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Monday, May 17, 2010

ILLITERACY, READING CULTURE AND VISION 2030

"We were told to read hard, pass exams and then enjoy life. But we blatantly mistook “enjoying life” as discarding reading all in all...
Honestly, shame on us if we can proudly walk head high masquerading as ‘university-materials’ when we cannot defend what we claim to be having...
Parallel degrees not only puts a grim caricature of once a beautiful education but also deadens the credibility of degrees..."

ILLITERACY, READING CULTURE AND VISION2030

Everybody has a right to education and I suspect, by extrapolation, everyone must have education by end of this millennium. But as a society we have failed to understand that education is not about preparing people for ready-made jobs. Collective needs together with individual aspects, such as better employment prospects and better lifetime salaries for those with higher education, have been the main causes of the unprecedented mushrooming of higher education institutions (HEIs) and colleges (many of them private) around the city and the country at large. Fortunately following the recent wake of the fashionable vision 2030, this investment in higher education might be commensurate. However, as all universities crave to offer all courses and education is commoditized, quality is the looser as institutions escalate illiteracy in another level. Despite this dubious competition, none of the colleges has announced any breakthrough in global warming, in technology or in medicine. Consequently, this necessitates the million dollar question: will Kenyan universities in this century continue to be the organization “par excellence” of creativity and innovation?



One need not walk very far to see the hand of the alienating aspects of our education system in our abhorrence of the book. We were told to read hard, pass exams and then enjoy life. But we blatantly mistook “enjoying life” as discarding reading all in all. University students start two weeks to and stop reading immediately after the final paper to start “enjoying life”. End of semester born fires as students burn their books is a pleasure, and as it is the order of the day, burning a whole library in KU jolts no qualms about it naturally.

HEIs must emphasize the distinction between “knowing that” and “knowing how”, reminiscing that the world goes around because of people who “know how”. One professor challenged his students to explain the meaning of ‘Hg’ the symbol for mercury, none cracked. Not that they don’t know mercury, they do not question ‘how’. Honestly, shame on us if we can proudly walk head high masquerading as ‘university-materials’ when we cannot defend what we claim to be having. Shame on us if we can’t strengthen our own innovative capacity from within by reading widely and wildly: from science, law up to religion. Still shame on us if we claim to be Kenyan and therefore using a ‘mwakenya’ from exam-room to bedroom is nothing to falter about.

Reading incorporates the empowerment of human mind. Reading strengthens the minds capacity to make meaningful choices in life. Reading lays the opportunity to enjoy intercourse with superior minds. Reading activates the mind and exercises its muscles pushing it to use our imagination for ingenuity. What an academic waste! If global wastrels were to be prepared today, Kenyan students would be very highly ranked. We can’t measure up in a global platform simply because we’ve weaned the BOOK! Left, write and centre books are still considered to be valuable objects worth possessing, worth befriending and cherished even by those who hardly ever read. If research were to be done today, 90% of students own less than one book whereas electronics takes the day. Let’s read the Bible and the Koran all in equal measure, history and newspapers with equal gusto and we shall be good to go the extra mile.



Unless the concerned ministry moves fast to reclaim the primacy of higher education, HEIs are destined to doom. Higher education cannot be considered a commodity exchanged in the market place. “Par excellence” ISO certification should not be a position just ‘given’, or came naturally. It must be deserved and comes only with excellent performances. A culture of (high) quality in all activities is, therefore, a must in any varsity (but does not entail wearing uniforms). The University of Nairobi has more parallel than regular students, so far the only university that has accredited the concept in the name of and I quote, “they run the university.” Even as they are given a pedestal at the top of the ‘food chain’, we must, with the best of intention, play tactfully without sacrificing quality on the altar of profit and monopoly of the rich.

As we hanker for more education, in our endeavor to realize vision2030, let’s get the facts crystal clear. The reduction and ultimate elimination of Kenyan poverty and inequality is the pre-eminent socioeconomic precedence. This truth must be part of the university’s commitment to the development and dissemination of knowledge. Intellectually speaking, we’re loosing in big time if higher education is meant to give papers only and not instill confidence and equip students with expository knowledge. It’s not surprising seeing students go around garnering irrelevant certificates and easy degrees from the fake colleges that are on the loose, solely to decorate their CVs since that is what Kenyan employers want-a whole page of pot-pourri of courses. Make no mistake, it isn’t what you went through but what you have that matter to them.



