Meeting challenges in rural African education: a Zambian case study

Authors

  • Jannie Compion Foundation for Cross-Cultural Education, Zambia
  • Hennie Steyn North-West University
  • Charl Wolhuter North-West University
  • Hannes van der Walt North-West University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.38140/aa.v44i1.1344

Abstract

Private initiatives can contribute to the eradication of many of the educational problems of developing countries, specifically in rural Africa. This article explores the crippling education problems of several developing countries. It argues that many of these problems can be addressed by non-governmental organisations making use of privately funded mini-education systems. In particular, an analysis and discussion of the Foundation for Cross-Cultural Education shows that a private educational initiative, acting as a mini-education system itself, can make a substantial contribution towards the pedagogical upliftment of a community in a rural area, such as that of the Masaïti area of Zambia.

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Published

2012-01-31

How to Cite

Compion, J., Steyn, H., Wolhuter, C., & van der Walt, H. (2012). Meeting challenges in rural African education: a Zambian case study. Acta Academica: Critical Views on Society, Culture and Politics, 44(1), 159–190. https://doi.org/10.38140/aa.v44i1.1344

Issue

Section

Articles