Syndicate

Part 1 - Liberia: What it means to be an educated person? Print E-mail
Written by Heather Cannon-Winkelman   
Monday, 19 October 2009
educationsymbolsShould we quantify someone as educated solely by the number of certificates and degrees hanging on their wall? Should we qualify someone as intelligent by their ability to read and write?

These questions need to be examined, because too often we measure someone as educated by their achieved academic level, ability to read or write, and knowledge learned in the traditional classroom. Based on these accepted standards, we often forgo that someone is also educated in the “world” classroom, because much insight and wisdom are gained through life experiences.

This two-part article will explore what defines an educated person. Part one examines how this relates to the need for educational programs that serve Liberia’s seasoned adult learners with some secondary education; and how Liberians are being arbitrarily eliminated from good paying jobs in private and public sectors including international NGOs (non-governmental organizations) for lacking a diploma or degree, or being bypassed by individuals who falsify their credentials. Part two will examine how people believe illiteracy hinders someone’s intelligence or knowledge; and how most Liberians, regardless if they can read or write, have no access to critical documents such as their constitution.  It is important to note that all these barriers (perceived or not) were erected from poverty, war and other social ills. Therefore, this two-part article will question why these barriers continue to exist.

What Defines an Educated Person

As someone who continues to seek knowledge and understanding, I have come to value “what it means to be an educated person.” I was first introduced to this question when I entered my alma mater—Metropolitan State University in St. Paul, Minnesota—in 2003 as a new freshman. As someone who was entering college in her mid-thirties, I could not discount the knowledge and experience I had gained outside the classroom as I pondered this question. Then this question was re-stated in 2005 during a perspective’s class where I decided to select the First College student-centered, individualized degree program (i.e. self-designed degree). It was during this class that we read various essays, watched films and participated in group activities that delved into an interdisciplinary study revolving around all the “-isms” in defining an educated person. This question was posited for the last time during my capstone class in 2008 as we prepared to graduate that semester. This time around many of us took an introspective approach to this question, since we had each experienced and overcame a critical life test that altered our futures. Many of these individual life trials were included in our final assignment to where we shared our “heroic” journeys in oral class presentations. These personal stories shared in this class illustrated how our life experiences shaped and defined our own existence as an educated person.

Metropolitan State University caters to primarily older students with an average age of 32 of diverse backgrounds. This highly diverse group of students is an invaluable database of knowledge and wisdom; since each person enters the classroom with a wealth of experience from being employed or self-employed, raising children, being involved in their communities, and living through situations that had profound impact on their lives. This diversity enhances the learning process through thoughtful exchanges in the classroom, because eyes and minds are opened to new perspectives as someone shares their experience of a life-changing or perilous journey. This unique learning institution values these experiences and the time constraints of these life-long learners by offering flexible creative learning strategies that allow them to demonstrate their knowledge as a way to earn college credit.

As a graduate from this university, I hoped to find something similar in Liberia that valued the life experience of those who suffered through a lifetime of poverty and survived 20 plus years of civil conflicts that may have prevented them from getting their high school diplomas or higher. I recently made an inquiry at one of Liberia’s public schools about the Accelerated Learning Program (ALP)1 it offered, because I knew two Liberians who were interested in getting their diplomas. These two men, now in their 40’s, had achieved some secondary education when they were younger; however, poverty and war stifled their chances then. As adults they are forced to work long hours to maintain their families’ survival and that stifled their chances now. I have found both individuals to be very educated and knowledgeable in many areas, so this prompted my inquiry.

When talking with the principal, my hopes quickly diminished that this accelerated program met the needs of these two men. What I hoped to find was a program that advanced these adult learners through the various disciplines by demonstrating their knowledge either by oral presentations, writing papers, tests, or other means. Then they could focus their attention on areas that needed classroom room instruction or only theoretical study in the areas that they possessed practical knowledge. Instead the ALP program only advances older children and adult ex-combatants through primary education.

In exploring what options were available for adult learners I was referred to meet with someone at the Ministry of Education, but that meeting did not occur as planned. Fortunately after scouring the internet for information about Liberia’s adult education programs, I did find one option and it is categorized as a non-formal education2 program for adults. This program offers literacy training and elementary elements of small business development and management skills that lead to micro-credit loans for graduates (The Art of Adult Learning and Education, 4). Neither the ALP nor the non-formal program is an option for adult learners who have some secondary education and advanced skills in business and management.

Based on these preliminary findings, it appears that there is a great need for an educational program that targets Liberia’s lifelong learners. There are some educators from private and public schools that I have discussed this issue and they have acknowledged a need for such as program. Additionally, from what I discovered from visiting and living in Liberia that there is a hidden wealth of knowledgeable, hard working and experienced Liberian people. However, the current reality in Liberia is that Unfortunately, these educated people continue to be overlooked for simply lacking a piece of paper that states they are.

Is this reality benefiting Liberia’s adult learner? If we examine the rate of Liberians who have completed some secondary education or higher, we find that the results are rather dismal. Looking at the table below, the number of Liberians having some secondary education is 20.3% while those completing high school is 7.1%. The percentages for individuals completing post-secondary education barely registers with only 0.7% receiving a vocational or technical degree, 0.7% receiving a bachelor’s degree, and 0.4% having a master’s or doctorate degree. What is even more alarming is the total ratio of men to women receiving some secondary and up to completing post graduate education is 1.8 to 1 and for those receiving post-secondary degrees is 2.6:1.

Table: Percentage of Literate Population 10 years or older by Highest Educational Grade Completed

Grade Level

Both Sexes

Males

Females

Ratio

Some Secondary

20.34%

25.10%

15.60%

1.6 : 1

Grade 12

7.13%

9.97%

4.29%

2.3 : 1

Vocational/Technical

0.70%

0.94%

0.47%

2.0 : 1

At University

1.98%

2.71%

1.25%

2.2 : 1

Graduate

0.74%

1.10%

0.37%

3.0 : 1

Post Graduate

0.42%

0.64%

0.20%

3.2 : 1

Total with some secondary to post graduate

31.30%

40.45%

22.18%

1.8 : 1

Total with post secondary degrees

1.85%

2.68%

1.03%

2.6 : 1

Source: Liberia's 2008 Population and Housing Census Final Results

In equating this ratio imbalance, there are 492,707 men out of 1,217.970 literate males to 271,054 women out of 1,222,232 literate females who have some secondary education up to post graduate degrees and this equates to 1.8 males to 1 female. Likewise, there are 32,635 men and 12,263 women out of their respective literate populations that have received post secondary degrees, so in other words 2.6 males to 1 female.

These percentages could easily increase if there were programs that allowed working adults to earn their high school diplomas or college degrees through accelerated alternative learning initiatives that valued their life experience. Also include programs that encourage more women to enter institutions of higher learning, and empower them to be more competitive in the job market.

Since returning to Liberia in January, I also have been seeking paid employment in this depressed market either with a NGO or the UN. Surprisingly, as I scan the postings I have discovered some for Liberian citizens that require both a post graduate degree and a vast amount of experience. How does a person acquire a master’s or doctorate degree living in a nation that has endured one civil crisis after another from 1979 to 2003? Again, the numbers from the Liberian 2008 Census show only 7,796 men and 2,423 women (3.2 males to 1 female) have acquired post graduate degrees which span from ages of 20 to 85 plus

Valuing Education over Experience: Falsified Credentials

Clearly, this educational background has frustrated Liberian job seekers in my community of friends, because they have extensive field experience with certified training in professions such as healthcare practitioners. However, they continue to apply for positions where they meet the job qualifications while knowing they have a good chance of being eliminated in the selection process for failing to “possess” the required degree.

Another frustrating point for many qualified and experienced Liberian job seekers is how some of their competitors are bypassing university standards of learning to purchase a fake degree. These fake degree holders see this as a means to quickly obtain the extremely limited management or specialized jobs in a country with 85% unemployment rate. And most often they will be employed in these prime jobs regardless if they possess the required knowledge or skills.

Liberia’s National Commission on Higher Education (NCHE) has been probing this problem and shut down ten so-called online institutions offering fake distant learner degrees. For example, on December 9, 2008, the NCHE in collaboration with the Justice Ministry arrested and jailed Rev. Dr. Johnson Oni Akinnola for illegally operating a bogus institution of higher learning—Monrovia University (MU)—in New Kru Town, a Monrovian community. As the President of the bogus MU, Rev. Akinnola was providing fake master’s degrees to eager students crammed in an overcrowded “one-room institution” that could barely accommodate ten people (Wolokokollie).

This problem of degree buying is not limited to Liberia, because even in countries like the U.S. people can obtain degrees from websites for $50 USD up to thousands (Counterfeit Degrees). Interestingly, many of these “purchased” degree holders become gainfully employed in upper management or executive level positions, because their educational backgrounds were not properly verified during the hiring process.

