"Notional" Science
The reforms made a sonorous - though unconvincing - case made for harmonization or integration of the science disciplines. Why was it so important to integrate the sciences while maintaining the arts and social science disciplines were left as single disciplines? The subterfuge was obvious. Biology, Chemistry and Physics that have now been bundled into a nondescript integrated science discipline - constitute the backbone of the Southern Cameroonian subsystem. Francophone children tend to drift children into Southern British Cameroons to take full advantage of this science foundation. It is thus reasonable to conclude that the changes were crafted to waterdown and destroy the foundation of the Southern Cameroonian educational system. (See Valentine Tameh, "New Educational Reforms: Brainwashing and the Entrapment of Education" as published on Ambasbay – Southern Cameroonian e-group)
Why was MINESEC venturing unto the testy grounds of syllabus definition, in a country with different examination boards which had been put in place to address the specificities of two different sub-systems? (See Section 15, Articles 1 & 2, and Sections 16 and 17 of Law No 98/004 of 14 April 1998) – specificities considered sacrosanct by the different peoples. Whereas Western countries whose perspectives we have always "ingurgitated" have organized perspectives in which the state sets standards, while the existing educational institution types (e.g. public of different orientations, lay private and confessional) and examination boards prepare their curricula and syllabuses following those "national standards."Why did the GOC not adopt the same standards worldwide and spare Cameroonians its multiple vacillations.
CBAE: From the Francophonie
The decision that French-speaking countries should use this "Approche par les Competences" was adopted in a 1994 summit of "La Francophonie" and so French educationists "went to school" to learn and translate extant literature on Competency Based Approach to Education (CBAE). When Cameroon's opted to join the CBAE wagon around 2006, some 12 years after, official francophone delegations went to Canada and were trained by French-speaking experts. They came back with literature in French, which apparently has been/is being hastily re-translated into English for the Southern Cameroonian community in Cameroon with the negative corollaries attendant upon such hasty, ill-thought out work!
There is nothing stealthy about the motives and mores of the Francophonie. The Francophonie is an overt warfariest agenda. The Francophonie was invented to expand the influence of France and French worldwide. At the expanse of English and Anglo-Saxon values.
In Cameroun, the main agenda of the Francophonie is to francophonize Southern Cameroonians. Listen to this, chutzpah from a francophone minister, a certain Hamadou Moustapha, former Vice -Prime Minister In charge of Housing and Town Planning, in Jeune Afrique Economie, 207, 20 Nov 1995 page 3:
'A un moment donné' effectivement, on a commencé a oublier que les anglophones étaient la, on a eu l' impression que les anglophones s'étaient déja francophonisés"
Or for a spell we almost forgot that the anglophones were here, we had the impression that they had been francophonized. Hannah Arendt's observation that: "The aim of totalitarian education has never been to instill convictions, but to destroy the capacity to form any," can be applied here to mean that the agenda of the Francophonie has never been to foster English and Anglo-Saxon values but to efface even the little available.
Festus Okafor in Philosophy of Education (1976) defines the CBAE as a data-based, adaptive, performance-oriented set of integrated processes that facilitate, measure, record and certify within the context of flexible time parameters the demonstration of known, explicitly stated and agreed upon learning outcomes that reflect functioning in life roles. Thus CBAE focuses on outcomes of learning. It addresses what the learners are expected to do, not just what they are expected to know. Okafor goes further to note that the basic concept that propelled the CBAE dates back to the 1920s, when behaviourist and textbook writer Franklin Bobbit in How to Make a Curriculum stated inter alia that "it was incumbent upon the curriculum designer to provide a detailed taxonomy of the full range of human experience so as to construct a curriculum responsive to the needs of students in terms of preparing them for life in the real world". So in as much as the CBAE package per se was first constituted in 1972, its tenets were already being defined and fine-tuned by English behaviourists.
The above mentioned tenets of the CBAE had long become part and parcel of the Southern Cameroonian subsystem of education, thanks especially to the British Inset Programme of the nineteen eighties and early nineteen nineties, with its highly developed penchant for learner-centred activities and mini projects, practical and field work, etc. Therefore, the change as proposed by MINESEC was uncalled for in the Southern Cameroonian subsystem. After all, the British INSET Programme had proven that the CBAE worked well even with the single subjects. The different appellations for the CBAE in the Anglo-Saxon world testify to the fame it has enjoyed therein since it was defined and elaborated in the USA (Oregon) in 1972 in what they called Life Skills Education. The British styled it Standard Based Education, the Canadians preferred it to be called Competency Based Education, the South Africans saw it as Outcome-Based Education, and the Nigerians named it Core Skills Education.
If it is the obsession to adopt the Competency Based Approach to Education (CBAE) as the new national policy, then CBAE could also have been applied within the single subject dispensation and the trainees' terminal profiles defined. Many wonderful educational reform proposals still end up being workable only in the contexts where they are conceived and not in others with different classroom and schooling situations. CBAE, with its focus on learner-centred, communicative and activity-oriented teaching, on the discovery method, on projects, on field and practical work, etc would be wonderfully feasible especially in European/western contexts, with "few learners" in the classrooms and the possibility of one-on-one rapports; but there would be need for extra mobilization and real hard work especially on the part of the teacher for it to succeed in our socio-cultural context, with its oversized/overpopulated classrooms.
From: Ofege Ntemfac ntemfacofege@YAHOO.COM [Cameroon_at50uk] <Cameroon_at50uk@yahoogroups.co.uk>
Date: Sat, Nov 28, 2015 at 8:37 AM
Subject: [Cameroon_at50uk] BACKGROUND INFORMATION: Vista of total and vile colonisation: The Anglophone Education System Under Siege. From the Manuscript of Long Walk to Freedom Land by Ntemfac Nchwete Ofege
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