Global University System (GUS)
in Sierra Leone and Mano River Union countries
Secretariat:
University of Sierra Leone
College
of Medicine and Allied Health Sciences
January
8, 2007
Principal Organizer
Professor, Vice Chancellor & Principal
University of Sierra Leone
Private Mail bag
A. J. Momoh Street, Tower Hill
Freetown, Sierra Leone
Tel: +232-22-226859/226594
Cell: +232-76-880-758/+232-033-599-835
Takeshi
Utsumi, Ph.D., P.E.
Co-Principal
Organizer
Founder
and Vice President for Technology and Coordination of Global University System
(GUS)
Chairman,
GLObal Systems Analysis and Simulation Association in the U.S.A. (GLOSAS/USA)
43-23
Colden Street, Flushing, NY 11355-5913, U.S.A.
Tel:
718-939-0928, utsumi@columbia.edu
http://www.itu.int/wsis/goldenbook/search/display.asp?Quest=8032562&lang=en
http://www.friends-partners.org/GLOSAS/
Tax
Exempt ID: 11-2999676
Global University System (GUS) aims
to create a worldwide consortium of universities and healthcare institutions to
provide the underdeveloped world with global e-learning and
e-healthcare/telemedicine via broadband Internet technologies. The aim is to achieve
Òeducation and healthcare for all,Ó anywhere, anytime and at any pace. Education and job skills are the
keys in determining a nationÕs wealth and influence.
GUS is headquartered at the Global E‑learning Center at the University of
Tampere in Finland, under the direction of the UNESCO/UNITWIN Networking Chair,
held by Dr. Tapio Vans. The GUS/Sierra Leone consortium member institutions
will also become members of this Chair Program.
With focus on women's empowerment, MAMAS is designed in context of
GUS programs, providing the Local Community Development Network (LCDN), linking
universities to/from community‑based
clinics, schools, governmental and lifelong learning centers. MAMAS is a model
for hybrid communications and international supportive partnerships, adapted to
rural and refugee needs. MAMAS incorporates best practices and most advanced
technology research for added value and reach to existing national and
community‑based
programs.
This
project is to create GUS/Sierra Leone, which is to be
emulated in other Mano River Union (MRU) countries, i.e., Guinea, Liberia and
Ivory Coast, in the near future. The
MRU Secretariat will provide overall co-ordination of GUS and emerging
programs.
GUS/Sierra
Leone will be a consortium of University of Sierra Leone, Njala University,
Milton Margai College of Education and Technology, and other local
stakeholders, etc., and will serve as the overall framework for past and future
initiatives entailing rural and community-based development activities,
especially (not exclusively) those pertaining to health care, education,
agriculture and fishing.
GUS/Sierra
Leone is designed to provide tools to enable the people of the region to
participate fully in their own development and to bring their culture forward,
thriving with the influx of opportunities, and contributing to new
prosperities. After a decade of
rebel wars, GUS/Sierra Leone will provide a modernizing tool to fast-track
peace-building, peace-consolidation and socio-economic development of the
participating communities, and contribute to the accelerated integration of the
MRU countries in the world economy, export and trade facilitation, rural and
community-based economic growth.
á
Proposed GUS/Sierra Leone linked by MAMAS to rural and
refugee communities, supports distance learning and e‑health/telemedicine for: 1) regional
technological infrastructure and 2) programs and academic content to increase
stakeholder capacity.
á
Both infrastructure and programs are supported by 1) exchanges
of educational courses and their credits through broadband Internet, 2)
promotion of community development, and 3) collaborative research.
á
Immediate focus is on community e‑health/telemedicine and participatory
governance because those programs are foundational and best developed for rapid
start‑up.
á
The e‑university
brings together resources of an extensive network of universities in Sierra
Leone, as well as specialized programs from many international universities.
á
GUS/Sierra Leone and MAMAS provide tools, systems,
partnerships and funding opportunities to strengthen local efforts for remote
learning and health system.