For example, in an 11-month congressional investigation conducted by the General Accounting Office it was discovered that over 300 U.S. federal employees4 had obtained phony degrees from “diploma mills.” This probe exposed one high profile case when an employee of the Department Homeland Security reported on May 2003 concerns of the credentials of the Chief Information Officer Laura Callahan, who was appointed one month earlier. It was discovered during this investigation that she had obtained all three subsequent degrees from the same institution, Hamilton University of Wyoming, within one year’s time, March 2000 to March 2001. These degrees, by the way, had been conveniently backdated to 1993, 1995 and 2000 in their respective order. This is one of several “diploma mills” operating in the U.S. and elsewhere that use similar names of accredited schools to disguise their illegal operations, and with this case it was the reputable Hamilton College in Clinton, New York, (Sperry).

Interestingly, U.S. and Liberia were linked to an $8 million “diploma mill” scheme from 1999 to 2005 that included over 100 phony institutions and over 9,000 individuals in the U.S. and elsewhere obtaining fake degrees. Several members of this scheme based in Spokane, Washington were arrested and charged with violating the Foreign Corrupt Practice Act for bribing several Liberian officials for more than $43,000 (USD) to obtain accreditation for three online distant learning universities. These alleged Liberian based schools sold about 6,000 phony degrees which 40% were bought by foreign residents seeking entry into the U.S. This is just a small sampling of the corruption in this billion dollar industry (Probation for FCPA).

There is also a cheaper alternative to buying degrees and it involves falsifying one’s résumé, curriculum vitae or other verifying document by simply listing a degree earned from accredited institution. This was the case of the notorious U.S. businessperson Tom Petters, who was arrested in 2008 for defrauding people for multi-millions of dollars in financial investments and charitable donations. A few years before his arrest, a New York hedge fund manager Richard Bookbinder of Capital Management passed on one of Petters’ dubious investments after learning he lied on the Dun & Bradstreet questionnaire about earning a degree at St. Cloud State University in Minnesota (Phelps, 5).

These are several good examples of how valuing a person as educated merely by the degree they claim to possess could be extremely hazardous. Not only could this lead to fraud as for Tom Petters, but also the hired “professional” may not have the experience to operate safely machinery or equipment, or manage people to effectively and efficiently achieve the goals of the business or organization. Therefore, it becomes a calculated risk to hire someone without verifying their education or experience, because people could be seriously hurt if not killed or the business could lose valued customers and sustain low profit margins if not go out of business.

Many Liberians have not been educated in the formal system or traditional setting, but they have acquired a great deal of experience throughout their life. In fact, since 1998, I have met individuals who are experienced technicians in automotive, communication, computer, and electronic fields; successful entrepreneurs; knowledgeable and wise teachers; skillful craftsmen and craftswomen; and others who are proficient in their vocations and avocations. The skills possessed by these individuals were not learned in any traditional institution, but were achieved in the “school of survival” What I discovered from this observation is how in countries like the U.S. we have so many career options that we can go years before we select one. But in countries like Liberia where poverty and war determine their fates, one does not have the luxury of time to choose a career. Instead their natural or God-given talents emerge out of necessity to continually exist. The studies and lessons from the “survival classroom” are some of the hardest and toughest exams a person can ever take, because their life and the lives of their family depend on them passing these critical tests.

Liberia cannot afford to continue to overlook these “educated and experienced” people, because they too are capable of contributing their knowledge and skills to help rebuild their nation. These are people that are worth investing in by developing an accelerated and flexible educational program that values their life experiences and demanding schedules. Poverty and war can no longer be a barrier for people who are eager to complete their education and to be acknowledged as qualified applicants based on established standards. It is time for Liberia and its international partners to recognize this talented and skilled labor force who are ready to contribute in the rebuilding process.

The second part of this article will be posted next week.

End Notes:

1 The Accelerated Learning Program (ALP) was established in 1998 by providing life skills training including literacy and numeracy for older children (i.e. children above the primary school age of eleven plus years), former combatants, and children associated with the fighting forces. The six years of curriculum in primary education was condensed and structured to enable this target group “to pursue and complete their primary education in three years.” (The Art of Adult Learning and Education, 4).

2 The non-formal education program also includes basic and secondary literacy training, post-literacy activities, apprenticeship, or on-the-job training, extension services, vocational courses, youth training, etc. It targets adolescence, young men and women, normally those fifteen years old and above (The Art of Adult Learning and Education, 2).


Works Cited:

  • Counterfeit Degrees. 27 August 2009. www.counterfeitdegrees.com
  • Kinder, Molly, and Emily Stanger. Policy Brief: What will the revitalization of Liberia’s economy mean for the women at its center? Harvard University John F. Kennedy School of Government. 2008. 09 June 2009 www.hks.harvard.edu/wappp/newsletter/KinderStanger.pdf
  • Phelps, David, and Jon Tevlin. Part 1: The collapse of the Petter’s empire. Star Tribune. 26 October 2008. 27 August 2009 www.startribune.com/business/33287804.html?page=5&c=y
  • Probation for FCPA Offenses In Fake Degree Case. USLaw.com. International Law: FCPA Blog. 02 October 2008. 27 August 2009
  • http://www.uslaw.com/library/International_Law/Probation_FCPA_Offenses_Fake_Degree_Case.php?item=257756
  • Sperry, Paul. Cut-Rate Diploma’s: How doubts about the government’s own “Dr. Laura” exposed a résumé fraud scandal. Reason Online. January 2005. 27 August 2009 http://reason.com/news/show/36443.html
  • The Development and State of the Art of Adult Learning and Education (ALE): National Report of Liberia. The Ministry of Education and Partners. October 2008. 20 July 2009 http://www.unesco.org/fileadmin/MULTIMEDIA/INSTITUTES/UIL/confintea/pdf/National_Reports/Africa/Africa/Liberia.pdf
  • 2008 Population and Housing Census Final Results. Liberia Institute Of Statistics And Geo-Information Services (LISGIS). May 2009. 14 July 2009 http://www.lisgis.org/Docs/NPHC%202008%20Report%20-%20Final.pdf
  • Wolokollie, Alva P. Reverend Jailed for Granting Fake Degrees. Daily Observer. 11 December 2008. 27 August 2009
  • http://www.liberia.corruptionwatch.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=artricle&id=141:reverend-jailed-for-granting-fake-degrees-&catid=1:latest&Itermid=1
  • Writer’s note: to learn more about Heather Cannon-Winkelman please visit http://unitingdistantstars.blogspot.com

 




Comments (82)
RSS comments
1. 20-10-2009 13:32
 
please reformat your article publish aga
Hey Cannon-Winkelman, 
Nice job: 
 
Your article seems very interesting to me but some of the texts overlapse the images on the right hand corner makes it harder to read.  
 
I am sure others will have the same problem as well. 
 
Without reading your article I can tell you now that education maybe define as the number of certificates one's earned--however, common sense, which comes from God help a person use his/her education wisely.  
 
Even though, Liberians politicians have education but unfortunately they have no common sense so their education is worthless. 
 
Here are my proof that Liberian politicians have no common sense: 
 
1) The 15 yrs civil war and after the war every one of them wants to become a president (with more than 50 political partie in that tinny country less than the size of NJ). This would mean every county in Liberia will have at least seven candidates for president....hahaha 
 
2) For example, see Henry Glay of Grand Gedeh association can't even accept defeat and now running from court to court for a non-paying position. 
 
Imagine this man is running for a real position--claiming he's educated. I don't doubt his education but I can tell you he has no common sense. 
 
3) Liberia has one of the highest corruption rate in world. Ghanaians, Nigerians, etc comes to Liberia to work and feed their family but because of lack of common sense (of our politicians) today we have no highway, electricity, or common water to drink. Our people are still drinking from wells, and creeks in 2010---such a shame on Liberia.  
 
4) I don't need anymore proof that our politicians have no common sense. 
 
I will like to read your article. please post it again.
 
Liberia
2. 20-10-2009 18:46
 
An Educated Person
An educated person is one who is knowledgeable about a subject on the level of acknowledged experts in a society. 
 
Where did Thomas Alva Edison the great inventor go to college? Does he have a degree? 
Where did the Wright brothers Wilbur and Orville go to college? Do they have degrees? 
 
In our current easy access information age, one could possibly become a self made expert.  
 
I am not a university graduate, but I have been a senior software developer in the USA at a global IT firm based in the USA for more than 15 years mentoring other employees holding bachelors and masters degrees from renowned universities. 
 
I could not afford the cost of a good engineering degree so I took upon myself to acquire the knowledge on my own because I enjoyed the subject.  
 
Whenever you use a computer on the internet, you are definitely using some of what I have designed!!!! 
 
Can a potential employer in Liberia verify my knowledge and experience by testing me, interviewing me and checking my job references?  
 
