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Inauguration of the
The Aga Khan Academy
Mombasa, Kenya
News
Video
on-demand from the ceremony
Speech by His Highness
the Aga Khan at The Aga Khan Academy, Mombasa, 20 December
2003
Press Release:
Aga
Khan and Kenya President Kibaki Inaugurate the First
of an International Network of Academic Centres of
Excellence
Photos
from the Inauguration of the Aga Khan Academy, Mombasa
Introduction
The first of a planned network
of Aga Khan Academies dedicated to expanding access
to education of an international standard of excellence
in Asia and Africa is to be inaugurated in Mombasa,
Kenya.
The network of Academies will feature
a curriculum based on the framework of the International
Baccalaureate (IB). At the centre of this approach
is a broad education in the humanities from pre-primary
years through to higher secondary. The Academies will
also feature a robust system of international student
and teacher exchanges between Academies in different
countries as well as with allied schools, including
Phillips Academy in the United States and the Schule Schloss
Salem in Germany. Proficiency in at least two languages,
with English as the medium of instruction, and progressive
mastery of information technologies will also be hallmarks
of the programmes. To ensure access regardless of socio-economic
status or other limiting factors, admission to the
Academy is merit-based and means-blind.
“An education must equip students
with the tools that enable them to adapt, and thrive, in
a world characterised by change,” His Highness the
Aga Khan has said. “In such an environment, technical
proficiency is not enough. Education that prepares
children for life must go beyond fundamental skills
to stimulate creativity, intellectual curiosity and
honest inquiry. Advancement and development, both personal
and societal, are dependant on these elements. Innovation
and progress arise from the ability to approach a
challenge in a new way and offer a solution.”
In addition to Mombasa, schools are planned
for Nairobi in Kenya, as well as Dar es Salaam in Tanzania,
Kampala in Uganda, Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic
of the Congo, Antananarivo in Madagascar, Maputo in
Mozambique, Dhaka in Bangladesh, Mumbai and Hyderabad
in India, Karachi in Pakistan, Kabul in Afghanistan,
Osh in the Kyrgyz Republic, Khorog and Dushanbe in
Tajikistan, Damascus and Salamieh in Syria and Bamako
in Mali.
The Academies will all feature residential
campuses designed by renowned architects. They will
have well-equipped laboratories for general science,
physics, biology, chemistry, home science and computers,
art and music rooms, a library and resource centre,
a religion and culture room, a counselling facility,
a design and technology workshop, student and teacher
lounges, a theatre, a multipurpose hall and a cafeteria
and dining area. Facilities for sports will include
swimming pools, fields for athletics such as soccer,
hockey and athletics. A gymnasium will typically house
facilities for a variety of sports such as basketball,
badminton, volleyball, squash and gymnastics. Other facilities
might include tennis courts, a cricket pitch or an ice-skating
rink, where appropriate.
Each Academy will incorporate a Professional
Development Centre for teachers that focuses on professional
development for teachers and curricular innovation
at all affiliated institutions. Each Centre will function
not only for the benefit of the Academy but extend
modern teaching and learning methods to government
and private schools locally and regionally.
These efforts are underpinned by the International
Academic Partnership, which brings together the worldwide
resources of the Aga Khan Education Services, Phillips
Academy in Andover, Massachusetts, USA, Aga Khan University’s
Institute for Educational Development (AKU-IED) in
Karachi, Pakistan, and the Schule Schloss Salem, in
Salem, Germany. Since its founding in 1993, the IAP
has linked over 400 schools in Bangladesh, India,
Kenya, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Tanzania, Uganda and
the United States.
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