‘We build understanding between cultures’
How is the British Council different from the British High Commission?
The British Council
is the United Kingdom’s international organisation for education and
cultural relations. We focus on projects that enable social and
educational development, particularly in three areas: Art; English;
Education and Society. We are a nonpolitical organisation and while
some of our funding comes from a grant from the United Kingdom, we also
source for funding, such as from the contract work that we do, our
exams and teaching (teaching not in Nigeria but we have teaching
centres in some countries across the world).
We are not the
British High Commission and I know that a number of people confuse us.
Our work involves people and sometimes to get to people, we also use
institutions like what we are doing under our English area of work.
For example, we are
training teachers in the country and to do that, we are working with
institutions, through the government organisations in various states.
For instance, working through them to sponsor the training of teachers
in their states. We are working with the Universal Basic Education
Commission and the states’ Universal Basic Education Board to train
even more teachers across the country. We are working with universities
in Nigeria to link them with the universities in the UK. We are working
with secondary schools, linking them with secondary schools in the UK,
and that is about building skills and exchange of ideas so that both
parties can learn from each other – which is a major part of our work:
building understanding between different cultures, between people in
the UK and people in Nigeria.
In the area of Art,
we are doing the same thing: connecting creative people with skill to
schools, to mentors, to develop their skills as they move from one life
stage to the other. Under our educational society work, we are doing
various programmes involving youth groups, involving NGOs, a big
portion of our work involves the exam services that we deliver.
Last year, we
delivered over 60,000 exams to over 20,000 candidates. We are also
running some state contracts on behalf of organisations such as the
Department for International Development where we are working in areas
of security in justice.
There is a project
we are doing called Africa Knowledge Transfer Partnership (AKTP); what
we doing in that project is connecting academia to business so we are
drawing from science departments in universities connecting them to
industries in Nigeria such that what goes on at universities can ease
into business.
What you find is
that you have universities doing their researches on their own,
businessmen running their businesses can benefit from real life
experience but there is nothing linking them together.
The African
Knowledge Transfer Partnership (AKTP) project bring them together so we
have for instance we have the Bayero University in link to the tannery
in Kano. So the tannery is the business but it is benefiting from the
research done by the chemistry department in the school and they the
university have somebody in the tannery learning to see how that
resource is actually transformed into improved finished product. So
that one way we are linking them together. And that is building
research from science.
Apart from your work in the arts what are you doing in the area of science?
More of what we do mainly is connecting for development. So even our
work we creative people, we realise it is not enough for them to have
talent alone, they need business skills and entrepreneurial skills that
will help them not only to develop their creativity but to build the
business around them.
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