I am an original "small town" boy from Liberia.
 
Kaka Kola
3. 20-10-2009 23:17
 
Degree vs working stuff
Kaka Kola, 
 
I don't know you but I am already proud of your accomplishment.  
 
However,remember one can even teach a chicken or dock how to walk or write computer software.  
 
The real question is how long will it take the chicken or dock to learn how to code a simple C-program. 
 
Now, college degree speeds up the learning curve and this is what companies look for.  
 
Of course with your experience I will definitely hire you too because as a manager I am interested in getting job done and not inventing. 
 
But when it comes to promotion or higher responsibilities degree played a major role. 
 
Since you are a programmer you might have realize that you can't defeat some 3-4yr old child in playing video game if he/she had played longer than you.  
 
That means he/she had mastered the game but doesn't know the programing effort behind it. 
 
Without college degree--you may master C or C++ programming code but that doesn't make you an engineer or computer scientist. 
 
Computer is a language that anyone can learn but in programming code development (the codes itself) one has to know integral,and differential calculus plus partial differential equations--are you telling me that you can solve all these problems? 
 
If not, then you just mastered how to put together what someone with advance degree has developed.  
 
I write C or C++ programming language too but that doesn't make me an engineer. I just read the book and remember the code (how to loop). 
 
Degree is important but common sense help a lot. What you have is common sense to watch and learn--for it has nothing do with understanding root cause. 
 
Those languages you use to write your software were developed by scientists, which you have no idea how these languages were developed, why they work, and the physics behind them.
 
Liberia
4. 21-10-2009 00:50
 
Liberia is full of educated derelicts!
In Liberia, we have associated an educated person with the number of degrees he or she has. 
This has proven to be inaccurate. 
 
Looking at Liberia today, and with all the educated derelicts in Liberia, we should be far more advanced than we are now. 
 
There are things in Liberia that can be done without having all the degrees attached to one's name. 
e.g., we all know that we need good roads, electricity, sanitation, water etc. 
Do you have to be a Harvard graduate to apply these simple basic needs? The answer is no. And yet we sit back and allowed all these educated derelicts to do our thinking. 
 
Education should be put into action that will benefit society. 
If you look at Asian countries e.g. Japan. This is a country with little natural resources and yet they have become the world second economic power house. 
 
In Liberia, we take pride in calling ourselves dr. so and so and yet our socalled doctors cannot even publish a book for Liberian schools. 
 
Most of the inventions that we enjoyed today, were not invented with a whole lot of college degrees. 
 
We should take a new look of education in Liberia. It should be based on practical as well as theoretical know how. In this way, we will become builders and not just degrees holders.
 
M. Brown
5. 21-10-2009 09:41
 
Education vs good will
Mr. Brown, 
 
I do agreed with you and Kaka but I also believe that degree purpose to enhance what makes us 'ourself': common sense and love for one another. 
 
For Liberia we have no common sense-probably because of our leaders (the African-Americans) who have been mentally disordered as a result of bad treatment from slavery. Imagine these people were our leaders for 100years. It's not their fault that Liberia is not develop becuase they just don't know what they were doing for the most part.  
 
For example,they don't even know that people working under them (the natives) deserves anything good. Again, that's kind of treatment they got from slaves' masters. So they just applied what they learned from abroad. 
 
Also, the free slaves didn't see Liberia as their home for they were just there for the job, which task they are not performing anyway--just taking the money and no one can ask. 
Development was last on the agenda!!! 
 
Today Liberian kids are used-to seeing someone taking money without been punished or asked. 
 
So for Liberian, 'ourself' is the greeds we learned from our leaders, which we use education to enhance. 
 
Liberia is in big trouble; for me white man needs to takeover Liberia for years to train us just like they did to Ghanaians.
 
Liberia
6. 21-10-2009 10:39
 
RE: Degree VS Working Stuff
I absolutely understand your point about getting a formal education and learning the nuts and bolts of programming. 
 
However, I am a mathematician. Infact I once worked in the capacity of using advanced lenear analysis for my work with databases. I started off programming in IBM 370 Assembly language, manipulating bits and bytes in the late 1970's. During this time, 95% of the universities in the USA did not teach IBM 370 Assembly language. My company sent me to an IBM facility to acquire the knowledge. They trusted that I was capable of learning this.  
 
 
You may be assuming that I assemble equipment. I believe that these are the assumptions that would concern many skilled Liberians about returning home to contribute. Manpower is the best resource of any country, and taking full advantage of it is key to success.  
 
My comments to this forum is only to reiterate the fact that one can abtain any level of education without getting a formal degree. If there is a way to recognize such individuals, progress in Liberia could be faster.  
 
If in Liberia it is a matter of who knows more book than the other, then I am afraid that progress will be very slow or non-existant. Liberians need to cooperate with one another for progress.
 
Kaka Kola
7. 22-10-2009 09:11
 
Whats in a degree?
Bill Gates, founder of Microsoft, Larry Ellison, CEO of Oracle, were both college drop-outs. The singular heights to which they rose professionally speak for themselves. 
 
While university training is paramount, the artificial, egotistical importance that are ascribed to degree holders in Liberia, irrespective of whether said degree was acquired at a diploma mill, is simply nauseating. A Ph.D in Liberia seems to carry more artificial weight than his U.S. counterpart. Never mind that such Ph.D was acquired in the dark ages and the holder of the degree has never opened a book since to make a minimum effort to upgrade his knowledge. Without such continual effort, such degree simply becomes a glorified initial added to one's name. 
 
I believe that the greatest education is self-awareness and self-mastery. These are often categorized as emotional intelligence. If you don't believe me, then answer me this: Why are all of the Ph.Ds in Liberia being excused of stealing? - Because they suffer a severe deficit of self-understanding. Only one committed to serving his ego will be so foolish. 
 
With three university degrees, my greatest education is in self-mastery. On any given day, a leader with emotional intelligence is much preferable to one with just cognitive intelligence (degrees).
 
K. Koiquoe Wilson
8. 22-10-2009 23:50
 
Wilson read post#5 for your answer
Your is in post #5
 
Liberia
9. 23-10-2009 06:05
 
RE: Whats in a degree
Mr. K. Koiquoe Wilson, your comments are noteworthy for all Liberians. Thank you. I think Liberia should adopt your “self-awareness and self-mastery” philosophy. This is vital to the very existence of any country.  
 
I believe that it is not WHERE, but WHETHER one acquires knowledge. Circumstances have prevented many capable individuals from acquiring skills in a university setting. In fact, many industrialized countries are now returning to the old system of apprenticeship where students work part-time in their field of interest. Humans learn by doing.  
 
Your comment about upgrading one’s education reminds me of the fact that success is a journey and not a destination. Education should be a life long effort. Furthermore, the more knowledge one acquires about a subject, the more he realizes how little he knows about it. This may be why very many knowledgeable individuals are humble. However, there seems to be hardly any humble individuals among the group of PhD’s you mentioned. In fact, when reading the news, I get the impression that there are more thieves among them.  
 
There are ladies selling in the Liberian markets with no formal education that are far better entrepreneurs and administrators than the group of PhD’s you mentioned.  
 
With your philosophy of “self-awareness and self-mastery” Liberia will know the talents among its citizens. She (Liberia) can then nurture these talents while making progress through their productivity.
 
Kaka Kola
10. 23-10-2009 16:33
 
Only in Liberia
Of all the countries in the world, Liberia is the only country to ask the importance of education. What a shame, no wonder 80% of the country is illiterate. Many of the senatorial candidates are illiterate and some are warlords. Warlords who once took breath out of people now want to rule the people after TRC investigation has been conducted and they are listed as notorous. Why not just turn the country over the white man since we do or do not believe that education is power and power is knowledge.
 
Larsana
11. 24-10-2009 16:54
 
Only in Liberia
This is how are see education. From my point of view, whatever education(BSC,MSc,MS, MD, Ph.D, etc)one acquires is a great achievement which I call a personal victory. Now the probem comes when we as learned people cannot convert this personal victory to a Public Victory to assist others and our country. 
When many educated Liberians leave the class room, they refuse to read and learn in Liberia. No continue Ed but continue palm wine, girl friends, and good time.
 
ContinueEd
12. 24-10-2009 22:24
 
Only in Liberia
The problem is that the ELITEs need to minimize the local citizenry(natives) in  
order to justify what they term BRAIN DRAIN.This is why they can bring a Binyan 
Kesselly and Wokie Parker, pay them astronomical salaries because they state they can't find qualified people in Liberia. 
You have to be a Phd holder to do a job in Liberia that a high school graduate should be able to do with proper training, and what is even more comical is what the author alludes to about having a mastr's degree and ten years experience. 
Lets contrast Liberia with Ghana, in 1957  
Ghana had only one University and a few secondary schools.Today Ghana has 12,630 primary schools, 5,450 junior secondary schools, 503 senior secondary schools, 21 training colleges, 18 technical institutions, two diploma-awarding institutions and five universities serving a population of 18 million. 
So to the real question of what it means to be an educated person, my answer is having resources available to you. 
Mr KK Wilson wrote an article about a year ago about a book drop center, I thought that was a brilliant idea, Do we have that today in Liberia? 
 
