2006年VOA标准英语-University in Ghana Prepares Students for(在线收听) |
By Nico Colombant Ghana HiTech College training ------------------------------------------ Very eager and disciplined students are taking part in a management class. Ashesi University (the name means "Beginning" in the Akan native Ghanaian language) is modeled after small, four-year, liberal arts colleges. But students here are mostly interested in computer science and business management. The university's president and founder is Patrick Awuah. He studied in the United States and worked for software giant Microsoft. But when he had a child, he decided it was time to give something back to his native Ghana.
Araba Amuasi and Sarah Mills are Class of 2007. Like most students, some of their schooling is paid by their parents, but they also get a school loan to cover the several-thousand dollar tuition.
One of the companies that need such future talent is nearby Rancard Solutions, which develops business application software. Its chief technology strategist is Ehigozie Binitie, who was also educated abroad, and came back to help the local economy.
Some of the company's new recruits are recent Ashesi graduates, like the two 23-year-old programmers. The man behind some of these new high-tech prospects in Ghana, Awuah, says it was nice to succeed for himself in the United States, but he feels he is doing much more now for others. "When I was working at Microsoft that was also very exciting. Those were heady times when I was there in the late 80s and early 90s. There are times when I am back in Seattle and I visit my old colleagues there and they are working on some pretty cool technology, certainly there's a part of me that misses that sometimes. But what I am doing now is equally challenging -- even more challenging I think -- than what I was doing at Microsoft. I think that the impact on the world is going to be greater than what I was doing at Microsoft." All the students here seem to be full of ideas and business plans, trying to design profitable and useful technological improvements. Many want to develop software in local languages for Ghanaians who cannot read or write in French or English. Rather than adding to the brain drain that afflicts so many sectors of Africa's economy, these students now say they have enough opportunity to stay here. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/3/31660.html |