Department of Educational Foundations and Management

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    Leadership initiatives in response to institutional quality assurance challenges in Tanzania’s private universities
    (Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2020) Mgaiwa, Samson John
    Higher Education (HE) systems worldwide are undergoing multifarious changes due to pressure engendered by the global need for the knowledge economy. The demand for knowledge economy has created two demands: the need for quality HE education and the high social demand for HE which has resulted in the rapid emergence of private universities (PRUs). The quest for quality education has long been the main foci in HE reforms evident in universities putting in place quality management systems for assessment of university performance. Extant research shows that in Tanzania, PRUs have long been facing quality challenges ranging from lack of adequate and qualified academics to frail quality assurance(QA) systems. Although the existing research on QA challenges in private higher education are numerous and informative, the question on how university leadership responds to quality management challenges and whether or not such initiatives are significant in lessening the challenges remains largely unknown. Therefore, this paper examines the leadership initiatives aimed to respond to QA challenges in Tanzania’s PRUs and on whether such initiatives are useful in addressing QA challenges. The paper contends that private universities need effective leadership and governance to overcome the existing quality challenges.
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    Fostering Graduate Employability: Rethinking Tanzania’s University Practices
    (Sage open, 2021-04-13) Mgaiwa, Samson John
    Globalization, partly spurred by technological innovation such as artificial intelligence and robotics, continues to disrupt not only economic trajectories and business models, especially in the developed world, but also the knowledge and skill requirements for graduates entering the labor market. A growing corpus of literature on graduates’ employability has identified barriers to employment ranging from skills mismatch to a lack of soft skills. Although the literature on graduate employability is informative and illuminating, the role of university practices in fostering graduate employability in sub-Saharan Africa, and Tanzania in particular, has been less studied. Drawing on the broader employability literature, this article provides a comprehensive analysis of the best university practices in an effort to address the unemployment problems of university graduates in sub-Saharan Africa and Tanzania in particular. Four critical university best practices for fostering graduate employability are of interest—developing effective university—industry partnerships, aligning university education with a country’s development plans, regular university curriculum reviews, and strengthening quality assurance systems. Therefore, this article contributes to the higher education literature on the role of university practices in fostering graduate employability.
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    Academics’ job satisfaction in Tanzania’s higher education: The role of perceived work environment
    (Social Sciences & Humanities Open, 2021-04-03) Mgaiwa, Samson John
    Employees’ job satisfaction is critical for better work performance, reduced turnover intention, enhanced organizational commitment, and decreased job burnout. In the last several decades, numerous studies have assessed the association between employees’ work environments and job satisfaction globally. However, little research has addressed academics’ job satisfaction in non-European countries, and studies of Tanzania are particularly scarce. Drawing on Lewin’s field theory, this study sought to fill this gap by examining the relationship between Tanzanian academics’ perceived work environment and their job satisfaction, as measured by the Minnesota Satisfaction Questionnaire (MSQ). The study was quantitatively driven, with a cross-sectional survey design. A convenience sample of 116 academics (men: N ​= ​93; women: N ​= ​23) from two universities in Tanzania responded to a newly self-designed Perceived Work Environment Inventory and the MSQ. Hierarchical multiple regression analysis was performed using SPSS version 25 to detect significant predictors of academics’ job satisfaction. The results demonstrated that academic freedom, participative decisions, teamwork, supervision, and resources statistically significantly predicted academics’ job satisfaction over and above their marital status, gender, age, academic rank, and institutional type. This study has both practical and policy implications, and its findings contribute to the broader literature on the management and governance of higher education.
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    Mentorship of early career academics in Tanzania: issues and implications for the next generation of academics
    (Higher Education Pedagogies, 2021-03-31) Mgaiwa, Samson John; Kapinga, Orestes Seliverius
    Mentoring has been pointed out as one of the strategies for early career academics (ECAs) preparation and support for smooth transition into academia. Although ECAs mentoring has been widely studied, and the findings have indeed been informative and illuminating, the issues facing ECAs have yet to be adequately addressed, particularly in Tanzania. Drawing from open-ended questionnaires, focus group dis cussions, and interviews, we examined the issues surrounding the mentoring of ECAs in selected Tanzanian universities. Academic exploi tation, isolation, and lack of support from senior academics were among the key issues facing ECAs. The findings further revealed that regular mentorship training, peer support, and institutional policy framework as strategies in place to subdue the mentoring challenges. We argue for universities to have policy framework on professional development through ECAs mentoring to fill out the gap on pedago gical, research and public engagement deficits for ensuring capable next generation of academics.
