Title:  Programme Officer, Research

Location: Nairobi, Kenya

Open to: Kenyan nationals only

Duration: 2 years, renewable

Application deadline: Friday, July 19, 2019

Background

The Partnership for African Social and Governance Research (PASGR) is an independent, non-partisan pan-African not-for-profit organisation established in 2011 and located in Nairobi, Kenya. PASGR works to enhance research excellence in governance and public policy that contributes to the overall well-being of all.  PASGR is recruiting for a role within its Research and Policy Unit to support research and evidence uptake programmatic work across the continent.

The right candidate for this programme officer position will be able to take initiative in connecting, informing and fostering exchange among relevant research, policy practice and advocacy constituencies working on selected issues of governance in Africa; in identifying and engaging funding and partnership opportunities for the research unit, coordinating communication arrangements for the research unit operation in the region. The candidate will develop and grow work along six key areas of responsibilities:

  1. Project coordination
  2. Substantive knowledge of public policy, development and governance theories and practices
  3. Technical support
  4. Capacity building
  5. Research and documentation
  6. Monitoring and evaluation

S/he will be comfortable with tight deadlines, and adept in setting relevant priorities and working in a self-directed and proactive manner, while knowing when and where to support where needed.

Role Profile

Summary of Key Responsibilities:

  • Support the development and implementation of PASGR’s flagship research uptake and use programme – Utafiti Sera – initiatives at regional and national levels
  • Support the overall institutional and research programme plans, including resource mobilization for programme sustainability
  • Participate in the development of plans and mobilization of resources for further policy strengthening initiatives at regional or national levels
  • Establish and maintain a comprehensive database of institutions and individuals actively engaged in research, research uptake, advocacy, and practice in Africa
  • Coordinate and support the management of PASGR Research Unit’s internal and external communication with relevant actors, stakeholders and the public
  • Provide managerial and technical support to the head of research and policy
  • Participate in strengthening existing M&E systems at all levels of the programme including supporting research programme grant recipients and Sub-recipients to meet programme deadlines and deliverables
  • Participate in documentation and dissemination of new lessons and experiences and in the implementation of research projects/studies
  • Participate in relevant PASGR activities, as needed.

Competencies

  • Master’s degree in the social sciences, development, governance or related fields. Candidates who are either completing PhD or those who have obtained a PhD within the past two years are encouraged. Working knowledge of French will be an added advantage.
  • At least three (3) years of post-qualification work experience in the field of social science including engagement with policy, practice and government constituencies
  • Experience of managing projects, events and stakeholder engagement including budgets and budget tools
  • Excellent writing and oral communication skills
  • Familiarity with the development of concepts for research or other projects and with the search for- and engagement of funding opportunities
  • Evidence of willingness to work as part of a team
  • Proven ability to multitask and work in a self-directed and self-driven proactive manner without supervision
  • Proven ability to actively reach out to and forge strategic connections and partnerships with a spectrum of stakeholders

Salary

This position attracts a competitive package that includes: basic salary, dependent education, pension plan and medical insurance.

Application process

Applications must be submitted electronically via email to PASGR (recruitment@pasgr.org) by Friday, July 19, 2019 at 1700hrs. Canvassing will lead to disqualification.

All applications must contain:

  1. Application letter stating why you are best suited for this role
  2. Curriculum Vitae with a list of 3 references
  3. Sample publication

PASGR is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

1.    Background

The public policy domain in Africa is shifting at a rapid pace moving towards inclusivity, democratization and the integration of gender as a significant component of equitable and inclusive public policies. At the Partnership for African Social and Governance Research (PASGR), the significance of gender in the studying, understanding and making of public policy has been recognized as indisputable and therefore integrated into all our programs and institutional formation.

PASGR intends to include more gender-based courses in its training including one on gendering the public policy process. A one-day forum that convened experts, activists, policy actors and researchers on gender was organized by PASGR in May 2019. The forum examined and explored the various dimensions and issues involved in the development of a training module to “engender the policy process”. The convening also made the connections between the changing nature of governance and key notions and practices embedded in state-citizen relations and their implications for evolving gender and politics; and gender and policy discourses.

This call is for expert(s) and academic(s) with the interest, commitment, expertise and capacity to design and develop a high quality stand-alone module on “gendering the policy process in Africa.”

PASGR is an independent, nonpartisan, pan-African not-for-profit organisation established in 2011 and located in Nairobi, Kenya. Currently engaged in more than 26 African countries, PASGR works to enhance research excellence in governance and public policy that contributes to the overall wellbeing of citizens. In partnership with individual academics and researchers, higher education institutions, research think tanks, civil society organisations, as well as business and policy communities both in the region and internationally, PASGR supports the production and dissemination of policy relevant research; designs and delivers suites of short professional development courses for researchers and policy actors; and facilitates the development of collaborative higher education programmes. Our vision is ‘a vibrant African social science community addressing the continent’s public policy issues’.