Adult education  
vocational education 
technical education for all LIBERIANS. 
 
In a 1920 letter to Marcus Garvey written by Elie Garcia he stated"“Liberia although a very rich country in natural resources is the poorest place on the face of the earth and actually the people are facing “starvation”. 
This condition is due to many facts, first the strong repulsion of the Liberians for any kind of work. There is no cultivated land in the Republic and RICE which is the National Food is imported from England and other places and sold at a fabulous price, although it can be produced in enormous quantities there. 
Class distinctions- This question is also of great hindrance to the development of Liberia. There are at this present time two classes of people; the Americo-Liberians also called “sons of the soil” and the natives. The first class, although the educated one, constitutes the most despicable element in Liberia. Because of their very education, they are self-conceited and believe the only honorable way for them to make a living is by having a “Government job.” The men of this class having been most of them educated in England or other European places, are used to life, which the salaries paid by the Government do not suffice to maintain. Therefore, dishonesty is prevalent. To any who can write and read there is but one goal, a Government office, where s/he can graft." 
 
Liberians need to stop being elitist in nature, stop concentrating on upper middle class(diaspora Liberians and Sirleaf friends and relatives),stop focusing on only the academically gifted who only want to have government jobs.
 
corvah zazay
13. 25-10-2009 10:58
 
Only in Liberia
Only in Liberia you have people who stress that education is of no importance and all so called "PhDs" or educated people are evil. Education is not the enemy and educated people are not the enemy...ignorance on all sides regardless of class or ethnicity is the enemy. When will Liberians learn that there are good people and bad people? Ethnicity and socio-economic status do not dictate your actions on the job or towards others. 
 
A PhD holder can be just as ignorant as a high school graduate however the probability of a "PhD" being successful in jobs that require a certain level of expertise, technical and or theoretical knowledge is much higher than that of a high school graduate.  
 
Factors such as body of work or experience notwithstanding, I would hire K.K. Wilson to maintain a server or build a website before I would employ a high school graduate from ANY country but most especially a third world nation. This is just common sense and is standard practice throughout the world. It seems that Liberians are the only ones who feel this norm should not apply. I will continue to put my money on education and "PhDs" to move Liberia forward, that is my personal belief and opinion. If the history of the most developed nations is anything to go by my money is well invested. 
 
Corvah,  
 
You seem to be confusing class with ethnicity or ancestry. For example, Irish-American is not a class and neither is African-American or Native-American. Individuals from these three ethnicities or who recognize their ancestry through the denotations can be found throughout the American class structure (Upper, Middle, Lower). This the same case in Liberia.  
 
I agree with your statement regarding agriculture and work but disagree with your position regarding class distinctions. I know many "natives" who are only concerned with getting Government jobs. These individuals include many of our politicians and so called activists.  
 
Liberians in general put too much emphasis on working in Government and not enough emphasis on the private sector or in particular, as you stated, agriculture. Were you aware that Palm oil is derived from a plant indigenous to West Africa yet Malaysia produces more palm oil than all of the West African countries combined? The plant was taken from West Africa and introduced to Asia by the Europeans, as a result several Asian countries today have a thriving "million" dollar palm oil agricultural industry because the farmers are diligent and hardworking. You would think that the war and hard times would have taught us something, I see progress but whether the Liberian mentality has changed is a question that remains unanswered. Step one in changing that mentality is to stop the blame game. The only people to blame for our condition is us, Liberians as a collective, not any particular ethnic or ancestral group. Someone recently posted an analogy about the "foolish" Liberian mentality, something about a rock and a window. It is unfortunate but after reading I had no argument, because I couldn't agree more.
 
V.R.
14. 25-10-2009 15:52
 
Only in Liberia
VR, first I did not write what you stated I wrote. 
"I agree with your statement regarding agriculture and work but disagree with your position regarding class distinctions. I know many "natives" who are only concerned with getting Government jobs. These individuals include many of our politicians and so called activists". 
 
but imagine what you alluded to was written in 1920 and it is still true today. 
From what you have written to me I am of the opinion that you are one of those dangerous types who believes that the West is superior to us hence this statement from you"Factors such as body of work or experience notwithstanding, I would hire K.K. Wilson to maintain a server or build a website before I would employ a high school graduate from ANY country but most especially a third world nation" 
 
I wonder how you have made this Malawian boy feel, 
 
 
The extraordinary true story of a Malawian teenager who transformed his village by building electric windmills out of junk is the subject of a new book, The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind. 
 
Self-taught William Kamkwamba has been feted by climate change campaigners like Al Gore and business leaders the world over.  
 
His against-all-odds achievements are all the more remarkable considering he was forced to quit school aged 14 because his family could no longer afford the $80-a-year (£50) fees.  
 
When he returned to his parents' small plot of farmland in the central Malawian village of Masitala, his future seemed limited.  
 
But this was not another tale of African potential thwarted by poverty.  
 
Defence against hunger 
 
The teenager had a dream of bringing electricity and running water to his village.  
 
 
 
 
 
Many, including my mother, thought I was going crazy - people thought I was smoking marijuana  
 
William Kamkwamba  
And he was not prepared to wait for politicians or aid groups to do it for him.  
 
The need for action was even greater in 2002 following one of Malawi's worst droughts, which killed thousands of people and left his family on the brink of starvation.  
 
Unable to attend school, he kept up his education by using a local library.  
 
Fascinated by science, his life changed one day when he picked up a tattered textbook and saw a picture of a windmill.  
 
Mr Kamkwamba told the BBC News website: "I was very interested when I saw the windmill could make electricity and pump water.  
 
"I thought: 'That could be a defence against hunger. Maybe I should build one for myself'."  
 
When not helping his family farm maize, he plugged away at his prototype, working by the light of a paraffin lamp in the evenings.  
 
But his ingenious project met blank looks in his community of about 200 people.  
 
"Many, including my mother, thought I was going crazy," he recalls. "They had never seen a windmill before."  
 
Shocks 
 
Neighbours were further perplexed at the youngster spending so much time scouring rubbish tips.  
 
 
 
William Kamkwamba's achievements with wind energy show what one person, with an inspired idea, can do to tackle the crisis we face  
 
Al Gore  
"People thought I was smoking marijuana," he said. "So I told them I was only making something for juju [magic].' Then they said: 'Ah, I see.'"  
 
Mr Kamkwamba, who is now 22 years old, knocked together a turbine from spare bicycle parts, a tractor fan blade and an old shock absorber, and fashioned blades from plastic pipes, flattened by being held over a fire.  
 
"I got a few electric shocks climbing that [windmill]," says Mr Kamkwamba, ruefully recalling his months of painstaking work.  
 
The finished product - a 5-m (16-ft) tall blue-gum-tree wood tower, swaying in the breeze over Masitala - seemed little more than a quixotic tinkerer's folly.  
 
But his neighbours' mirth turned to amazement when Mr Kamkwamba scrambled up the windmill and hooked a car light bulb to the turbine.  
 
As the blades began to spin in the breeze, the bulb flickered to life and a crowd of astonished onlookers went wild.  
 
Soon the whiz kid's 12-watt wonder was pumping power into his family's mud brick compound.  
 
'Electric wind' 
 
Out went the paraffin lanterns and in came light bulbs and a circuit breaker, made from nails and magnets off an old stereo speaker, and a light switch cobbled together from bicycle spokes and flip-flop rubber.  
 
Before long, locals were queuing up to charge their mobile phones.  
 
 
WINDS OF CHANGE  
2002: Drought strikes; he leaves school; builds 5m windmill 
2006: Daily Times writes article on him; he builds a 12m windmill 
2007: Brings solar power to his village and installs solar pump 
Mid-2008: Builds Green Machine windmill, pumping well water 
Sep 2008: Attends inaugural African Leadership Academy class 
Mid-2009: Builds replica of original 5m windmill  
Mr Kamkwamba's story was sent hurtling through the blogosphere when a reporter from the Daily Times newspaper in Blantyre wrote an article about him in November 2006.  
 
Meanwhile, he installed a solar-powered mechanical pump, donated by well-wishers, above a borehole, adding water storage tanks and bringing the first potable water source to the entire region around his village.  
 
He upgraded his original windmill to 48-volts and anchored it in concrete after its wooden base was chewed away by termites.  
 
Then he built a new windmill, dubbed the Green Machine, which turned a water pump to irrigate his family's field.  
 
Before long, visitors were traipsing from miles around to gawp at the boy prodigy's magetsi a mphepo - "electric wind".  
 