We cannot gainsay the magnificence of the continuous education programme (CEP) aka module II programmes. But for sure, its current status and caliber not only puts a grim caricature of once a beautiful education but also deadens the credibility of degrees. What reputation is relished if some sacred cows can complete a diploma/degree in a quarter or less the time it takes to complete the same in full-time dedication? Leave alone that one is there by virtue of ‘pocket-size’ and not by merit or IQ touchstone. Good Kenyan call me judgmental or myopic but the truth should be told. First, it’s their memory being tested. The ones with good cramming power graduate with first class honors by photographing a few pages notes given. A candid catalyst backing up the otherwise subversive programme stagnating any 2030 projections. Many may strongly disagree others may not. The many may either be undergoing the programme, they have a relative undergoing it or they benefit from it money-wise. But if we want this famous Dream2040 come true, we must bestow our youth with the best. One anonymous author said, “We can always repair the roof over our heads to stop the rain from getting in, but if we do not look after the foundation, sooner or later the house will cave in-with us in it.” Our scholars are our foundations. The foundation to the Kenyan’s dream. And this raises the other inevitable question: is our foundation taken care of: Any leakages? DPC well laid? We don’t have to set a special tribunal or commission to probe into the truth of this matter. Get this straight from the horse’s mouth; something has to be done.



The challenge for Dr. Kosgei is to rekindle the citizenry’s dying embers of hope in the higher institutions. For one she must reign over the docket, cushion institution from commercialization by imposing educational tax, demand teaching etiquette for both regular and CEP students in all purporting colleges, put a clear policy on academic-industrial collaboration and most importantly flagships should be more than just “Nyayo Cars”. Perhaps if you had the patience to read this far, job well done and thus luxuriate in a reading culture with Ecclesiastics 7.5: “It is better to have wise men reprimand you than to have stupid people sing your praises.” Amen.

MAGATI M. ALPHONCE

ENGINEERING BEHIND THIKA ROAD CONSTRUCTION


 
"the research of which this disquisition forms a record, however, broke new grounds which it aimed deliberately at unravelling and illustrating the steps and the reckoned eventuality. Rarely do you meet this kind of exposition, so read on...
In a city where most traffic rules are either non-existent or are flouted left, write and centre, the roads become a perfect battle field. Swapping between lanes, hooting for vehicles in front to move away yet the jam is 20 metres long ahead...
 
The Design AND Engineering
Sneak peek
  • Cash on each segment
  • Extreme construction
  • Muthaiga Roundabout
  • Highway or Boulevard
  • Regimental Highways (Autobahns)
  • Muthaiga--KU
  • The Engineering beneath the Surface
  • KU—Thika
  • Priority control and Restraints
  • Plastics for Road Construction(future)