2.    Purpose of the assignment

The purpose of this assignment is to develop a short course on gender and public policy in Africa. The title of the course is “Gender and Public Policy Transformation in Africa: Understanding and Practice”. The focus of the course will be to contribute to the understanding and practice of the public policy process in Africa through a more dynamic and organic integration of gender in the narrative as well as the practice.

The course among others is expected to cover some of the following elements:

  • An- Introduction: that provides rationale, brief analytical overview and conceptual clarification utilizing Gender analysis as a running thread/theme
  • A brief overview of relevant theoretical perspectives
  • An exploration of the implications and importance of voice & agency in the policy process
  • An exploration of concrete practices in selected thematic areas to provide context and substance for conceptual and theoretical content.

3.    Scope of work

The assignment will entail designing and developing of the short course structured around key elements stated above. There will be a requirement to consider and use PASGR’s innovations in pedagogy that blend face-to-face delivery made up of a variety of learning approaches and platforms with online delivery. It is expected that the course will utilize both the blended approach and stand-alone face to face delivery covering no more than four days.

Specific tasks will include the following:

  1. Develop a course on gender and public policy that:
  2. addresses the understanding and practice of the gendering public policy process;
  3. contains intrinsic gender engaged and gender transformative content, process and objectives;
  4. addresses needs of the target audience (predominantly policy actors and policy practitioners);
  5. concretely demonstrates how gender inclusivity is effectively integrated in, or can help reform specific policy processes;
  6. demonstrates alignment in content, delivery methods and learning outcomes;
  7. Identify and develop learning resources/material for the course.
  • Engage and endeavour to link the course delivery with appropriate pedagogical strategies currently in use by PASGR.
  1. Design innovative assessment tools.

4.    Request for expressions of interest

PASGR invites expressions of interest (EOI) from individuals or teams with demonstrated expertise and experience in:

  1. Gender and public policy analysis/Gender and Governance
  2. Teaching and facilitation at higher education or advanced learning levels
  3. Module development and writing.

Interested persons who meet the specification are invited to complete and submit the following:

  1. A Technical Proposal answering to the TORs (not exceeding 5 pages). This should cover the approach to work, detailed course outline, and work plan with indicative time frame.
  2. A Financial Proposal;
  3. A brief description of recent experience in similar assignments;
  4. A current writing sample on the subject or current course description and brief curriculum if they have developed a similar course
  5. CV (2 pages highlighting relevant experience)

All applications should be sent to PASGR info@pasgr.org  by July 15th, 2019. Quote “EOI- Gendering Policy Process Course Development” in the subject line of your email.

The Partnership for African Social and Governance Research (PASGR) is an independent, non-partisan pan-African not-for-profit organisation established in 2011 and located in Nairobi, Kenya. Currently engaged in more than 12 African countries, PASGR works to enhance research excellence in governance and public policy that contributes to the overall wellbeing of women and men.
PASGR invites interested and eligible firms to submit their applications to be enlisted as pre-qualified suppliers for the financial years 2019 – 2021. Previously prequalified suppliers are required to reapply to confirm competitiveness and continued compliance with the prequalification criteria.
Interested eligible firms can obtain further information from the prescribed pre-qualification documents with detailed information from here or from our offices at 6th Floor, I&M Bank House, 2nd Ngong Avenue, Upper Hill, during working hours. A non-refundable fee of KES 3,000/- for each pre-qualification category application shall apply. Deposits should be made in the following account and the deposit slip attached to the tender document upon submission.

Partnership for African Social and Governance Research
Account No: 8018540018
Commercial Bank of Africa, Upper Hill Branch

Duly completed pre-qualification documents in plain sealed envelopes, clearly marked with category number and category description bearing no other mark should be addressed and sent or dropped to;

The Tender Committee
Partnership for African Social and Governance Research (PASGR)
6th Floor, I&M Bank House, 2nd Ngong Avenue, Upper Hill
P.O Box 76418-00508
Tel: +254 (0)20 2985000 /(0)729 111031 /(0)731 000065
Nairobi

So as to be received on or before 12.00 noon on Friday 21st June 2019. The Management shall have the right to accept or reject any application without giving reasons for its decisions.

The Executive director of the Partnership for African Social and Governance Research (PASGR), Professor Tade Aina, and the director of Higher Education as well as team leader for Pedagogical Leadership in Africa (PedaL), Dr Beatrice Muganda, recently led a team of 59 resource persons from different parts of the world to Nigeria to deliver a training workshop in pedagogy at the University of Ibadan. Dr. Muganda speaks to MODUPE GEORGE, who caught up with her at the event on the activities of PASGR and the systemic change PedaL is catalysing in teaching and learning in African universities and other issues in education.

