

Both public and private universities had 443,783 students last year compared to about 62,000 in 2002, a rise that has not been matched with facilities and lecturers. This has in part contributed to graduates who do not match the needs of the job market.

Degrees from top-notch universities like Yale are seen as a ticket to securing top jobs in the global market.

This year, Kenya’s admissions to Yale comprise 17 undergraduate students and seven graduates. This saw the country emerge 16th in the world and first in Africa in the admissions.

Students from Tanzania managed seven slots at the university, the same number as Ethiopia, Rwanda had five while Uganda had only one.

Globally, China led the pack with 680 admissions, followed by Canada (223), India (189), South Korea (148) and 121 for the UK.

Mr Mandhry said that Yale is considering partnering with Strathmore Business School in Nairobi in business and management courses.

“Strathmore is quite phenomenal in business courses,” he said.

‘‘The university provides scholarships and financial aid to needy but bright students who demonstrate exceptional academic and leadership qualities.

“We extend our admission policy to international students so the college will be accessible to all candidates from any part of the world who show great academic and personal promise, regardless of their financial situation,” the university says on its website.

http://www.nation.co.ke/business/Ke...intake-at-Yale/996-3859688-1439k5p/index.html
 
Yu might be the graduate of one of Kenyan university hu is obsessed with yale. ..wake-up this is not a news!!
 
Inabidi tuongoze kwa kila kitu Afrika hii...

lupita.jpg


Actress Lupita Nyong’o is a graduate of Yale. FILE PHOTO | NMG

Kenya has cemented its position as the top African country with the largest number of students admitted yearly to the prestigious Yale University in the United States.

Data from the university indicates that 24 Kenyan students have been accepted to study at the institution this year, ahead of Nigeria’s 23, Zimbabwe (18), Ghana (17) and South Africa (16).

Last year Kenya held the top position in the continent with 23 admissions.

The university, where Kenyan-born Oscar Awards winner Lupita Nyong’o graduated with a Master’s degree in acting, offers courses in nursing, law, medicine, arts, music, management, environment and architecture.

“Kenyans continue to hold the largest share of admissions to Yale from Africa, which shows the premium the country puts on quality education,” Yale director for Africa Eddie Mandhry said on the sidelines of the Africa CEOs forum in Geneva, Switzerland.

Central Bank of Kenya Governor Patrick Njoroge is yet another key alumnus of the university, having earned his PhD in Economics from the institution, according to Mr Mandhry.

Kenyans are increasingly placing priority on education with most sending their children to top colleges as a passport to a better future.

Quality concerns

This comes amid concerns over the quality of university education in Kenya faced with a shortage of lecturers and facilities as well as cash for research.

Both public and private universities had 443,783 students last year compared to about 62,000 in 2002, a rise that has not been matched with facilities and lecturers. This has in part contributed to graduates who do not match the needs of the job market.

Degrees from top-notch universities like Yale are seen as a ticket to securing top jobs in the global market.

This year, Kenya’s admissions to Yale comprise 17 undergraduate students and seven graduates. This saw the country emerge 16th in the world and first in Africa in the admissions.

Students from Tanzania managed seven slots at the university, the same number as Ethiopia, Rwanda had five while Uganda had only one.

Globally, China led the pack with 680 admissions, followed by Canada (223), India (189), South Korea (148) and 121 for the UK.

Mr Mandhry said that Yale is considering partnering with Strathmore Business School in Nairobi in business and management courses.

“Strathmore is quite phenomenal in business courses,” he said.

‘‘The university provides scholarships and financial aid to needy but bright students who demonstrate exceptional academic and leadership qualities.

“We extend our admission policy to international students so the college will be accessible to all candidates from any part of the world who show great academic and personal promise, regardless of their financial situation,” the university says on its website.

http://www.nation.co.ke/business/Ke...intake-at-Yale/996-3859688-1439k5p/index.html


Lakini wote hao wanaingia kwa quota system, yaani upendeleo maalumu na hawashindanishwi kama Wanafunzi wengine kama Waasia, Wazungu ambao huingia Ivy league kwa msuli na siyo quota system!
 
How has it benefitted Kenya??...How is it even of cincern to us(Tanzania)??
they return home and helps the country with skills and exposure....ata wakibaki huko na kufanya kazi bado wanaweka kenya kwa global map look at lupita nyong'o...do you know we have a kenyan mayor sijui kama ni uk ama us...it may not concern tanzania but to kenya it matters alot na if im not wrong this is a kenyan forum akuna mtu ame ku force ufungue page!!!
 