At the planning workshop (see below),
following working groups will be formed.
GUS programs and services will be delivered via regional satellite
hubs, typically located at a major university, that connect via broadband
Internet to educational resource cites in the E.U., U.S., and Japan. In a sense, the regional satellite hub
is to be the major Internet Service Provider (ISP) for not-for-profit
organizations in the region and the gateway to the outside world. The GUS/Sierra Leone consortium member
institutions will be connected to very high speed Internet, as similar to the
optical fiber network at 3 Gbps of the Multimedia Broadband Internet (MBI) of
the Ethiopian government. GUS member institutions will then connect with
secondary and elementary schools, libraries, hospitals, local government
offices and NGOs, etc., through broadband wireless Internet at drastically
discounted rates.
The buildings with a broadband Internet connection will then also
become relay points for the low-cost ÒWi-Fi (wireless fidelity)Ó networks that
are now rapidly appearing in Japan, USA and Europe. This advanced wireless communication with laptop computer
will make e-learning possible for anyone, anywhere, and anytime with
capabilities of Internet telephony, fax, voice mail, e-mail, Web access,
videoconferencing, etc. This is
not only to help local community development, but also to assure close
cooperation among higher, middle and lower levels of education.
In
order to assure broadband Internet availability, Sierra Leone will be linked to
the Infinity Worldwide Telecommunications Group of Companies, Inc.Õs (IWTGC)
<http://www.iwtgc.com/> ultra-high
speed submarine optical fiber cable around the western African countries
followed by or to the extent possible, at the same as the other MRU countries;
to facilitate the laying of fiber optic cables (with combined use of wireless,
where feasible) along various highways under construction and planned to be
built. The aim is to provide a solid IT backbone that ensures uninterrupted
Internet connectivity and satellite-driven communication systems.
Along
the telecom infrastructure, adequate and appropriate solar-powered electrical
energy infrastructure will be constructed to ensure Internet connectivity and
availability of affordable power and related services, particularly in rural
and sub-urban agglomerations for various uses including household consumption,
clinics and other health centers, freezers and other storage facilities,
schools and other education establishments, community centers, markets, etc.
The GUS
will be anchored in universities in Sierra Leone and the other MRU countries to
enhance e-learning to their students and life-long learners in their community
for the development of technical and professional human capital and attendant
enlightenment etc., and to ensure the sustainability of global e-learning via
links with universities and other academic establishments in North America,
Europe, Japan and more industrially advanced countries.
Learners will be able to take their courses from member
institutions around the world to receive a GUS degree, thus freeing them from
being confined to one academic culture of a single university or country.
These institutions also act as the knowledge center of their community for the
eradication of poverty and isolation through the use of advanced Information
and Communications Technologies (ICTs).
GUS/Sierra
Leone will increase access to customized communications and related resources
which mobilize and encourage hospitals and e-healthcare centres to use the Internet and
hybrid technologies to provide patients online second opinion for various
infectious and chronic diseases, including malaria, sickle cell anaemia, river
blindness, HIV/AIDS, polio, cancer, heart disease and other conditions.
Existing university and community programs will help define communications and
data management systems, which reduce obstacles to good health management.
Doctors
will also be taught (through a train‑the‑trainers
program) how to use computers effectively to order tests and drugs, which has
been shown in studies to reduce medical errors and flag patient drug allergies.
Nurses will also be taught to use computers to track patients as they go
through the primary healthcare centers and hospitals.
Medical
records will be computerized, including lab results, drug data and records of
office visits in text files, which would be standardized in a format that can
be shared. Crosscutting priority will be to encourage government and donors to
develop incentives to encourage health administrators, doctors, health workers
to use the Internet.
Learners,
faculties, and public policy makers can promote community development and many
other advances at a local, regional and even on a global scale. GUS/Sierra
Leone consortium member institutions will act as the flagship of their
community development, particularly on the facilitation of entrepreneurial
initiatives for the creative economy of Knowledge Society in the 21st
century.