As the fame of his renewable energy projects grew, he was invited in mid-2007 to the prestigious Technology Entertainment Design conference in Arusha, Tanzania.  
 
Cheetah generation 
 
He recalls his excitement using a computer for the first time at the event.  
 
"I had never seen the internet, it was amazing," he says. "I Googled about windmills and found so much information."  
 
Onstage, the native Chichewa speaker recounted his story in halting English, moving hard-bitten venture capitalists and receiving a standing ovation.  
 
 
 
William Kamkwamba and Bryan Mealer (left) spent a year writing the book  
A glowing front-page portrait of him followed in the Wall Street Journal.  
 
He is now on a scholarship at the elite African Leadership Academy in Johannesburg, South Africa.  
 
Mr Kamkwamba - who has been flown to conferences around the globe to recount his life-story - has the world at his feet, but is determined to return home after his studies.  
 
The home-grown hero aims to finish bringing power, not just to the rest of his village, but to all Malawians, only 2% of whom have electricity.  
 
"I want to help my country and apply the knowledge I've learned," he says. "I feel there's lots of work to be done."  
 
Former Associated Press news agency reporter Bryan Mealer had been reporting on conflict across Africa for five years when he heard Mr Kamkwamba's story.  
 
The incredible tale was the kind of positive story Mealer, from New York, had long hoped to cover.  
 
The author spent a year with Mr Kamkwamba writing The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind, which has just been published in the US.  
 
Mealer says Mr Kamkwamba represents Africa's new "cheetah generation", young people, energetic and technology-hungry, who are taking control of their own destiny.  
 
"Spending a year with William writing this book reminded me why I fell in love with Africa in the first place," says Mr Mealer, 34.  
 
"It's the kind of tale that resonates with every human being and reminds us of our own potential."  
 
Can it be long before the film rights to the triumph-over-adversity story are snapped up, and William Kamkwamba, the boy who dared to dream, finds himself on the big screen?"  
 
I wonder how many 14 year old Liberian boys dreams would never be realized because VR would never give them a chance? 
 
P.S Notice that the White man in the story believes in him but he has also got a chance to make money from this. Africans like VR would laugh at this boy. 
This is whats wrong with us, we minimize ourselves, and then when we get so called white man education we minimize others.
 
Corvah Zazay
15. 25-10-2009 21:56
 
Only in Liberia
Mr VR, As a mentor of mine usually says to me" We have a serious problem in Liberia". 
First your statement here"The plant was taken from West Africa and introduced to Asia by the Europeans, as a result several Asian countries today have a thriving "million" dollar palm oil agricultural industry because the farmers are diligent and hardworking." is a serious disrespect to our farmers in Liberia because you seem to suggest that they are not DILIGENT and HARDWORKING. How Unfortunate. 
But back to your history lesson 
Sime Darby the Oil Palm giant is about to move into Liberia to begin oil palm production, Sime Darby was initially a British owned company but because of "Malaysianisation" policy the Company became Malaysian owned. 
Imagine if we did this in Liberia to control our own destiny, if we took over Firestone e.t.c. 
It is not that our people are lazy, it is just that our leaders are too willing to give away our bithrights. 
 
P.S We need a LIBERIANIZATION POLICY!!!!!!!
 
Corvah Zazay
16. 26-10-2009 01:26
 
Only in Liberia
Corvah, 
 
Back to the rock and the window analogy. Seems the blame game will never stop.
 
V.R.
17. 26-10-2009 01:36
 
Only in Liberia
p.s. We do have a "Liberianization" policy in place for the Firestone plantation! At the end of the contract all assets are to be turned over to Liberia. The ONLY reason we didn't take ownership when the original terms of contract ended a few years ago is because we the government was not in the position to run the plantation. Perhaps if we hadn't destroyed our economy and had been building instead of breaking down all of our institutions, we would have the finances, knowledge, and capabilities to take over the plantation and run it with maximum efficiency.
 
V.R.
18. 26-10-2009 13:06
 
SOME OF LIBERIA'S BEST MINDS!!!
Sayeh, McIntosh, Karpeh in Liberia to Hang Heads. 
 
 
MONROVIA – The Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF)’s Africa Department, Dr. Antoinette Sayeh, arrives in Liberia today to participate in the third program review of the Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility (PRGF) and to discuss the progress to date and the challenges ahead. 
 
EDUCATION IS THE KEY TO OUR FEATURE - AN EDUCATED POPULATION WILL SEE OUR STANDARD OF LIVING GOING THROUGH THE ROOF. ONE EXCEPTIONAL STORY OF SOMEONE MAKING IT WITHOUT FORMAL EDUCATION IS NOT THE RULE BUT THE EXCEPTION. ONE PERSON HITTING THE LOTTERY JACKPOT DOSEN’T MEAN EVERYONE IS CABABLE OF HITTING THE JACKPOT – THE REST OF US WILL HAVE TO GO TO WORK AND MAKE A LIVING NOT WAITING FOR THE JACKPOT.
 
TheLiberianPeople
19. 26-10-2009 19:05
 
SOME OF LIBERIA'S BEST MINDS!!!
Unlike you Sir Sayeh, McIntosh and Karpeh  
do not make me excited at all. 
You are right aboout one thing though, Education is the key to our Future so we can be able to plot our own destiny. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Dr Kwame Osei 
opinion 
 
I have been compelled to write this article as a result of two articles that I have seen recently in newspapers that confirm my warning to Ghanaians that IMF/World Bank induced policies WILL cripple them. 
 
The first article came in this newspaper that had as its headline "Woes of textile sector deepen ..... As cheap foreign imports flood Ghana's market and that more job losses were in the offing. 
 
The second article is from another publication a couple of weeks back which revealed that Vodafone Ghana made a loss of GHc264 million - this is the same Vodafone saying it was coming to rescue Ghana Telecom from its own loss making which is why it was sold to them dirt cheap. 
 
What these two stories have in common is that both are a victim of IMF/World Bank sanctioned policies that they have foisted on the Government of Ghana under the guise of so-called economic liberalization. 
 
In the first instance regarding the textile industry, in the days of Dr. Kwame Nkrumah and even in the few years after he was removed from power, Ghana had a thriving textile industry that was employing thousands of Ghanaians and making made in Ghana fabric and designs that were the envy of Afrika. 
 
However, since the overthrow of Nkrumah, the IMF/World Bank have very carefully and totally eroded the once thriving local textile industry to such an extent that even fabrics that once were associated with Ghana are not even manufactured in Ghana. 
 
These polices sanctioned by the IMF/World Bank have resulted in cheap imports mainly from China flooding the Ghanaian market which has devastated the local textile industry in the process leaving thousands of Ghanaians lose their jobs in this industry. 
 
The second warning refers to the Vodafone scandal. In another newspaper it was reported that Vodafone Ghana in only its first year in operation made a loss of nearly GHc300 million. 
 
This from a company that the Ghanaian public were told were going to rescue Ghana Telecom and start to make it a profit making company. 
 
The reality that Ghanaians should be ware of is that Vodafone before taking over GT was a company in deep trouble - they had recorded the biggest loss for a British company at over $US26bn, a company that was facing a tax suit in the Indian courts and sold its Japanese concern after it struggled to break the lucrative Japanese market. 
 
However, this loss is totally unacceptable when Vodafone has been in charge officially of GT for less than a year. 
 
Even the acting CEO, Randell Hato admitted in a "private and confidential" internal memo dated 31 July 2009 that "last year the company reported a loss of GHc264 million, we urgently need to turn Vodafone Ghana into a strong and successful business." 
 
However, the shocking thing about the Vodafone situation is that unknowing to many Ghanaians, it is their hard-earned tax cedis that is paying for this failure. 
 
For example there are 80 mainly White European expats who live at expensive rented accommodation in Trasacco's plush Villagio Premavera estimated to be at $US5,000 per person per month - this works out to be $US4,800,000 or GHc7,200,000 in accommodation expenses for the last year only. 
 
To add insult to injury the expat staff drive around in rented posh cars from C & C at a cost to the Ghanaian taxpayer of $US150 a day per person which is $US4,368,000 or GHc6,552,000 a year, not forgetting their free petrol allowance. 
 
Also since Vodafone assumed control of GT, many Ghanaians have lost their jobs/livelihood. Vodafone has already sacked 950 Ghanaians under its so-called voluntary redundancy package and a further 950 more Ghanaians will be sacked by the end of November this year under Vodafone's compulsory redundancy. 
 
These redundancies are a part of Vodafone's plan as Mr. Hato confirms in his memo - he states "in other areas we need to reduce numbers or cut roles which are not core to our business". 
 
So the above shows what is at the heart of the Vodafone fiasco and Ghana's fading textile industry - the total re-colonization or neo-colonization of Ghana and a new for m of imperialistic enslavement 
 
Why is this? 
 
