Africa.Com has released their list of the top rated Universities in Africa. Two of Nigeria’s leading Universities made the list.
See the list for the top Universities in Africa for the year 2014.
1. 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.
2. UNIVERSITY OF GHANA AT 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.
3. UNIVERSITY OF NAIROBI – 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 organizations 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.
4. 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.
5. UNIVERSITY OF BOTSWANA – GABORONE, BOTSWANA
Established in the early 1980s as the country’s first institution of higher education, the University of Botswana is now home to nearly 19,000 students. Females make up more than 55 percent, with an undergraduate population of over 15,000, and more than to 3,000 postgraduate students, all taught by a total of 890 academic staff members. The university has a total of 9 research facilities, including the Okavango Research Institute that is focused on the study and conservation of the Okavango Delta along with other southern African wetlands, and the Centre for Study of HIV & AIDS that takes an interdisciplinary approach to understand and address the impact of the virus. The University’s main library, one of the largest on the continent, is five stories high, has roughly 460,000 books, 123,000 full text journals, and 187 internet-dedicated workstations.
6. UNIVERSITY OF LAGOS – LAGOS, NIGERIA
Established in 1962 with a total of 72 students and only three faculties, the University of Lagos (Unilag) sought to train professionals for the newly independent Nigeria. UNILAG has over 40,000 undergraduate students, 12,000 postgraduates, and 100 PhD candidates, all taught by over 1,000 academic staff members. With an emphasis on research, the University’s faculty has published over 1,700 papers, with the most publications coming out of the medical, science, and engineering faculties. The university was recently one of seven institutions to receive a share of a $1.2 million research grant awarded by the Lagos State government.
7. UNIVERSITY OF DAR ES SALAAM – DAR ES SALAAM, TANZANIA
Following the dissolution of the University of East Africa (which also included Makerere University College in Uganda, Nairobi University College in Kenya), the University of Dar es Salaam was established as an independent university in 1970, making it the oldest – and largest – university in Tanzania. The University has five campuses and 10 faculties, including faculties in mechanical and chemical engineering and aquatic science and technology, and offers bachelors, masters, and doctoral degrees, along with certification programs. Its expansive library maintains a collection of around 600,000 volumes and 2,800 periodical titles, of which more than 140 are current printed journals.
8. ASHESI UNIVERSITY COLLEGE – BEREKUSO, GHANA
Established in 2002 with just 27 students, Ashesi University (AU) has grown to a population of over 600 registered students. Close to half are females, with foreign students making up 16 percent of the total population. Describing itself as a “coeducational institution,” its stated mission is to “educate a new generation of ethical, entrepreneurial leaders in Africa; to cultivate within our students the critical thinking skills, the concern for others and the courage it will take to transform a continent.” With an academic program designed in partnership with over 20 international professors, AU offers majors in business, computer science, and management information systems. Its curriculum combines a liberal arts core, with a 4-year focus on leadership, innovation and community service. Ashesi is to launch an engineering degree program in 2015, with hopes to fill 50 percent of the slots with female students in a bid to address gender inequality in that sector. The university has 17 full time faculty members, complemented by 34 adjunct, intern and visiting faculty.
9. ADDIS ABABA UNIVERSITY – ADDIS ABABA, ETHIOPIA
Established as the University College of Addis Ababa more than six decades ago, the Addis Ababa University (AAU), is the oldest educational institution in Ethiopia. AAU has gone from just over 30 students in 1950, to close to 50,000 today (including over 34,000 undergraduates, 13,000 graduates, and over 1,700 PhD students). The university has grown to have a staff contingent of more than 6,000, including over 2,4000 academics that are spread across its 14 campuses. These campus are made up of nearly a dozen colleges, and 8 research institutes, including the Aklilu Lemma Institute of Pathobiology that focuses on conducting biomedical research.
10. CHEIKH ANTA DIOP UNIVERSITY (UNIVERSITY OF DAKAR) – DAKAR, SENEGAL
Named after the Senegalese historian and anthropologist, Cheikh Anta Diop, it’s the only francophone university on our list, with all courses being taught in French. Originally established as a medical school in 1918, it is now one of the largest universities on the continent with over 60,000 students, and draws a number of international students who enrol in its study abroad programs.
List compiled by Africa.com
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