The
learners and their professors from participating institutions will form a
global forum for exchange of ideas and information and for conducting
collaborative research and development. Researchers in MRU countries can partner with
colleagues in more advanced countries, and perform joint collaborative research
and development with the use of virtual reality/virtual laboratories on
inexpensive Beowulf mini super-computers (clusters of PCs) for experiential/constructive
learning and creation of knowledge through the emerging global GRID computer
networking technology.
This
GUS projects will combine (1) the Japanese government's Official Development
Assistance (ODA) funds and (2) Japanese electronic equipment (including
technical assistance and training) with (a) the Internet technology and (b)
content development of North America and Europe.
The
first practical step in this process is the preparation of a detailed program
document encapsulating the diverse components of the enterprise. This requires
a fact-finding mission to Sierra Leone and MRU countries to be undertaken by
Prof. Utsumi and Ms. Linda Hawkin Israel.
During this period, an initial stakeholder meeting will be held for
formal confirmation of project partners in Freetown, Sierra Leone, and to form
working groups mentioned above. This
trip must include following:
1)
Visits to participating colleges, universities, hospitals,
local governments and community based programs in Sierra Leone:
2)
Establishment of working groups for each aspect of
collaborative proposal writing, with representation from the communities,
institutions, and governmental agencies that will benefit from the initiative.
Each
working group will produce proposal with necessary steps to be taken during the
following half year with their budgets, which will be summarized into a
proposal. This proposal with precise budget for the next design phase will be
used for the fund raising. The emphasis will be placed on the design of
tech/facilitator support and marketing survey for sustainability of GUS/Sierra
Leone with their applications and others at anchoring institutions, mentioned
above. This
proposal will be submitted with endorsements from various UN, governmental,
university, NGO agencies to the nearby Japan Embassy for the Japanese ODA fund.
This
phase will conduct market survey, feasibility study, system design of
infrastructure, design of support system and administration structure, as well
as to construct a business model for maximum effectiveness and sustainability
and replication in other locations. This phase would produce a project proposal
for deployment, for which Japanese ODA fund will cooperate with federal and
regional government for funding as GUS/Sierra Leone program.
Time Period: March 1, 2007 to June 1, 2007
Budget: $30,000
1)
establishment of local secretariats to move project forward,
2)
confirmation of official participation,
3)
convening of initial stakeholders meetings in Freetown, Sierra
Leone.
Time Period: July 1, 2007 to December 31, 2007
Budget: $150,000
1) collaborative
development of infrastructure, program tracks, and timelines by stake holders,
2) development
of relationship with grantors,
3) written
proposal, with budgets, for Japan ODA support and matching grants,
4) grants
agreed upon and mechanism for administration put in place.
Time Period: January 1, 2008 to July 1, 2008
GUS/Sierra Leone implemented per agreements.
Utsumi, T., Varis,
T., and Klemm, W. R., (2003), ÒCreating
Global University System,Ó Global Peace Through
The Global University System, University
of Tampere Press, Tampere, Finland
<http://makeashorterlink.com/?I2F231019>
Utsumi, T., (2006), ÒReport on Fact-Finding
and Assessment Trip To Create Global University System/Altai Mir (now
GUS/Siberia)Ó with a fund from the USAID through Eurasia Foundation
<http://tinyurl.com/te6sb>
Utsumi, T., (2006), "Globally
Collaborative Innovation Network with Global University System,"
Paper for Learning Technology, IEEE Computer Society, Vol. 8, Issue 3, July
Varis,
T., Utsumi, T., and Klemm, W. R., (Editors), (2003), Global
Peace Through The Global University System,
University of Tampere Press, Tampere, Finland, November, (ISBN 951-44-5695-5)
<http://makeashorterlink.com/?M2D252E09>