As we have seen in the years since the overthrow of Dr. Kwame Nkrumah, IMF/World Bank sanctioned policies have all but crippled Ghana's once envied and thriving education, healthcare and agriculture sectors, destroyed the livelihoods of millions of Ghanaians resulting in a social and economic time bomb and making Ghana, once the Black Star of Afrika now a basket case. 
 
This is why Dr. Kwame Nkrumah said that political independence is meaningless unless economic independence is attained too. 
 
Economic independence is doing what is in the best interests of swathes of the ordinary people and the country and further the continent and not being tied down or being enslaved to the impositions of the oppressor via its economic machinery, in this case the IMF/World Bank being the main two culprits. 
 
Dr. Kwame Nkrumah also warned in his classic book "Neo-colonialism, the last stage of Imperialism that "imperialism has grown more sophisticated and more dangerous. It is more sophisticated because the neocolonial powers i.e. the West have developed a comprehensive propaganda machinery, which moulds the minds of the people in the neocolonies. It is more dangerous because it is difficult to hold the powerful states that exercise neo-colonialism responsible for their criminal actions". 
 
He also stated that purpose of the West particularly the United States is to ensure that governments in Afrika comply and conform to the wishes of the Western powers, especially the United States. 
 
The main interest of the West, especially the United States is to secure access to markets, cheap labour and natural resources and this is where the IMF/World Bank come in with their flawed economic policies designed to achieve this. 
 
And in order to achieve this the IMF/World Bank under disguise employ what is termed as economic hitmen - John Perkins the authour of the critically acclaimed book, "Confessions of an economic hitman" states that his function as an economic hitman was to convince the political and financial leadership of underdeveloped countries like Ghana to accept enormous development loans from institutions like the World Bank and USAID. 
 
Saddled with huge debts they could not hope to pay, these countries were forced to acquiesce to political pressure from the United States on a variety of issues such as trade and economic policy. Perkins states in his book that developing nations were effectively neutralized politically, had their wealth gaps driven wider and economies crippled in the long run. 
 
This proves what Dr. Kwame Nkrumah warned about in his book by stating that the essence of neocolonialism is that the state (Ghana)which is subject to neocolonialism (Western particularly American influence) "has all the outward trappings of international sovereignty but in reality its economic system and thus its political system is directed from outside". 
 
This means then that whether Ghanaians accept it or not the brutal truth is that our financial, monetary and economic policies come from London and Washington and not the Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning and in the case of Francophone states, Paris. 
 
 
If an Afrikan government seeks to change the nature of this economic enslavement and wants to be in the position of total economic independence as espoused by the likes of Nkrumah, the West especially The United States will use any means necessary, including coups to put pressure on the government to maintain the status quo being economic slaves to the West. 
 
One of the instruments that is used to do this is Aid dependency which makes countries like Ghana dependent on "financial support" from the neo-colonial master (United States, Britain, France etc), in order to make the state system to function at a minimum level and to secure foreign investments (which are mainly a continuum of western domination). 
 
And this is how the IMF/world Bank are able to hold countries like Ghana to ransom and keep them in the cycle of poverty that currently exists in Ghana and Ghanaians must WAKE UP to this reality that is damaging their quality of life. 
 
 
Why do we have to borrow from the IMF/world Bank? 
 
The above question is a very serious one to ask if we are serious about nation building in the right direction. The reason why Ghana has to go cap in hand to the IMF/World Bank is quite simple - this is because Ghana as a country does not earn enough from its exports in order to invest in schools, roads, transport, local government, healthcare and so forth. 
 
This is because although Ghana has Gold, Diamonds, Bauxite, Timber and so forth, the harsh reality is that WE DO NOT OWN THE ABOVE COMMODITIES. As a result of IMF/world Bank intervention, Ghana has since lost overall control of its commodities to Western and Asian interests and if we are not careful the oil find will be another casualty. 
 
For example the gold is now owned and controlled by American, British and Canadian mining companies who take up to 95% of the profits outside of Ghana. Our timber is not controlled by Ghanaians - this is controlled by the Arab cartel of Lebanese and Syrian interests who make billions of cedis every year and hardly pay any tax to the government of Ghana. Other commodities like aluminum are controlled by Indians. 
 
This is a shocking state of affairs that has been created by the World Bank and IMF who have manipulated our Government to liberalize our economy whilst at the same time surrendering our core state assets like Ghana Telecom to private concern. This is why we have to go to the IMF and World Bank for money because we do not receive anything from our core commodities such as those as I have stated above. 
 
When a country like Ghana accepts money from the IMF/World Bank, there are some conditionalities that have to be met. These conditionalities ultimately affect the quality of life for the ordinary Ghanaian such as increase in fuel prices or utility bills. 
 
 
 
 
What the current "Global financial crisis" has shown us is that economics as practiced by the west has failed even the West with record bankruptcies, mass unemployment and a re-appraisal of the economic policies that were adopted by the West. 
 
The conventional approach as instructed by the IMF/World Bank that Ghana has presided over the years since political independence towards addressing its economic mal-development has failed miserably and therefore there is the urgent need for Ghana to undertake a complete overhaul of our current economic paradigm. 
 
This means researching, conducting feasibility studies and field studies, then implementing the recommendations that will result in implementing economic policies prescribed by Ghanaians and NOT by Europeans/Americans that creates REAL growth, REAL jobs, REAL opportunities that will substantially improve the quality of life for ALL Ghanaians and not just a privileged few.
 
Corvah Zazay
20. 26-10-2009 20:13
 
Bread winners
Truth be told. There are counties in Liberia who contribute greatly toward agriculture in Liberia. They are Lofa, Bong and Nimba. 
I am not from anyone of these counties but I will tell you, every time I read something about agriculture, these counties always come up. 
Recent survey also claimed they have the most educated people in the country(yeap as much as I hate to say it they do). Bassa also have educated people. 
A few months ago I read that these counties again have dedicated acres of lands for the development of palm oil to be sold to the west for soap making etc. 
 
So let us not be so hasty in criticizing our country men and instead give a big kudos to these bread winners of Liberia. Those of us from southeastern Liberia need to take pride in our counties by giving Monrovia a breeder. We need to help grow rice, palm oil and a lot of produce to help sustain us as well. Monrovia is not Liberia, it is rather the capital of Liberia. We have messed up new kru-town 
and sonewein. We need to get back to the soil because we have the land. We could even be the provider of proteins to Liberia, we have the ocean don't we? Also we as Liberians as a whole need to put aside our differences for the sake of development of ourselves and our future generations.
 
Larsana
21. 27-10-2009 08:27
 
Glorified PhDs
Only a handful of Liberians, even having the aptitude, will ever acquire a Ph.D. This is because the vast majority of Liberians do not have the opportunity to pursue a Ph.D even given the ability. Liberia cannot bank her future on Ph.Ds. We therefore have to harness the resources we have at hand. This entails cultivating the strength of Liberians to occupy any position regardless of their level of degree. With the proper level of encouragement, more Liberians, even without advanced degrees, can become successful. Is it not counterintuitive to demand that only holders of advanced degrees from the best universities occupy positions in Liberia when the vast majority of the Liberian resource pool do not meet such criterion? Doesn't this demand automatically create an elite class in Liberia? Doesn't it relegate our own universities?  
 
How many CEOs in the U.S. have Ph.Ds? How many U.S. Senators? How many U.S. presidents have had Ph.Ds? This number, if computed, will be very miniscule. Why then is Ph.D an ultimatum in poverty-stricken Liberia that has an illiteracy rate of 90%? Good leadership demands that we cultivate our talents from within irrespective of our doldrums. Can not a graduate of the University of Liberia run the Bureau of Maritime Affairs with the assistance of consultants as is the case right now? Can not a graduate of CUC run NPA? I will argue that Liberians with the right set of values will do a fabulous job at these institutions. To accept the exorbitant salaries that we hear of at these institutions where the average Liberian cannot provide basic sustenance for his family is an abomination. It clearly shows a severe deficit of emotional intelligence on the part of these so-called intelligent people. 
 
The best and most successful companies in the U.S. harness their best resources from within. They adopt a system of cultivating leaders instead of searching for the best leaders from without. The criterion thus becomes who has shown the level of initiative to occupy a given position as opposed to who has a Ph.D. Having a Ph.D. in this scenario is incidental and not the determinant of whether one occupies a position. Ph.D. in academia may be a necessity but this is hardly the case in industries. Again, Bill Gates is a classic example. 
 
Our Ph.D Minister Sayeh of Finance bailed out after a brief stint at that ministry to return to greener pastures. A local talent, Ngafuan, was tapped to occupy that position. With the right amount of encouragement and support, Ngaguan can be successful at Finance. There are many Ngafuan(s) in Liberia who are currently being passed over for so-called foreign educated. 
 
