Educating Africans: Perspectives of Ghanaian Philosophers

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25159/2413-3086/5277

Keywords:

Africa, consciencism, education, Ghanaian philosophers, neo-liberalism, Sankofaism

Abstract

This paper reflects on the foundational principles and strategies for tertiary education in Africa. Since the early 1940s, Ghanaian philosophers have advanced unambiguous perspectives on education policy in Africa. Although the integrity and cogency of these perspectives have remained intact for over 60 years, they have not yet found expression in public policy formulation. Available evidence suggests that Africa has so far remained impervious to the perspectives and strategies for education outlined by Ghanaian philosophers since Nkrumah’s overthrow from the presidency in Ghana. Current African Union strategies on education, articulated in Agenda 2063, seem to validate the resistance by national governments to these philosophical perspectives. This paper seeks to argue that what these philosophers espouse are excellent conceptual models worthy of development and implementation in Africa; and that in service of a sounder educational future for Ghana and Africa than that which currently prevails, a sankofa approach to the conceptualisation of education, which incorporates these Ghanaian philosophical perspectives, is desirable.

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Author Biography

Martin Odei Ajei, University of Ghana

Senior Lecturer in Philosophy

Department of Philosophy and Classics

University of Ghana

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Published

2019-01-14

How to Cite

Ajei, Martin Odei. 2018. “Educating Africans: Perspectives of Ghanaian Philosophers”. Phronimon 19:15 pages. https://doi.org/10.25159/2413-3086/5277.

Issue

Section

Research Articles
Received 2018-12-09
Accepted 2019-01-08
Published 2019-01-14