Patrick Awuah: Educating a new generation of African leaders

87,147 views ・ 2007-08-08

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:26
Like many of you here, I am trying to contribute
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towards a renaissance in Africa.
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The question of transformation in Africa
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really is a question of leadership.
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Africa can only be transformed by enlightened leaders.
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And it is my contention that the manner in which
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we educate our leaders is fundamental
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to progress on this continent.
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I want to tell you some stories that explain my view.
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We all heard about the importance of stories yesterday.
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An American friend of mine this year volunteered as a nurse in Ghana,
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and in a period of three months she came to a conclusion
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about the state of leadership in Africa
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that had taken me over a decade to reach.
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Twice she was involved in surgeries
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where they lost power at the hospital.
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The emergency generators did not start.
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There was not a flashlight, not a lantern, not a candle --
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pitch black.
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The patient's cut open, twice.
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The first time it was a C-section.
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Thankfully, baby was out -- mother and child survived.
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The second time was a procedure that involved local anesthesia.
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Anesthetic wears off. The patient feels pain.
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He's crying. He's screaming. He's praying.
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Pitch black. Not a candle, not a flashlight.
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And that hospital could have afforded flashlights.
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They could have afforded to purchase these things, but they didn't.
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And it happened twice.
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Another time, she watched in horror as nurses watched a patient die
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because they refused to give her oxygen that they had.
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And so three months later,
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just before she returned to the United States,
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nurses in Accra go on strike.
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And her recommendation is
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take this opportunity to fire everyone, start all over again.
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Start all over again.
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Now what does this have to do with leadership?
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You see, the folks at the ministry of health,
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the hospital administrators, the doctors, the nurses --
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they are among just five percent of their peers
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who get an education after secondary school.
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They are the elite. They are our leaders.
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Their decisions, their actions matter.
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And when they fail, a nation literally suffers.
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So when I speak of leadership,
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I'm not talking about just political leaders.
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We've heard a lot about that.
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I'm talking about the elite.
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Those who've been trained,
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whose job it is to be the guardians of their society.
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The lawyers, the judges, the policemen, the doctors,
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the engineers, the civil servants --
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those are the leaders.
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And we need to train them right.
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Now, my first pointed and memorable experience with leadership in Ghana
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occurred when I was 16 years old.
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We had just had a military coup,
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and soldiers were pervasive in our society.
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They were a pervasive presence.
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And one day I go to the airport to meet my father,
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and as I walk up this grassy slope from the car park
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to the terminal building,
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I'm stopped by two soldiers wielding AK-47 assault weapons.
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And they asked me to join a crowd of people
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that were running up and down this embankment.
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Why? Because the path I had taken was considered out of bounds.
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No sign to this effect.
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Now, I was 16. I was very worried about
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what my peers at school might think
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if they saw me running up and down this hill.
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I was especially concerned of what the girls might think.
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And so I started to argue with these men.
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It was a little reckless, but you know, I was 16.
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I got lucky.
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A Ghana Airways pilot falls into the same predicament.
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Because of his uniform they speak to him differently,
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and they explain to him that they're just following orders.
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So he takes their radio, talks to their boss,
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and gets us all released.
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What lessons would you take from an experience like this?
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Several, for me.
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Leadership matters. Those men are following
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the orders of a superior officer.
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I learned something about courage.
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It was important not to look at those guns.
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And I also learned that it can be helpful to think about girls.
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(Laughter)
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So a few years after this event, I leave Ghana on a scholarship
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to go to Swarthmore College for my education.
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It was a breath of fresh air.
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You know, the faculty there didn't want us to memorize information
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and repeat back to them as I was used to back in Ghana.
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They wanted us to think critically.
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They wanted us to be analytical.
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They wanted us to be concerned about social issues.
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In my economics classes I got high marks
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for my understanding of basic economics.
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But I learned something more profound than that,
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which is that the leaders -- the managers of Ghana's economy --
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were making breathtakingly bad decisions
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that had brought our economy to the brink of collapse.
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And so here was this lesson again -- leadership matters.
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It matters a great deal.
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But I didn't really fully understand what had happened to me at Swarthmore.
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I had an inkling,
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but I didn't fully realize it until I went out into the workplace
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and I went to work at Microsoft Corporation.
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And I was part of this team -- this thinking, learning team
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whose job it was to design and implement new software
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that created value in the world.
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And it was brilliant to be part of this team.
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It was brilliant.
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And I realized just what had happened to me at Swarthmore,
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this transformation --
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the ability to confront problems, complex problems,
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and to design solutions to those problems.
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The ability to create is the most empowering thing
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that can happen to an individual.
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And I was part of that.
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Now, while I was at Microsoft, the annual revenues of that company
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grew larger than the GDP of the Republic of Ghana.
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And by the way, it's continued to.
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The gap has widened since I left.
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Now, I've already spoken about one of the reasons why this has occurred.
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I mean, it's the people there who are so hardworking,
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persistent, creative, empowered.
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But there were also some external factors:
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free markets, the rule of law, infrastructure.
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These things were provided by institutions
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run by the people that I call leaders.
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And those leaders did not emerge spontaneously.
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Somebody trained them to do the work that they do.
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Now, while I was at Microsoft, this funny thing happened.
