Rebuilding Afghanistan’s Higher Educational System: Observations from Kabul

This paper describes the crucial issues and challenges facing Afghanistan’s universities as they begin the demanding task of rebuilding and restructuring their university system after two decades of war and civil unrest. The setting for this qualitative study is a four-day professional development c...

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Main Authors: MICHAELH. ROMANOWSKI, TERI MCCARTHY, TERRYL.MITCHELL
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Simon Fraser University 2007-03-01
Series:International Journal of Education Policy and Leadership
Online Access:http://journals.sfu.ca/ijepl/index.php/ijepl/article/view/63/20
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spelling doaj-294ecfc55d614b0dbd0aa4268e1460a82021-09-02T01:04:04ZengSimon Fraser UniversityInternational Journal of Education Policy and Leadership1555-50622007-03-0123Rebuilding Afghanistan’s Higher Educational System: Observations from Kabul MICHAELH. ROMANOWSKITERI MCCARTHYTERRYL.MITCHELLThis paper describes the crucial issues and challenges facing Afghanistan’s universities as they begin the demanding task of rebuilding and restructuring their university system after two decades of war and civil unrest. The setting for this qualitative study is a four-day professional development conference for Afghan university presidents and academic deans sponsored and funded by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization and the Afghanistan Ministry of Higher Education. Cooperative Studies (an NGO, not-for-profit educational organization located in Kansas City) provided a team of academics to Kabul, Afghanistan, to offer professional development workshops. Using the Grounded Theory Methodology as a theoretical framework for this research, data was derived from interactive sessions, questionnaires, informal dialogue, small group sessions and question and answer sessions; the perspectives of the 39 Afghan academic leaders are presented as they describe the problems facing university administrators in their country today. Findings identify these challenges and center on 1) the lack of autonomy; 2) the need for qualified faculty; 3) concerns regarding students’ access and preparation; and 4) concerns about funding and budget issues. Based on these findings, policy suggestions and recommendations are provided.http://journals.sfu.ca/ijepl/index.php/ijepl/article/view/63/20
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author MICHAELH. ROMANOWSKI
TERI MCCARTHY
TERRYL.MITCHELL
spellingShingle MICHAELH. ROMANOWSKI
TERI MCCARTHY
TERRYL.MITCHELL
Rebuilding Afghanistan’s Higher Educational System: Observations from Kabul
International Journal of Education Policy and Leadership
author_facet MICHAELH. ROMANOWSKI
TERI MCCARTHY
TERRYL.MITCHELL
author_sort MICHAELH. ROMANOWSKI
title Rebuilding Afghanistan’s Higher Educational System: Observations from Kabul
title_short Rebuilding Afghanistan’s Higher Educational System: Observations from Kabul
title_full Rebuilding Afghanistan’s Higher Educational System: Observations from Kabul
title_fullStr Rebuilding Afghanistan’s Higher Educational System: Observations from Kabul
title_full_unstemmed Rebuilding Afghanistan’s Higher Educational System: Observations from Kabul
title_sort rebuilding afghanistan’s higher educational system: observations from kabul
publisher Simon Fraser University
series International Journal of Education Policy and Leadership
issn 1555-5062
publishDate 2007-03-01
description This paper describes the crucial issues and challenges facing Afghanistan’s universities as they begin the demanding task of rebuilding and restructuring their university system after two decades of war and civil unrest. The setting for this qualitative study is a four-day professional development conference for Afghan university presidents and academic deans sponsored and funded by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization and the Afghanistan Ministry of Higher Education. Cooperative Studies (an NGO, not-for-profit educational organization located in Kansas City) provided a team of academics to Kabul, Afghanistan, to offer professional development workshops. Using the Grounded Theory Methodology as a theoretical framework for this research, data was derived from interactive sessions, questionnaires, informal dialogue, small group sessions and question and answer sessions; the perspectives of the 39 Afghan academic leaders are presented as they describe the problems facing university administrators in their country today. Findings identify these challenges and center on 1) the lack of autonomy; 2) the need for qualified faculty; 3) concerns regarding students’ access and preparation; and 4) concerns about funding and budget issues. Based on these findings, policy suggestions and recommendations are provided.
url http://journals.sfu.ca/ijepl/index.php/ijepl/article/view/63/20
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