There has been no shortage of Dr. This and Dr. That in Liberia, yet Liberia is operating akin to the Stone Age today. For time in memorial we have perpetuated the myth that these were the most qualified amongst us. Where have these Ph.Ds taken Liberia today? 
 
I was once a Ph.D student. I abandoned this effort because I did not perceive its usefulness to my career. I have been just as successful in my career without a Ph.D. With their Ph.Ds, what good to Liberia are Dr. Toe, Dr. Sayeh (bailed out prematurely), Dr. Bropleh, Minister Banks, LL.D, etc., today? Just from these few names, it should become clear why emotional intelligence should trump cognitive intelligence.
 
K. Koiquoe Wilson
22. 27-10-2009 14:43
 
NOT EXICITED - NOT A SURPRISE!!!
I'm not surprise that you are not excited about successful Liberians. The only thing that gets some of you excited is when there are stories about failure and some Liberians not doing very well. These Liberians have reached the top of their profession - whether some work for the dreaded IMF or World Bank is not the issue - they should be celebrated for their achievements and be pointed out as role model for us the next generation. 
 
If nothing about these three people can get you excited, at lest you should be excited for the great job they did to eliminate billions of dollars of Liberia's debt. After that, you can go back to getting excited about all the negative things about Liberia.
 
TheLiberianPeople
23. 27-10-2009 15:04
 
Bread Winners
Larsana,  
Be careful according to how you analyze what you read, see or hear. There are opinions as well as facts out there. Everybody is entitled to his/her opinion. At the end of the day, the facts of any story are worth a bundle. 
 
Lofa is a huge county. The Lofaians have more land to plant rice than the Marylanders. However, the Marylanders are not fed by the Lofaians.
 
F. S. Hney
24. 28-10-2009 09:10
 
Everywhere else but NOT in Liberia
K.K. Wilson,.  
 
Let's compare apples to apples (Government agencies to Government agencies) because you are clearly making a comparison between apples to oranges (Government agencies to Legislators). I don't have the statistics but would like to see how many heads of U.S. Departments and federal Agencies, the counterparts to our Ministries and agencies, don't have some type of advanced degree. Off the top of my head I know the following: 
 
The Secretaries of State, Agriculture, Commerce and the Chairman of the Federal Maritime Commission (The U.S. version of the NPA & BMA) are all Doctors of Law. The Secretary of Defense has a PhD.  
This should be standard everywhere but Liberia right?  
 
I am glad you introduced companies as an example. When the best of most successful companies in the United States identify, develop, or hire the future leaders of their organizations there is an advanced degree they require you attain. How many persons in upper level management in the best of most successful US companies don't have an MBA? Check the statistics.  
This should be standard everywhere but Liberia right?  
 
Do you also believe that we have too many Doctor's of Medicine in Liberia (M.D.)? Should the nurses aids, orderlies, or even nurses be allowed to take over the jobs of these practitioners? If we were to apply your argument to the medical field it would be a disaster.... 
but since having a doctorate makes a difference everywhere but Liberia perhaps we should try right? 
 
I agree that talent needs to be developed from within but we must have standards and encourage our people to strive for excellence regardless of the challenges. You are sending the clear message that education is not important.  
 
Imagine if the President were to appoint nothing but college graduates to positions of authority and some of these individuals were either failures, corrupt, or resigned during their tenures. The logic in your message would cause people to then believe that a college level education is also useless!?! Your argument is nothing but counterproductive my brother.
 
V.R.
25. 28-10-2009 10:00
 
Emotional Intelligence
Mr. Wilson, 
 
I encourage you to do more research before you make blanket statements regarding the value of emotional intelligence over cognitive intelligence. The following is an excerpt from the blog of a renowned psychologist, Dan Goleman. Quote: "EI trumps IQ in “soft” domains, where intellect matters relatively little for success." 
 
When Emotional Intelligence Does Not Matter More Than IQ 
Monday, March 24, 2008 at 8:53pm 
The sub-title of my 1995 book Emotional Intelligence reads, “Why It Can Matter More Than IQ.” That subtitle, unfortunately, has led to misinterpretations of what I actually say – or at least it seems to among people who read no further than the subtitle. I’m appalled at how many people misread my work and make the preposterous claim, for instance, that “EQ accounts for 80 percent of success.” 
 
I was reminded of this again when browsing comments on a journal article that fails to find much of a correlation between teenagers’ level of emotional intelligence and their academic accomplishments (Australian Journal of Psychology, May 2008). For me, there’s no surprise here. But for those misguided people who think I claim emotional intelligence matters more than IQ for academic achievement, it would be a “Gotcha!” moment. 
 
But I never made that claim – it’s absurd. My argument is that emotional and social skills give people advantages in realms where such abilities make the most difference, like love and leadership. EI trumps IQ in “soft” domains, where intellect matters relatively little for success. That said, another such arena where EI matters more than IQ is in performance at work, when comparing people with roughly the same educational backgrounds (like MBAs or accountants) – which is exactly what goes on in human resource departments of companies every day. 
 
As I’ve explained elsewhere on this website: 
 
My belief is that if a longitudinal study were done, IQ would be a much stronger predictor than EI of which jobs or professions people can enter. Because IQ stands as a proxy for the cognitive complexity a person can process, it should predict what technical expertise that person can master. Technical expertise, in turn, represents the major set of threshold competencies that determine whether a person can get and keep a job in a given field. IQ, then, plays a sorting function in determining what jobs people can hold. However, having enough cognitive intelligence to hold a given job does not by itself predict whether one will be a star performer or rise to management or leadership positions in one’s field. 
 
IQ washes out when it comes to predicting who, among a talented pool of candidates within an intellectually demanding profession will become the strongest leader. In part this is because of the floor effect: everyone at the top echelons of a given profession, or at the top levels of a large organization, has already been sifted for intellect and expertise. At those lofty levels a high IQ becomes a threshold ability, one needed just to get into and stay in the game. 
 
The one place I expect we will be seeing more data showing a relationship between skills in the emotional and social arena and school performance will be in studies of children who have gone through social/emotional learning (SEL) programs. These curricula give students the self-management skills they need to learn better. And so to the extent that advantage boosts learning (as opposed to IQ, which differs from learning), they should do better on academic achievement scores. 
A forthcoming study from the University of Illinois finds around a 10 percent boost in achievement test scores among these students. Presumably, the SEL programs would also have meant higher scores on the particular assessment of EI used in the Australian study – and so had they tested such children, there may well have been a positive correlation. 
 
So learning seems to be another domain where EI may matter – whether more than IQ is an empirical question.
 
V.R.
26. 28-10-2009 10:15
 
Emotional Intelligence vs Cognitive Inte
Emotional intelligence does not "trump" cognitive intelligence. Emotional intelligence enhances cognitive intelligence. Individuals with BOTH tend to be more successful than individuals who have a higher degree of cognitive intelligence. Emotional intelligence is not a stand alone concept Mr. Wilson. 
View Link: 
http://www.teach-nology.com/tutorials/teaching/iq/
 
V.R.
27. 28-10-2009 11:08
 
LETTER OF THE DAY
When People Freely Choose Their Leaders, They Feel Empowered, Engaged 
10/26/09 - Menker Casey, This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it  
 
 
The Editor, 
 
last week I asked my Mother who's their Paramount chief? She says, "my son I don't know, because since we elected our woman president there had been no election here". Absolutely, she does not know because the constitutional right to freely choose their local Leaders have been denied. But any time a Law maker dies, millions would be set aside to conduct a bi-election. 
So, the excuse about no fund to conduct a local elections for the people to freely elect their Leaders becomes another inability of govt. to take complete charge of the country democratically. The government does not have to conduct a costly election for the people to elect their leaders. 
For example, government. could use indelible ink to conduct local elections.Is it a curse in Liberia for people to live in the villages? Because everything the quality of life stands for is inadequate for them. Liberians need a leader that would give back to community but not back off from them. When people freely choose their leaders, they feel empowered, engaged and more importantly they interact since we are also a community. 
Thanks, 
Menker Casey,
 
TheLiberianPeople
28. 28-10-2009 11:22
 
LETTER OF THE DAY
TheLiberianPeople, 
In many ways we have digress from the focus of this author's article and in fairness to the author I would like to put her article back into perspective. 
The author writes about the need for programs that would serve the needs of adults in our society, and elaborates on how that lack of service is affecting Liberians who perhaps did not have the opportunity to go abroad. If you peruse any Liberian site that offers jobs you will understand what the author is speaking about. 
The question then is what is the Liberian Government doing about this? 
Is hiring Binyan Kesselly, Wokie Parker, Fumba Sirleaf from abroad the answer? 
Now these people are Liberians also so dening them jobs in Liberia is not the answer, but creating an elite class beomes the problem because essentially these "Liberians" are being treated like expiatriates. 
Is this the answer? 
Without accusing me of hating the Sirleaf government I would like you to answer those questions. 
 