Dr. Beatrice Muganda,
Director of Higher Education Programme at the Partnership for Social and Governance Research (PASGR)

PASGR is an independent, non-partisan pan African non-governmental organisation that was established nine years ago in Nairobi, Kenya. We work with intricately with academics and researchers, higher education institutions, research think tanks, civil society organisations, business and policy communities both in the region and internationally to enhance research excellence for public policy. We also offer training in pedagogy and research methods. Like now, I’m around for a training in pedagogy at the University of Ibadan (UI) through an initiative known as Pedagogical Leadership in Africa (PedaL). Basically, PASGR has three programmes. The first programme is research. Here, we work with researchers to produce evidence that involves public policy. We hold forums based on the Utafiti Sera (a Swahili word for research policy community) model. Through this platform, we bring a multitude of stakeholders together to discuss research evidence from fresh undertakings or synthesis of existing research. We have achieved a lot ofsuccess in generating appropriate and negotiated policy actions and uptake, for example, underemployment creation in agriculture and agribusiness as well as action for empowerment and accountability in Nigeria; in turning urban cities around in Rwanda; and, in social protection in Kenya. The second programme is professional development and training. This one offers research methods training to tool and retool researchers. So far we have trained 1600 researchers, some are very fresh in the field such as doctorate candidates while others are more experienced but need to renew their skills or broaden exposure to mixed methods. The third programme is the higher education programme which I direct.

Tell us more about the higher education programme of PASGR?

Here, we do a number of things. We mainly collaborate with universities to enhance the quality of education and training in different forms. We rolled out the collaborative Master of Research and Public Policy (MRPP) programme in 2014. The programme was jointly designed by 13 universities in seven African countries and it is being offered in these universities:In Nigeria -University of Jos, University of Ibadan and University of Lagos; University of Serria Leone; University of Ghana; University of Dar es Salaam and Mzumbe in Tanzania; Uganda Martyrs University and Uganda Christian University in Uganda; University of Nairobi, Maseno and Egerton University in Kenya; and, University of Botswana. These universities came together, discussed and agreed on issues, tools, and practices that could be integrated into a programme of public policy and taught to student in a broadly similar way across the continent. So, it is the same programme, awarded by each university and we at PASGR provide intellectual and strategic guidance in programme development; facilitate the network to share ideas, resources and expertise. We also link our local partners to international knowledge, technology, and research networks. So far, we have graduated four cohorts and we will be launching a collaborative Doctoral programme in Public Policy from September 2019 in distinctive hubs.

PASGR works with resource persons from within the continent and beyond in all its programmes. We have drawn on global perspectives, expertise, and innovations from: University of Minnesota (US); The Open University (UK); IDS, University of Sussex (UK); Queens University (Canada); Hertie School of Governance and Free University Berlin, Global Public Policy Network (GPPN) and Global Business Schools Network (GBSN) among others.  All through, our vision remains clear: to create a reasonable pool of resource persons within the continent and in each of the participating universities. We are getting there and remain confident that the capacity embedded in each university will offer PedaL trainings to colleagues on a sustainable basis with very little support from outside. We have grown the resource pool gradually by spotting and nurturing talent in each of the PedaL trainings people who are excited, curious and highly motivated and with an innate capacity to deliver. They are identified; mentored, given an opportunity to co-teach with more experienced teaching staff, and thereafter assigned a leadership role.

Why the need for pedagogical leadership in teaching at the university level?

First of all, we need to professionalise teaching at universities. The norm has been to recruit academics with mastery of disciplinary content in Physics, Political Science or whatever other disciplines at a Master’s or doctorate level to teach at the university. Yes, they are good in their contents, but they are not really conversant with the art of teaching and learning which must be acquired and constantly practised. Teaching and learning have their own contents, skills, and competencies, bolts and nuts, so to say. In PedaL, university academics are provoked to question their own beliefs about teaching and learning based on teaching philosophy a well as theories of learning. They are invited to understand the learning needs of students and how to turn around to be more responsive to these needs so as to engender deep learning as opposed to mere regurgitation of facts by students. When learning is developed around a variety of activities, it becomes interesting and is more likely to retain students and curtail the high dropout rates that dog graduate programmes. Fourth, part of the reasons that we are getting graduates who are not properly grounded in their work and who are not adaptive to changing economic conditions is that most of the university teaching staffs dwell on passing on knowledge at the expense of helping students to develop the right attitudes and values as well as 21st century skills such as social consciousness, critical thinking, leadership, teamwork, adaption, problem-solving and creativity. I am glad that this gap is drawing the attention of stakeholders and bilateral organisations. DFID, World Bank and even the European Union have started investing money into programmes for developing the teaching capacities of university teaching staff.

