Olubayi Olubayi Explained

Olubayi Olubayi
Birth Date:7 November 1960
Boards:Kiwimbi Organisation
Children:Zuri Apoma Olubayi
Parents:Chief Samson Olubayi and Mrs. Christine Apoma Olubayi

Prof. Olubayi Olubayi (born November 11, 1960, in Kenya, raised in Kenya. Professor Olubayi studied at Moding Primary School (1967 to 1969) and St. Peter's Mumias Primary School (1969 to 1970) and Museno Primary School (1970 to 1973) and then the famous Kakamega High School (1973 to 1979). Thereafter he moved to the USA, where he attended SUNY Farmingdale (1981 to 1983), Florida Atlantic University (1983 to 1987), and then Rutgers University (1988 to 1995).

Career

He is the Chief Academic officer at Maarifa Education,[1] he was the vice chancellor and president of the International University of East Africa[2] in Uganda. He is a scientist and an expert on bacteria, education, learning, leadership and social-entrepreneurship.[3] As a scientist and eclectic scholar, Olubayi earned his Ph.D. on bacteria-and-plant cellinteractions at Rutgers University,[4] holds a research patent on the flocculation of bacteriaand has published several scholarly articles in microbiology, biotechnology and socialscience. As an educator he taught at Middlesex College and at Rutgers University for 16years, and has taught critical thinking in the IUEA MBA program. He has beenan advisor and consultant to government officials in Kenya and South Africa, and UNDPon matters of literacy, education, biotechnology, sustainable development and globalcitizenship. He is an external advisor to Ph.D. students in the Oxford University-Kemri/Wellcome Trust Research Program in Kilifi, Kenya.As a social entrepreneur, Olubayi co-founded the nonprofit Kiwimbi International[5] and the widely respected American nonprofit Global Literacy Project which sets uplibraries worldwide and provides global service learning opportunities.As a thinker, he is the author of the book “Education for a Better World”[6] and a ground breaking scholarly exploration of the emerging National-Culture of Kenya.[7] [8]

Prof. Olubayi is the chairman of the University Council at Cavendish University Uganda.[9] He is a Member of the University Council of KCA University, Kenya.[10] [11] He worked as a consultant for the Ethnic and Race Relations Policy of National Cohesion and Integration Commission of Kenya (NCIC) in 2012 and 2013.[12] He is a widely cited intellectual voice on “the emerging national culture of unity in Kenya” since 2007.[13] [14] [15] He is also a chairman of board of management for St. Thomas Amagoro Girls High School, Busia County, Kenya.

Prof. Olubayi is the co-founder of the MUSEUM OF TESO CULTURE in Busia County Kenya. He is the co-founder of the first free public library in Busia County Kenya (Kiwimbi Library).[16]

Publications and Presentations

He is the author of a seminal paper on education policy that presents what has rapidly come to be known as IDEA NUMBER TWO in education policy circles. In this paper on education policy, Prof. Olubayi provides an answer to the following development questions that perplex most Africans: “Why do African countries rely on foreign companies and foreign experts for almost all our development projects? How can we have so much natural wealth and yet be so poor? Why do we invent so little?”

The answer, according to professor Olubayi is in Africa’s failure to implement idea number two.

According to Prof. Olubayi, there are two major ideas in education policy, which are:

Idea number one is the obligation to educate all children because it is their fundamental human right as enshrined in the 1948 United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Idea number two is the strategy of establishing and sustaining world class schools and universities for the education of the most highly gifted and highly talented citizens.

Professor Olubayi was the keynote speaker at the Africa-wide annual democracy dialogues (the Davos of Africa) hosted by the Goodluck Jonathan Foundation in Benin City on 13th June 2023. He presented his IDEA NUMBER TWO on Africa’s strategic need for world-class schools and world-class universities. In addressing Africans, Prof. Olubayi says, “let us not do what the developed world tells us to do, let us do what they do.”[17]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Team. Maarifa Education.
  2. Web site: Leadership. University of East Africa.
  3. Web site: East Africa Business Times. Ipsos Limited.
  4. Web site: Rutgers African-American Alumni Alliance. Rutgers African-American Alumni Alliance.
  5. Web site: Initial Kenyan NGO Board Members. Kiwimbi International.
  6. Book: Education for a Better World. 1461076862.
  7. Web site: The Emerging National Culture of Kenya. Journal of Global Initiatives.
  8. Web site: Sociology of Culture Commons. Digital Commons Network.
  9. Web site: Cavendish University Uganda. www.cavendish.ac.ug. en. 2019-09-29.
  10. Web site: 9th Commencement Ceremony. kcauniversity. en. 2019-09-29.
  11. Web site: University Governance. kcauniversity. en. 2019-09-29.
  12. Book: Wairimu, Nderitu, Alice. Kenya, Bridging Ethnic Divides: A Commissioner's Experience on Cohesion and Integration. 2018-12-12. Mdahalo Bridging Divides. 9789966190314. en.
  13. Web site: One Tribe, One Kenya?. Blog. Guest. 2017-08-25. Cultural Rights and Kenya's New Constitution. en. 2019-09-29.
  14. Web site: Kenyan Diaspora Convention Kicks Off. 2007-03-23. Mshale. 2019-09-29.
  15. https://digitalcommons.kennesaw.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1030&context=jgi The Emerging National Culture of Kenya: Decolonizing Modernity
  16. Web site: Olubayi Olubayi . 2024-08-21 . Kiwimbi International . en-US.
  17. Olubayi . Olubayi . July 2024 . Africa must create centres of educational excellence for innovation and development . . 28 . 7.