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I became a parent.
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And for the first time, Africa mattered more to me than ever before.
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Because I realized that the state of the African continent
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would matter to my children and their children.
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That the state of the world -- the state of the world
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depends on what's happening to Africa,
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as far as my kids would be concerned.
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And at this time, when I was going through
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what I call my "pre-mid-life crisis,"
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Africa was a mess.
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Somalia had disintegrated into anarchy.
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Rwanda was in the throes of this genocidal war.
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And it seemed to me that that was the wrong direction,
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and I needed to be back helping.
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I couldn't just stay in Seattle and raise my kids
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in an upper-middle class neighborhood and feel good about it.
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This was not the world that I'd want my children to grow up in.
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So I decided to get engaged, and the first thing that I did
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was to come back to Ghana and talk with a lot of people
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and really try to understand what the real issues were.
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And three things kept coming up for every problem:
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corruption, weak institutions
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and the people who run them -- the leaders.
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Now, I was a little scared
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because when you see those three problems,
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they seem really hard to deal with.
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And they might say, "Look, don't even try."
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But, for me, I asked the question,
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"Well, where are these leaders coming from?
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What is it about Ghana that produces leaders
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that are unethical or unable to solve problems?"
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So I went to look at what was happening in our educational system.
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And it was the same -- learning by rote --
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from primary school through graduate school.
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Very little emphasis on ethics,
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and the typical graduate
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from a university in Ghana has a stronger sense
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of entitlement than a sense of responsibility.
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This is wrong.
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So I decided to engage this particular problem.
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Because it seems to me that every society, every society,
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must be very intentional about how it trains its leaders.
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And Ghana was not paying enough attention.
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And this is true across sub-Saharan Africa, actually.
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So this is what I'm doing now.
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I'm trying to bring the experience that I had at Swarthmore to Africa.
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I wish there was a liberal arts college in every African country.
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I think it would make a huge difference.
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And what Ashesi University is trying to do
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is to train a new generation of ethical, entrepreneurial leaders.
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We're trying to train leaders of exceptional integrity,
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who have the ability to confront the complex problems,
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ask the right questions, and come up with workable solutions.
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I'll admit that there are times when it seems like "Mission: Impossible,"
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but we must believe that these kids are smart.
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That if we involve them in their education,
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if we have them discuss the real issues that they confront --
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that our whole society confronts --
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and if we give them skills that enable them to engage the real world,
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that magic will happen.
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Now, a month into this project, we'd just started classes.
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And a month into it, I come to the office,
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and I have this email from one of our students.
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And it said, very simply, "I am thinking now."
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And he signs off, "Thank you."
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It's such a simple statement.
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But I was moved almost to tears
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because I understood what was happening to this young man.
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And it is an awesome thing to be a part
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of empowering someone in this way.
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I am thinking now.
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This year we challenged our students
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to craft an honor code themselves.
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There's a very vibrant debate going on on campus now
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over whether they should have an honor code,
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and if so, what it should look like.
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One of the students asked a question that just warmed my heart.
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Can we create a perfect society?
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Her understanding that a student-crafted honor code
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constitutes a reach towards perfection is incredible.
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Now, we cannot achieve perfection,
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but if we reach for it, then we can achieve excellence.
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I don't know ultimately what they will do.
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I don't know whether they will decide to have this honor code.
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But the conversation they're having now --
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about what their good society should look like,
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what their excellent society should look like,
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is a really good thing.
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Am I out of time? OK.
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Now, I just wanted to leave that slide up
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because it's important that we think about it.
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I'm very excited about the fact
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that every student at Ashesi University does community service before they graduate.
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That for many of them, it has been a life-altering experience.
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These young future leaders are beginning to understand
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the real business of leadership,
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the real privilege of leadership,
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which is after all to serve humanity.
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I am even more thrilled by the fact that least year
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our student body elected a woman
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to be the head of Student Government.
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It's the first time in the history of Ghana
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that a woman has been elected head of Student Government
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at any university.
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It says a lot about her.
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It says a lot about the culture that's forming on campus.
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It says a lot about her peers who elected her.
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She won with 75 percent of the vote.
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And it gives me a lot of hope.
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It turns out that corporate West Africa
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also appreciates what's happening with our students.
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We've graduated two classes of students to date.
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And every single one of them has been placed.
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And we're getting great reports back
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from corporate Ghana, corporate West Africa,
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and the things that they're most impressed about is work ethic.
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You know, that passion for what they're doing.
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The persistence, their ability to deal with ambiguity,
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their ability to tackle problems that they haven't seen before.
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This is good because
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over the past five years, there have been times
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when I've felt this is "Mission: Impossible."
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And it's just wonderful to see these glimmers
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of the promise of what can happen if we train our kids right.
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I think that the current and future leaders of Africa
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have an incredible opportunity
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to drive a major renaissance on the continent.
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It's an incredible opportunity.
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There aren't very many more opportunities like this in the world.
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I believe that Africa has reached an inflection point
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with a march of democracy and free markets across the continent.
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We have reached a moment from which can emerge
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a great society within one generation.
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It will depend on inspired leadership.
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And it is my contention that the manner in which we train our leaders
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will make all the difference.
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Thank you, and God bless.
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(Applause)
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