Does your training in pedagogical leadership in any way enhance the curricula of the universities in which you have trained several cohorts?

As a matter of fact, PedaLtraining enriches curricula. For most teachers, what to teach (content) is at their fingertips. PedaL helps them to answer the question – how do I organise what I teach in the most interesting and memorable fashion? PedaL interventions in curricula will vary with context, discipline and even individual university norms. In the process of stretching their imagination, academics may explode some of the course descriptions into comprehensive course outlines. In other cases, they will refine the expected learning outcomes and design activities that lead to the attainment of these outcomes. What we are saying to teachers is, take a second look at your course, and as we work through it, address any conspicuous gaps with regard to linking theory to practice, bringing issues that affect people in their daily lives in your content, using case studies of women and marginalised groups to draw attention to their plight, creating opportunities for projects and other learning activities that stimulate critical thinking and also enable students to develop a range of skills such as communication and presentation.  Our interventions are at the level of the course, and will organically enrich the curriculum. Ultimately PedaL influenced courses will not only help students to know a lot of things, but they will also develop the capacity to do a lot of things and to survive in the unpredictable knowledge economy.

It appears you only work with public universities; don’t you have plans to involve private institutions in your programmes since they are all working towards the same goal?

We started with five partner universities for purposes of managing the partnership effectively. However, the partnership provides many entry points into other universities in the host countries. Take ARUA for example, it has opened the door for 16 research-intensive universities to prioritise pedagogy taking cognisance of the fact that it takes good teaching and learning to produce effective researchers.  So we are going through networks that we are already working with such as the Regional Universities Forum for Capacity Building in Agriculture to reach a critical number of universities on the continent. For PedaL, we want a systemic change, and the system includes the private, public, faith-based, small and big; we need to move forward together.  Already, we are working with a number of private universities; Uganda Martyrs and Uganda Christian, The United State International University in Kenya, Kisubi, Africa Rural University of Uganda, and so forth. We are reaching out to other universities. However, to be able to do this, we need universities to put down some resources, to share the cost of the training. We can only reach the whole continent if we are able to mobilise domestic resources.

How has PedaL been bridging the gap between the older generation of teachers and the new when it comes to imparting pedagogical leadership training across nations?

We’ve had a lot of experience and positive vibes, especially when we started integrating technology into teaching and learning. When we started recording content videos, we were surprised that the more mature and experienced academics were eager to have their voices heard across the continent.  Older cohorts of teaching staff are acknowledging the pedagogical transformation: “ I had never worked with technology, but now, I have created my website” said Nobert, an academic at the University of Nigeria.  Given their rightful position and a valuable opportunity, the older academics are ready to work with us. The practice of co-teaching in most universities will also lead to rubbing of younger and older minds around innovations.  We believe that when the older ones see the value of the transformation, they will come on board slowly. But also the push for accountability that may stem from students along the way. This will provide a powerful stimulus for transforming teaching and learning strategies. Then we have senior champions of the transformation complete with a strong voice and platform: if Emeritus Professor Pai Obanya can do it, who can’t?

How accessible are you to upcoming universities, which are in dire need of PedaL, but do not have the wherewithal? How do you intend to reach out to them? 

In every PedaL training mounted, we invite a few participants from such ends. Besides, every hub training organised at a university provides an opportunity for solidifying PedaL in the host country as a number of other universities are invited to participate and special places are reserved for the smaller universities because we want to be inclusive and equitable. For instance, in Uganda, we were able to train six other universities, which were not part of the partnership. These included a small university, the Africa Rural University as well as another university from a post-conflict region, Gulu University. We care so much about the marginalised universities; we want them to get the right exposure. The next hub training is planned for Ghana in August 2019 and we will be replicating the same model.

This has been re-posted from: https://tribuneonlineng.com/216683/

Course Dates: September 4 – September 19, 2019

Training Location: Ibadan, Nigeria

Contact Person: nirungu@pasgr.org

The Partnership for African Social and Governance Research is currently accepting applications for the September 2019 Advanced Training for Multi-Method and Policy-Oriented Research. This includes:

  • Advanced Research Design
  • Impact Evaluation
  • Engendering Social Science Research

This training is relevant to African academics, researchers, PhD. students, the civil society, media, government departments and policy actors interested in broadening their knowledge and skills in the design and execution of policy-oriented research.

This is a residential programme that will be offered in two consecutive blocks, including a mandatory pre- and post- workshop online engagement.

Applicants interested in pursuing this opportunity should:

  1. Read the  Call for applications
  2. Register and complete the Application Process for your preferred course:

The deadline for submission: July 7, 2019