It’s argued and even confirmed that if you can survive in Nairobi roads as a driver, you definitely deserve NFS licence primarily because all other odds have been eliminated. In a city where most traffic rules are either non-existent or are flouted left, write and centre, the roads become a perfect battle field. Swapping between lanes, hooting for vehicles in front to move away yet the jam is 20 metres long ahead, drivers who join the main road haphazardly without checking for the oncoming traffic, or squeezing in front to force their ways, these are just few examples of common madness in our daily roads.
The long snarl-ups caused by ministerial motorcade are not spared too. Matatus too, love them or otherwise, they are here to stay. Their lunacy, mindless driving will continue existing all in scramble for “space.” But all these will become a thing of the past given that the ministry of Roads has fully embarked on changing the faces of our roads into super-highways and flyovers to decongest the city of Nairobi.
EXTREME CONSTRUCTION
I am not yet acquainted with the engineers on the site and the strategies laid in store for the effectual action, but the research of which this disquisition forms a record, however, broke new grounds which it aimed deliberately at unravelling and illustrating the steps and the reckoned eventuality. Rarely do you meet this kind of exposition, so read on.
Roads and motor vehicles are correlative, and one without the other will simply be sending bright minds back to the dark ages to search for the other lost “sheep.” Good vehicles need good roads, and vice versa. It’s been argued that one important quality of a road is accessibility. This, technically, describes how vehicles are allowed to enter and exit a rad. By controlling access to a road, the road can support, in a given time, move traffic at higher speeds i.e. reduced traffic snarl-ups.
The Ksh. 26 billion project involves construction of two major types of roads:
(1) highways, and (2) boulevard or urban streets. Each of the two types control access to different levels, differ in location, the amount of traffic it can safely support, and the speed at which traffic can safely travel. These parameters shall be fully employed in the three demarcated segments, namely:
  • Muthaiga Roundabout— Uhuru Highway Section
  • Muthaiga Roundabout –KU Section
  • KU – Thika Section
[A] Muthaiga Roundabout –
For this section, the contract bid was deservedly procured by China Wu Yi Company with a cheque of Ksh. 8, 030, 386, 596 dangling in their able hands. The contract narrative clearly laid the action and it involved construction of four-lane flyover across Globe Roundabout then widening the linking to 8-lanes from the current 6-lanes which shall meet a flyover on Muthaiga Roundabout. Wu Yi shall then set up an underpass at Pangani. Eventually, footpaths shall crown all the roads as a sign of pedestrian precincts.
Together,
Museum Road
– Museum Hill Roundabout will be worked on, turning
Forest Road
into 6-lanes from the current 4-lanes, with a median (divider in the middle of the road). Similarly Museum Hill Roads will become 6-lanes as they erect a forked flyover on
Limuru Road
.
The construction of this section shall be much biased to erection of urban street rather than superhighway. To understand which one, it’s prudent of us to distinguish between the two primarily.
HIGHWAY OR BOULVARD DESIGN
As boulevards endeavour to cover cities, towns and suburbs, highways on the other hand strive to connect to or more major cities. Despite the fact that both are constructed using similar principles, boulevards are contrived to accommodate underground public facilities, such as electrical wiring, water and sewage pipes, and telecommunication lines. Besides, they are built around existing buildings and other barriers like rivers. The boulevards, which often control vehicle movements by use of traffic light and signs, can be classified into two on the basis of the amount of traffic designed to carry: collector streets and arterial streets. Collector streets convey traffic from residential streets to the main roads called the arterials. In cities like Nairobi, the arterials are often similar to highway in construction even though they are located within city limits. For the highways, the contrast lies in the amount of access control they have (i.e. the amount of traffic they are designed to carry). We have:
REGIMENTAL Highways aka Motorway/ Autobahns
The autobahns can handle the most traffic with the lustre of having three, four or more lanes for each direction of travel and often include medians to separate traffic moving in opposite directions of travel and often include medians to separate traffic moving in opposite directions. Vehicles that enter or exit the autobahns can do so only at incontestable points usually by using a special entrance and exit ramps (slope that join two parts of a road when one is laid higher than the other). The ramps grant vehicles access to the road without disturbing the flow of traffic. Incoming vehicles must merge with the flowing traffic, and vehicles leaving the highway use exit ramps that guide them off the highway without blocking the traffic behind. The burden of intersection with other roads is eliminated by use of special bridges called overpasses or tunnel-like structures called underpasses.
NON-REGIMENTAL Pass ways handle less traffic comparatively, and they intersect other roads at-grade (at the same level), rather than using overpasses or underpasses. This kind usually encourages traffic jam as vehicles scrample to find through way.
Now we know...
[B] Muthaiga Roundabout—KU
With the above design technique in mind, this segment must be designed as a high-speed autobahn with very limited access and exit. Sinohydro Corporation, the concerned contractor, pledges to widen the carriageway from Muthaiga—Kasarani into 8-lanes, and from Kasarani – KU into 6-lanes with a cheque of Ksh. 8, 690, 568, 489 the budget entails construction of three underpasses, at Kahawa, KU and at the former Nakumatt Building; three flyovers, at Kasarani Roundabout, Githurai Roundabout and Interchange at GSU Roundabout.
To support vehicles (light and heavy) moving at high speeds and to ensure durability, the road is made up according to standing civil conventions. Lets see what Sinohydro Corporation is devising...
The Engineering beneath the Surface
Basically a road has at least three distinct layers but the number often depends on the intended use of the road, number of vehicles and the budget constraints. From the bottom upwards, the layers are:
  • the Topmost (pavement)
  • the Base Course
  • the Roadbed
The Roadbed is the base of a road. Natural soil is the most common roadbed material, but in case of wet-land, stones do better. Roadbed is shaped (consolidated) to make a smooth, level surface that will support the layers built over it. Engineers use bulldozers, compressors and other equipments to distribute soil evenly and firmly along the roadbed. The soil can be stabilized by adding or mixing materials such as calcium chloride, lime or Portland cement to the soil.
The Base Course is often made up of compacted gravel and it rests on top of the roadbed. Mostly, without adequate drainage, roads may buckle as water distends the ground underneath. To disengage this inconvenience, drainpipes are usually installed within the base course to control rain and moisture drainage. For very busy autobahns or motorways, a second layer is included to the base course for extra support.
The Topmost is made of wearing solid layer of pavement and is designed to be smooth and to withstand corrosion from traffic or weather. The pavements are of two main types:
  • Bituminous (or flexible) pavement
  • Concrete (or rigid) pavement
Bituminous Pavements is cheaper and easier to construct, but it requires more maintenance. The bituminous material, which maybe a by-product of petroleum like asphalt (or mixture with plastic waste), softens when heated and can be prepared and applied in a wide range of concentration. Asphalt, a thick bituminous material can be used directly as a pavement, or commonly mixed with aggregate for added strength and traction. Then thin overlays less than 2cm deep or in layers several centimetres deep is applied accordingly.
[The asphalt and aggregate are usually mixed and heated at their base station. The material is then transported to the construction site, where it is spread directly over the base course and compacted using a roller-dozer.]
Concrete Pavement, on the other hand, lasts for a very long time with minimal upkeep but is much more expensive. The concrete, which has been used once in , is generally laid as a single thick layer directly over the base course. With a thickness of about 30—35 cm, the concrete is usually laid in long sections or slabs of varying length. The metal bars or dowels are inserted between the slabs to help connect the joints, holding the slab firmly. Concrete despite it renowned for being strong material with a high compression tolerance, it has poor tensile strength. So when the ground underneath expands and contract unequally due to seasonal or weather changes, the concrete become prone to cracking. Cracks can occur at or near the joints where concrete slabs meet or on the slabs themselves. Deep cracks can allow the broken concrete slab to move upward or downward creating an uneven road surface. To eliminate this, reinforced concrete is preferred. This one contain steel bars or mesh imbedded within the concrete layer which help hold the concrete together over time, even if cracks occur. But cost is the deciding factor.
[C] KU—Thika
To be continued in Part 2...  
Mbagathi Way
Forest Road
University Way
Uhuru Highway
THE ENGINEERING BEHIND THIKA ROAD CONSTRUCTION