How has it benefitted Kenya??...How is it even of cincern to us(Tanzania)??
New mayor Cllr Elizabeth Kangethe dons robes in mayor making ceremony
PUBLISHED: 11:30 12 June 2014

Freddy Mayhew

image.jpg

The new Mayor of Barking and Dagenham, Cllr Elizabeth Kangethe

A former teacher has donned the red robes and golden sceptre to become the borough’s new mayor.

Cllr Elizabeth Kangethe was officially elected at the Annual Ceremonial Council on Friday, June 6, replacing Cllr Hardial Singh Rai as Mayor of Barking and Dagenham.

The Labour councillor has represented Parsloes ward since 2010 and is a leading representative of the Kenyan community within the UK as well as volunteering with groups that support women through domestic violence.

She has served as a school governor for Parsloes Primary and Sydney Russell Comprehensive schools having first graduated from the University of East London with a teaching degree.

Mayor Cllr Kangethe said: “I am thrilled to be elected to serve as the Mayor of Barking and Dagenham for 2014 to 2015.

“I am looking forward to representing the borough and working with our residents, the different community organisations and local businesses.”

She said her predecessor, Cllr Rai, had done a “tremendous job” as mayor and announced her chosen charity for her year in office would be the Teenage Cancer Trust, which helps improve the lives of young people living with cancer.
 
Kenyan makes a name in US film industry





A Kenyan filmmaker is causing a stir in the US with her controversial documentary about tensions between African-Americans and Africans living in the US.

Ms Peres Owino recently won an award at the Seattle International Film Festival for Bound: Africans versus African-Americans. It was honoured by attendees at the West Coast city’s festival as the best movie made by a female director.

She explores the two groups’ cultural conflicts and misunderstandings through a series of testimonials.

“Some Africans say they are perplexed by the prevalence of crime and drug abuse in black American communities. And African-Americans wonder why Africa remains so poor and underdeveloped. They also express resentment at Africans ‘for selling us into slavery’,” Ms Owino tells the Sunday Nation in a telephone interview. She suggests that these deep-rooted differences reflect contrasting forms of identity.

“Race is the default setting for African-Americans,” she says, noting that centuries of discrimination and oppression at the hands of whites cause black Americans to view US society through the prism of skin colour. For Kenyans and many other Africans, Ms Owino states, “ethnicity is the default setting.”

And tribal identities matter not at all in Los Angeles, the city where Ms Owino has lived for the past 16 years.

“My being a Luo is of no consequence in the US,” she says.

Ms Owino excelled academically in Kenya, winning a scholarship to the University of Wisconsin, a north-central US state. She studied social change and development despite her father’s desire that she become a lawyer.

“Secretly, I was studying theatre and the performing arts because that was my real passion,” she says.

OWINO CONFIDES.
And she was so committed to making a career in those fields that she hitch-hiked 2,000 miles to LA after completing her studies in Wisconsin. “I had $10 in my pocket and was living on the floor of people’s homes,” Ms Owino recalls. She also remembers telling her mother, Rosemary Owino, the owner of a restaurant in Kisumu, that “this city is not going to defeat me.”

Ms Owino worked for seven years in the marketing department at Paramount, one of Hollywood’s top studios. She got acting jobs on the side and also wrote theatre pieces and screenplays.

One of them, Seasons of Love — co-written with her professional partner Sharon Brathwaite — was recently shown on a US television network. The made-for-TV movie has received an unprecedented 16 award nominations in an annual competition sponsored by the NAACP, the leading US civil rights organisation.

Although Ms Owino appears well on her way to stardom in the US entertainment industry, she says her creative endeavours have not yet made her financially independent. She works part-time as a script reviewer and all-around troubleshooter for RatPac Entertainment, a small Hollywood studio.

Ms Owino says she intends to stay in the US for now. “Here I’m at least able to say what I want to say,” she declares, noting, “I grew up in Kenya in the Moi era.”

“It’s good to be in a place where my ideas count,” she adds.

Ms Owino, who’s unmarried and has no children, does return to Kenya regularly to visit her family. And she’s impressed by what she sees happening in Kenyan cinema.
“It’s really come a long way,” she says. “It’s typical of Kenyans too in that they endeavour to be excellent in their film making. They won’t settle for less.”
 
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Kenya is a global brand churning out talent to all parts of the country. We need to export a president for Tanzania! America still cries for Obama to continue being a president
 
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