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    Emerging Fundamental Issues of Teacher Education in Tanzania: A Reflection of Practices.
    (Educational Process: International Journal, 2018) Mgaiwa, Samson John
    Quality of teachers is recognized as one of the critical dimensions for promoting student learning in schools. However, in Tanzania there are several emerging issues that affect teacher education and teachers, and as a result affect students’ learning. The existing corpus of literature indicates a death of studies on the systematic understanding of issues that affect teacher education in Tanzania, especially at a time when education across the world is encountering a number of challenges. Employing documentary review and interviews as data collection methods, this paper attempts to analyze the emerging issues affecting teacher education in Tanzania. Employing the Teacher Education Model for the 21st Century, the paper identified five major issues affecting teacher education namely; lack of specific policies for teacher education, lack of continuing professional development, lack of an autonomous teacher regulatory body, inadequate ICT and teacher education, and poor quality of candidates joining teacher education. Generally, the findings indicate that teacher education is not effectively planned in terms of policy imperatives to meet the contemporary professional demands for 21st century education in Tanzania, and beyond. Finally, conclusions and certain recommendations which take a futuristic perspective in preparing 21st century teachers are offered.
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    Operationalising Quality Assurance Processes in Tanzanian Higher Education: Academics’ Perceptions from Selected Private Universities.
    (Creative Education, 2018) Mgaiwa, Samson John
    The purpose of this research was to examine the extent of operationalization of quality assurance processes in Tanzanian Private Universities (PRUs). A descriptive survey design informed by a mixed research approach was employed to guide this research. Purposive and stratified random sampling procedures were employed to select a sample of one hundred and ninety-five (N = 195) participants in the study who comprised of 191 academics, and 4 quality assurance officials from four private universities. Questionnaires and face-to-face interviews were used for data collection. The findings indicated that QA processes such as institutional self-assessment and external examinations were to a large extent conducted by PRUs. Unlike these findings, internal quality audits and tracer studies were not adequately carried out. Conclusively, the non-regular practice of these processes remains the main challenge in most of the surveyed Tanzanian PRUs because they are stipulated in the institutional policy documents without a will to adequately implement them.
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    The paradox of financing public higher education in Tanzania and the fate of quality education: The experience of selected universities.
    (Sage open, 2018) Mgaiwa, Samson John
    This article examines the sources of funding for public university education in Tanzania. The article also examines the trends in Other Charges and Capital Development funding for selected public universities in Tanzania taking a leap of years from 2010/2011 to 2015/2016 and their implications for quality issues in the provision of higher education. Results indicate that the sources of financing for public universities in Tanzania are unreliable and unsustainable. The findings further show that government approval rates for budgetary requests from universities decreased over the 6 years. At the same time, the proportion of government-approved funds and those released to universities decreased during the period under review. This article argues that given the unreliability of sources of higher education funding and decreasing budget approval rate and disbursed funds, the fate of quality higher education in the Country is questionable should the trend continue. Based on the findings, conclusions are drawn and recommendations made in light of the weaknesses identified and the review of the system of public university education funding in Tanzania.
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    Institutional constraints affecting quality assurance processes in Tanzania’s private universities. Journal of Higher Education in Africa
    (The Journal of Higher Education in Africa, 2017-11-01) Mgaiwa, Samson John; Ishengoma, Ishengoma Mchunguzi
    Abstract The purpose of this study is to identify the institutional constraints of quality assurance processes in Tanzania’s private universities and colleges. The descriptive survey design combines qualitative and quantitative research approaches. Purposive, stratified, and random sampling procedures are used to select a sample of 486 participants in the study who comprised 191 academic staff, 291 students, and 4 quality assurance officials from four private universities. Questionnaires and interviews are used for data collection. The findings indicate that inadequate financing, lack of capacity in terms of adequate, qualified and experienced human resources to undertake quality assurance functions, lack of clear and viable quality assurance policies, lack of awareness on quality assurance issues, and lack of academic leadership were the identified major institutional constraints to quality assurance processes in Tanzania’s private universities. The theoretical and policy implications of these findings are also discussed.
