United Methodist University Celebrates First Graduates

By Phileas Jusu March 7, 2022 (Originally published by UM News. Used with permission. Click to read the full article. https://www.umnews.org/en/news/sierra-leone-university-celebrates-first-graduates )

The United Methodist University in Sierra Leone, founded by the late resident Bishop John K. Yambasu, graduated its first class on Feb. 26. Seven students graduated in theology, 18 with National Diplomas in Education and seven with certificates in chaplaincy.
Yambasu, who died in a car accident in August 2020, was the chancellor of the university. Although he did not live to award certificates, his memory lives on.

Speaker after speaker at the ceremony recalled his zest and passion as he worked around the clock to actualize his United Methodist university dream for Sierra Leone. A moment of silence was observed in memory of the visionary resident bishop, who was awarded a posthumous certificate of recognition for his hard work and a dream fulfilled.

 

Interim Sierra Leone Conference Bishop Warner H. Brown (right) watches as Millicent Yambasu receives a posthumous award on behalf of her late husband, Bishop John K. Yambasu, who founded the United Methodist University in Sierra Leone. The first set of students enrolled in the university graduated Feb. 26 at the Leicester Peak campus. Photo by Phileas Jusu, UM News.

The vice chancellor, Professor George Carew, said education goes beyond producing people of skill. Christian education must help the individual grow intellectually, spiritually and morally.

“The emphasis on skills alone,” Carew cautioned, “may create educated teachers who take bribes from their students; professional nurses and doctors who consistently exploit their patients; and politicians who betray the trust of their people and drive their country to economic ruin. Education should never produce learned monsters.”

That is why, he said, the United Methodist University is committed to the motto of “Excellence, Integrity and Service.”

The multidimensional emphasis on Christian spirituality, character formation and skills acquisition in our curriculum, will necessitate the process of creating students of integrity and academic excellence.

Interim Sierra Leone Conference Bishop Warner H. Brown (right) awards a symbolic certificate in Bachelor of Theology with Honors Degree in Christian Education to the Rev. Stephen N. Senesie. Senesie was among the first students to graduate from The United Methodist University in Sierra Leone, which opened in late 2017. Photo by Phileas Jusu, UM News.

The faculty of theology, the first to be established at the university, is now training chaplains for all United Methodist primary and secondary schools. The Sierra Leone Conference, Carew said, views the school system as an evangelical wing of the church and has over 300 primary and 50 secondary schools across the country. In the next four years, the university expects to train at least 400 teachers as chaplains in United Methodist schools.
“The training of professional teachers to return moral decorum to the classroom,” Carew said, “is certainly one way to impact the wider society in search of a moral compass.”

The first students from the new faculty of Transformative Education produced the best results in the National Diploma in Education exams, with three students passing with distinction.

The university’s preparatory program addresses a massive failure rate of students in the West Africa Senior Secondary Examination. Over the past two years, the university has been preparing students who failed the WASSCE, and many have passed their exams and gained admission to higher institutions of learning.

The university, the vice chancellor said, intends to launch two senior preparatory schools known as the Bishop Yambasu Schools of Excellence, one in Freetown and another in Bo in the south. Students who pass the Basic Education Certificate Exams will be admitted to the Bishop Yambasu Schools of Excellence. In addition, all United Methodist teachers will attend in-service training courses during the long vacation every year. Such measures, he said, will remedy the issue of massive failures and students’ reliance on exam malpractices to pass exams.

“The church,” Dr Josephus Brimah said, “has to be at the heart of education because it is good to have good degrees. But if you have no moral compass that guides you, it means nothing. That’s why I’m touched by your motto: ‘Excellence, Integrity and Service.’” Brimah is the chief technical and higher education officer at Sierra Leone’s Ministry of Tertiary Education.

He congratulated the graduates as he emphasized the essence of ethics in education. “Ethics should be the guiding principle,” he noted. “In knowledge, you should be humble because humility is restored in ethics, and ethics is the mother of all virtues. All virtues take their rise and footing from humility.”

The Sierra Leone Conference’s interim episcopal leader, Bishop Warner H. Brown, was also honored for his outstanding leadership as interim bishop and chancellor of the United Methodist University.

Stephen N. Senesie graduated as the best academic student with a distinction. “We are pleased,” he said, “because it was like a research-based university. We were exposed to research methods and a whole lot of sources of information. It was a very good exercise, though a tedious one. The teaching staff were great. They would follow up to ensure we understood every bit of what we were taught. That aspect was what I particularly admired because they made sure that nobody was left behind. They were the best.”

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