LEADERSHIP INCOMPETENCY KNOWS NO BOUNDS: BE IT INTELLECTUALS OR OUR HONOR-REBEL

"Seated back watching our intellectual, one could not toy around with the hypothesis that Kenyan youths will ever be used and misused for Machiavellian prospects...With the current interest in political matters, money is the motivation not joy to serve

VARSITY ELECTION, WHAT A SHAME ON INTELLECTUALISM

The cyclic wave of political incorrectness in Kenya must be broken. As much as we envisage the much coveted vision 2030, much has to be done if at all it is something to go by. It’s only in Kenya where anything, anybody and everything must have a political slant in one way or another. If you get heckled because of your traitor-ship, it's politics. Kenyans not reading the constitution, it's politics. And speaking of constitution (allow me to digress briefly), after taking a choreographed research, the shockingly leading place where the steamy harmonized constitution has not been read totally, is in our varsities. Wonder what we can do if we cannot dissect such an important document-- making noise on Uhuru Highway?
Universities are the apples of Kenyans’ eyes much as I hate to admit it. In fact I am completely dumb-founded, like any other Kenyan, by my fellow UoN brains. It is not the rampage, it is not the raucous cacophony, it is not the burning of precious properties worth millions, it is not their paralysis of the traffic despite our incapability to beat the jam on our roads. How do you burn a Mercedes Benz worth millions to protest against re-election of some useless student leader who will not champion your rights anywhere except milk enough to replenish what s/he used to campaign with!