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    Public–private partnership in higher education provision in Tanzania: implications for access to and quality of education
    (Bandung Journal of Global South, 2016-11-24) Mgaiwa, Samson John
    Public–private partnerships (PPPs) in education are presented as capable of resolving several issues of education provision, financing, management, access and quality. This paper aimed at analyzing the impact of PPPs on access to and quality of higher education in Tanzania. Secondary research was used to gather data and critical review of the data and its analysis made. The focus of the paper was on higher education financing and on private higher education institutions. The findings indicated that PPPs have had a positive impact on increasing access to Tanzania higher education. However, although private universities and university colleges are many in number, enrolment has continued to be higher in public universities. It was further noted that an increase in higher learning institutions and subsequent increase in access to higher education has not meant an improvement in the quality of education provided by the institutions. As such, PPPs have had no significant impact on the improvement of quality of education. This is mainly accounted for by the number and qualifications held by academic members of staff in private universities, the infrastructure as well as the programmes they offer.
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    Tanzania: Revisiting Eastern and Central African Education Systems.
    (Bloomsbury Publishing, 2014) Fussy, Daniel; Anangisye, William A. L.
    Generally, the educational foundations laid by African traditional or indigenous education systems in the pre-external word contact period tend to be sidelined. Rarely are education values inherited from the pre-colonial education system acknowledged in different levels of education. For example, the craft of oral storytelling as a teaching technique widely used in lower levels of education owes much to the African traditional education (Pence & Schafer, 2006; Anangisye, 2008). In Tanzania, such traditional roots tend to be ignored because the current education system is, a large extent, premised on the formal education system introduced by the German and British colonial powers. Historically, such designed to perpetuate colonial values as well as address and meet colonial demands. This formal colonial education was only provided to a handful of select Africans in Tanganyika and Zanzibar. In the post-Independence periods in 1961 and 1963 for Tanganyika and Zanzibar, respectively, the two nations embarked on concerted efforts to overhaul the education system oriented towards meeting the needs of the colonial powers. These efforts became even more meaningful when the two nations forged the Union of Tanganyika and Zanzibar on 26 April 1964. Even at this early stage, it was acknowledged that the education push in the country had to acknowledge the beliefs and values of Africans. This became even more pronounced in the aftermath of the 1967 Arusha Declaration that gave birth to the Education for Self-Reliance (ESR) policy. This educational drive geared towards building an egalitarian society was premised on the African values of communalism, rather than the Western-derived values of individualism. This educational orientation, much in line with the argument of this chapter, sought to redress the common belief among colonial administrations that Africa’s education slate was not tabula rasa by making the African values centre-stage in the promotion of populist education for national development. This chapter revisits the development and trends of education system in Tanzania. In particular, the chapter draws on different key educational issues under the following sub-sections: introduction; background to education developments; basic structures of education; goals and purposes of education; nature of curriculum; school management; nature of teacher education, recruitment and supply; remunerations; education professionalism; and the conclusion.
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    The Institutionalisation of Teacher Ethics in Tanzania’s Secondary Schools: A School Head’s Perspective
    (Pakistan Journal of Education, 2018) Fussy, Daniel
    This paper explores practices that school heads employ to institutionalise teacher ethics in Tanzania’s secondary schools. It draws on qualitative data, generated through in-depth face-to-face interviews and document analyses. Secondary school heads, teachers and students from Iringa Municipality were involved in the study. The findings demonstrate that school heads employed several strategies to institutionalise teacher ethics, which include staff induction, allotment of weekly virtue practices, supervising and counselling individual teachers, assembling staff meetings and posting ethics related placards on staff room noticeboards. The study has shown that most of the practices lacked a profound impact on shaping teachers’ professional conduct. The study adds knowledge to school leadership literature from Tanzania, particularly on the aspect of teacher ethics. Accordingly, the study recommends that school heads should institute mentoring programmes where by early career teachers are attached to veteran teachers to regularly enhance their professional knowledge and behaviour. School heads should exemplify ethical conduct within and outside school premises by serving as role models for the teachers to facilitate the promotion of teacher ethics. Furthermore, education officers at the regional and district level should provide professional development programmes for school heads to further raise the awareness and confidence of school heads’ professional obligations.
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    Reflections on the Historical Antecedents to Revitalize Higher Education Research in Africa.
