Saturday 11 April 2015

TOP POST::: Top 10 Best African Universities 2015 [GUESS WHICH TOPS LIST]





Via-  What makes a University best? Is it their infrastructure, campus size, buildings, alumni, programs offered or all the mentioned things. Flip through the list for the top Universities in Africa for the year 2015.

10. MAKERERE UNIVERSITY, KAMPALA – UGANDA

Founded in 1922, and later becoming an independent national university in 1970, Makerere University is Uganda’s largest and oldest public university. The university developed a focused research agenda in line with the national government’s policy objectives, and seeks to support those programs with a multidisciplinary approach ranging from natural sciences to economics and education. Spread across three campuses, Makerere University has a population of over 40,000, with more than five percent of the student body made up of international students. Makerere offers 145 undergraduate programs, over 140 Postgraduate programs, and 135 Masters Degree programs. Home to a top medical school, the University of Makerere also partners with the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine to host a medical exchange program in which students complete rotations in the fields of cardiology, family planning, pediatrics, infectious disease, and trauma (emergency medicine), among many others

9. UNIVERSITY OF GHANA LEGON, ACCRA – GHANA

With a student population of around 30,000 (including over 1,000 international students), the University of Ghana is the oldest and largest public university in the country. Originally founded as an affiliate college of the University of London, the University of Ghana became an independent institution in 1961. Academic programming is spread over nine colleges issuing an array of academic degrees. A hub of research, the university has institutes focusing on seismology, population studies, migration studies, and ecology. The university boasts partnerships with the Norwegian Universities’ Committee for Development Research and Education, and the Commonwealth Universities Student Exchange Consortium. Balm Library, the university’s main library, has a collection of over 300,000 volumes.

8.UNIVERSITY OF KENYA, NAIROBI – KENYA

Tracing its roots back to 1956 as a technical college, the University of Nairobi (UoN) became an independent university in 1970. Today, the university is spread across seven campuses and is home to over 1,600 academic staff members who oversee more than 70,000 students (at least 90 are PhD students), through over 600 of its university programmes. UoN hosts an average of 120 foreign students each year, and has close ties with the international community, with official bilateral collaborations with at least 20 global universities and O**anizations in joint research and publications. The research intensive university has over 1,000 research projects currently being undertaken by staff and students, and boasts a range of research facilities including the expansive Science and Technology Park which also houses the small-scale digital fabrication workshop that serves as a rapid prototyping centre, the “FabLab.” Its also a space where students can incubate and develop business ideas, with entrepreneurship strongly encouraged and supported throughout the university, like at the School of Computing’s Startup Incubation Program.

7.UNIVERSITY OF IBADAN, IBADAN – NIGERIA

The oldest university in the continents’ most populous country, the University of Ibadan (UI) has a population of over 35,000 students, including 13,000 undergraduates, 7,000 postgraduates, and 14,000 distance learning students. With a total of 13 faculties – including Agriculture and Forestry, Veterinary Medicine and Technology – and 300 professors, UI produces an average of 3,000 postgraduate and PhD students every year. UI has close ties with international institutions, including the Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine in the United States that sends its medical students to UI’s teaching hospital.




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