Today I couldn’t agree more, comparing politicians and SONU leaders, I wonder which defines us more. The just concluded SONU election has volumes to teach us: Kenya is teetering on the brink of hopelessness, simply because our politicians are no longer paragon of virtue for the youth to look upon.
The reduction and ultimate elimination of Kenyan’s poverty is the pre-eminent socioeconomic priority. This truth must be part of the university commitment to the development and dissemination of knowledge. The challenge of our intellectuals is to rekindle the citizenry’s dying embers of revolutionary particularly in public offices. But does leadership incompetency’s know no bounds? The sheer displays of political reincarnation in our student intellectuals not only put a grim caricature of what was once a beautiful leadership in campuses but also slacken our realization of real change- the Kenya we want. When we capture student organization of Nairobi university (SONU) elections, Kenyan deteriorating politics comes into big picture and this is not just another case of crying ‘wolf’. Seated back watching our intellectual, one could not toy around with the hypothesis that Kenyan youths will ever be used and misused for Machiavellian prospects. In case you disagree, focus on this eye-opener of a lifetime. I played an partly active role in the SONU election 2010/2011 and I have a testament testimony. First the game has no rule.

With the current interest in political matters, money is the motivation not joy to serve. God fearing me could not hold back my trauma when I saw real brains voting somebody depending on the amount of liquor he’s ‘splashed’ out. This is an enchantment that makes people behave ‘well’ during their campaigns, chanting incantations like “Osianyi forever, Never without Osianyi”, lie in front of a speeding car while invariably reminding people “I am not drunk!” Consequently, the business of’ security’ measures and counter aggression squads of ‘nyaunyo waving’ ethnic goons are jolted into action. If one proclaimed that violent politicians in the nation are bred in the University of Nairobi, I will easily buy it. (But this is where I throw in a disclaimer and say not all politicians are just that).

The discrepancy of chieftainship cannot be marginalized to politicians alone. I was dumbfounded, like any other Kenyan that tribalism thrives well among the cream of the crop. The unfolding event underlines the urgent need to educate our “Osianys, Muendos, Cheruiyots and Ng'ang'as” how to handle matters sagaciously particularly ethnic equation fallacy. The so called stalwarts plainly demonstrate immaturity when they blindly adopt to ballot somebody by the virtue of his or her mother-tongue and not specifically on the leadership touchstones. They believe leadership is a birthright and nothing less. I wonder why we complain over their undoing and not delivering.
Comrades, is there such a thing as taking a good idea too far? Yes, of course but not for the less moneyed. The eyesore posters from the public benches to the wash-room sinks cannot be overlooked. The fake phony opinion polls are an equivalent of local Synovate Opinion group. The Gallup poll, like any other, is engineered and choreographed from the ‘centre’ and devoid of a homogenous statistics with the aim of swaying voters at these amenable moments.

Contestants talk the talk but never walk it. ”I will ensure hot milk supply to your rooms...I promise you a reloaded SONU of the days of Karl Max...” are the examples of the fantastic election pledges that incite many. The many who’ll never use the hindsight to foretell the future. But after triumph, like honorable so and so elsewhere, the change their phone numbers and become inaccessible to the ordinary mortals who placed them at the point they hang from.

So why am I writing this? The answer is three dimensional. In pointing out the major difficulties attendant to changing the way Kenyans live, I do not wish to cast doubt on the authenticity of people’s desire for better way of living. However, old habits die hard. The ball is in our court, we have to switch habit to habitat mode when it comes to politics. Sit-ins, setting up and leading think tanks, and engaging in sober and reasoned open debates is the absolution. And as crème de la crème of the society, change has to start with us right here right now, all these in a bid to invite reason to prevail in political arena, distilling constitutional etiquette. We shall only be fully liberated, as history has proven, when our leaders (SONU or elsewhere) understand the real meaning of simplicity and upload joy in serving.


Given our incomplete knowledge of better politics we cannot rule out the possibility of shocking surprises to our economy. Let us do it while we still can, trying hard to reconcile the mishap that is a slap in the face of our intellectualism. For now, all this chest thumping and scramble for ‘power’ will drive us deeper into quagmire. Is it politics or Kenyan? What portfolio does one get by serving in as the 'unwanted' leader? Time and hard work will tell.
ALPHONCE MAGATI