    (Educational Process: International Journal, 2018) Fussy, Daniel
    A vibrant higher education sector is a cornerstone to the production and application of cutting-edge knowledge and human resources relevant to spearheading socioeconomic development. While this is true, Africa has a discouraging performance in research, as compared with other world regions. In raising its research performance, Africa is now receiving considerable attention to revitalize its higher education sector from both global and local forces. In a bid to enhance success of different local and global interventions that Africa is currently receiving, it is imperative to revisit the past to comprehend what has made Africa’s higher education research be where it is today. Informed by the postcolonial theory, this paper seeks to establish the historical antecedents that have undermined the development of research in Africa. Several antecedents are established including the role of colonial higher education policies, incompatible supranational donor policies, unstable political landscape, interrupted academic freedom and autonomy, and unfamiliar language of academic, research and scholarly communication. The paper argues that any initiative that aimed at revitalising research in Africa should place the present higher education research doldrums in its wider socio-historical context where Africa’s higher education sector had been hindered for decades by challenges, as discussed in this paper.
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    The Status of Academic Advising in Tanzanian Universities
    (KEDI Journal of Educational Policy, 2018) Fussy, Daniel
    The need to enhance students’ participation, retention, and academic success has compelled universities to provide student advisory services. This study examines the status of academic advising in Tanzania, focusing on the significance, structure and incentives provided. Faculty members, students, and institutional documents informed the data generation process. The findings show that the academic advising programme is generally perceived as significant in enhancing students’ academic and social integration into the university life. The shared model is used to provide the advisory service based primarily on the prescriptive approach. Training and incentives are not provided to advisors, something which rendered the advisory service to operate in a haphazard fashion. The study offers recommendations to help higher education policy makers and practitioners to improve the delivery of student advisory services to attain higher retention, participation, and graduation rates.
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    Policy Directions for Promoting University Research in Tanzania
    (Studies in Higher Education, 2018) Fussy, Daniel
    This paper examines the influence of Tanzania’s higher education policy context on promoting research within Tanzanian universities. It focuses both on the prescribed mission of universities and the way in which the government provides funding for the universities in the country. Data were obtained through document analysis and interviews with national higher education policy-makers, as well as senior university leaders and academic staff members sourced from four leading universities. The findings show that the Tanzanian higher education sector operates under a homogeneous university model, wherein each university is prescribed as a research university. Indeed, direct institutional allocation has remained a dominant method of funding universities in general, and research in particular, since Tanzania gained political independence in 1961. The paper, therefore, recommends a reform of the national higher education policy to bridge the gap between policy articulations and implementation on the ground.
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    Research Dissemination Practices in Tanzania: Limitations and Potentialities
    (International Journal of Educational Development, 2018) Fussy, Daniel
    Disseminating research findings to both academic and non-academic fraternities is imperative for effectively fulfilling both academic and developmental roles. However, efforts to disseminate research outputs beyond academic circles are still limited, neglected and rarely questioned. This paper explores research dissemination practices engaged by researchers in four Tanzanian universities to establish their limitations and potentialities. The findings indicate that practices towards research dissemination continue favouring academic fraternities and there is growing belief among researchers that research is conducted principally for publication and academic qualification attainment rather than as something that researchers can directly use to change society and bring about development. The paper provides some recommendations for the potential reform and improvement of the dissemination of research findings to both academic and non-academic audiences.
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    The Hurdles to Fostering Research in Tanzanian Universities
    (Higher Education, 2019) Fussy, Daniel
    Universities across the world are normally called upon to be innovative and generate relevant knowledge to address context-related issues afflicting society. This central role of universities notwithstanding, the involvement in research by African universities and academics, has been minimal when compared with other universities and academics in other parts of the world. This raises the question of what is exactly happening in the region’s universities regarding the development of research. As such, this study establishes the hurdles of developing university research in Tanzania, which directly falls within the wider expectations of developing a research culture in developing countries. The study involved higher education policy makers, senior university leaders and academic staff members who were sourced from four universities and two non-university institutions which oversee the Tanzania’s higher education sector. Based on interviews and document analyses, the study has established various hurdles, ranging from cultural, political and structural to institutional. The study situates the hurdles and associated debilitating effects in the broader African and developing world context that share similar social, educational, political and economic characteristics to that of Tanzania. Additionally, the study adds to the existing body of knowledge on university research development in developing countries’ higher education systems.