Then ask yourself how did Liberia get into billions of dollars of debt? 
(without accusing the PRC)
 
Corvah Zazay
29. 28-10-2009 12:00
 
reply to post#21
KK. Wilson nothing wrong with folks obtaining PHD to lecture at our universities but instead they put their eyes on government jobs. I personally think Dr. Bropleh have got a damn big mouth. let his ass go back to UN to obtain pay cheques instead.
 
Gargar
30. 28-10-2009 12:47
 
DR, SAYEH AND OTHERS - MAJOR ASSETS TO L
Technology Important in Eliminating Payroll Corruption’ Dr. Sayeh. 
 
MONROVIA – The Director of the African Department of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and Liberia’s former Minister of Finance, Dr. Antoinette Sayeh, says the biometric system at the Civil Service Agency (CSA) has the potential to help the country’s efforts to update the payroll system. 
 
How shortsighted it is not to take pride in seeing Liberians sitting at the table of international decision making bodies when the interest of Liberia is fully and ably represented. 
 
This is absolutely a false discussion going on here - of course it is imperative to utilize the God-given talent and potential of all citizens for the full benefit of the country. 
 
But to discount some level of education (PhDs) as being useless and not beneficial is just misleading. I'll not want a nurse to perform an open heart surgery just to prove that the nurse is on the same level of knowledge as a person with a doctorate in medicine. 
 
Just because some with PhDs are not perfect in their personal life doesn’t means that the attainment of higher knowledge is a drag on society.  
 
Since most people in corporations and government in America are lawyers - it is safe to say most have JDs -that is the equivalent of PhD. But most lawyers are not called Dr. When it comes to the technical work of government and corporations in America or the developed world, the highly educated people are the ones doing those jobs and not some drop outs. 
 
So if we are going to say that being highly educated is a waste of time then we can just abolish higher education in Liberia and only require high school education as the standard. The rest of the knowledge void can be filled by life experiences. Who needs PhD or higher education!!!!!
 
TheLiberianPeople
31. 28-10-2009 14:26
 
DR, SAYEH AND OTHERS - MAJOR ASSETS TO L
"There has been no shortage of Dr. This and Dr. That in Liberia, yet Liberia is operating akin to the Stone Age today. For time in memorial we have perpetuated the myth that these were the most qualified amongst us. Where have these Ph.Ds taken Liberia today?" 
 
PhD's did not destroy Liberia! Neither Doe nor Taylor had any type of advanced degree (Masters/Doctorate)! The people running around rioting, looting, and shooting each other didn't have advanced or even college level degrees. Where have they taken Liberia today Mr. Wilson?
 
V.R.
32. 28-10-2009 16:57
 
Liberia's Bread Winners
Larsana, 
Liberia's "bread winners" are not the residents of the counties you've named. 
A bread winner is someone like you who earns a livelihood or one who feeds himself/herself or dependents. Do the farmers of Lofa, Bong and Nimba feed the Liberian people? Or are the rest of the counties of Liberia dependent on Nimba, Lofa and Bong? The irrefutable answer is no! 
 
Let the truth be told. I am extremely proud of the farmers of the Nimba, Bong and Lofa. I am also very proud of the farmers of the counties you didn't name. Subsistence farming has been a way of life throughout Liberia for centuries. If the government really means business in terms farming for commercial reasons, Liberian farmers including those who reside in the counties you've mentioned, will do a fantastic job. 
 
Earlier this year, VP Boakai brilliantly came up with a wonderful plan that appealed to the farmers of Liberia. But, although I wholeheartedly embraced the VP's plan, I opted out quickly because of a very good reason! There isn't a "fitting motor road" for the farmers of Lofa, Nimba, Grand Gedeh and all other counties that could be used to transport their produce to the Monrovia market. Nimba and Bong counties are closer to Monrovia than Lofa, Maryland, Sinoe or Kru Coast. If a Sinoe farmer cannot immediately transport his bananas or corn to the market in Monrovia because of a muddy road, he will not bother himself to produce bananas abundantly. Despite all of that, the Sinoe farmer is a bread winner for his dependents. 
 
The Most Educated Liberians. 
What do you mean exactly by the most educated Liberians are those of Lofa, Nimba and Bong? Do you mean that there're "more Nimbians, Lofaans and Bongans" than the rest of the counties of Liberia? Or do you mean the educators of those counties "know what they've learned" better than the educators of the rest of the counties of Liberia? 
 
Let's consider a scenario: 
* Larsana has a BS in math. Larsana is a native of Bong county. 
 
* Momo Nyanatee has a BS in math. However, poor Nynatee was born in Sinoe, and not Nimba, Bong or Lofa. 
 
Question, Mr. Larsana: 
Mr. Larsana, are you "more educated" than Momo Nyanatee, the Sinoe county gentleman? 
I think I know what you mean. I think your opinion about "bread winners and the most educated" is something you're entitled to. Until you have solid facts, I disagree with you. Oh, yes, please let me know if you think your BS degree is better than Nyanatee's eventhough both of you earned you BSs at Harvard University. 
 
Keep up the good works Larsana!
 
F. S. Hney
33. 28-10-2009 19:58
 
Foolish Liberian Mentality
See! Everyone else to blame but Liberian man hisself. 
 
If a Liberian man were to pick up a rock and break his own window after seeing the destruction he will say, "I am not to blame for breaking the window. Mother nature put the rock there so she is to blame, if she had not made the rock available I would not have broken the window!"
 
Umann
34. 28-10-2009 21:26
 
95 PERCENT OF GOVERNMENT WORKER ARE.....
Covah, about 95 percent of government workers are people who did not come abroad for schooling. Furthermore, what is wrong with qualified Liberians working for the government even if they came abroad for schooling? What part of the constitution that said that Liberians should not work for their country if they go abroad for education. This is the worse false argument I've ever heard.  
 
As to your question about how we got billion of dollars in debt, I'll give you the answer you want to hear. It was incurred by the Sirleaf administration. The PRC had nothing to do with it. 
 
 
TheLiberianPeople -TLP
 
TheLiberianPeople
35. 28-10-2009 22:31
 
95 PERCENT OF GOVERNMENT WORKER ARE.....
The First Rule Of Education Should Be: 
"Do No Harm" 
 
Shaun Kerry, M.D. 
Diplomate, American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology 
The present day educational system is damaging to young people. Evidence of this harm is being presented from psychological, neurological, 
 
sociological, statistical, and common-sense perspectives.  
 
There are many notable people, who did not complete their formal education, but accomplished great things. Bill Gates, founder of the software giant Microsoft, and the wealthiest person in the world, dropped out of Harvard in his freshman year. His incredible rise to prominence in the computer industry is testimony to the fact that formal education is not synonymous with success. In fact, his phenomenal knowledge of computers was not acquired in the structured environment of the classroom. Instead, Gates pursued this interest after school by studying the BASIC language from a manual with his friend Paul Allen, helping a local company debug its computers, and designing computer programs.  
Many will dismiss Gates as an exceptional individual, who may have dropped out of college, but excelled in high school before being accepted at Harvard. There are, however, many other people who have reached the highest echelons of their profession without even completing elementary school, let alone high school. The following list offers a small sample of the thousands of individuals who have achieved tremendous success in their lives without completing their formal education:  
 
• Albert Einstein: Nobel Prize-winning physicist; "Time" magazine's "Man of the Century" (20th century) (after dropping out of high school, he studied on his own and passed the entrance exam on his second try to the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology) 
 
• John D. Rockefeller Sr.: Self-made billionaire American businessman-philanthropist; co-founder of "The Standard Oil Company;" history's first recorded billionaire (dropped out of high school two months before graduation; took business courses for ten weeks at Folsom Mercantile College [a chain business school]) 
 
• Henry Ford: Self-made multimillionaire American businessman; assembly-line auto manufacturing pioneer; founder of the "Ford Motor Company" 
 
• Walt Disney: Oscar-winning American film/TV producer; animation and theme park pioneer; self-made multimillionaire founder and spokesperson of "The Walt Disney Studios/Company; "Presidential Medal of Freedom recipient; Congressional Gold Medal recipient; French Legion of Honor admittee/Medal recipient (received honorary high-school diploma from hometown high school at age 58) 
 
• Abraham Lincoln: 16th President of the United States; (little formal education - Lincoln himself estimated approximately one year; home schooling/life experience; later earned a law degree through self study of books that he borrowed from friends) 
 
• Carl Sandburg: Pulitzer Prize-winning American author (little formal education; later passed entrance exam to Lombard College and graduated) 
 
• Diana, Princess of Wales 
 
• George Burns: Oscar-winning actor/comedian (elementary school dropout) 
 
• Dave Thomas: Self-made multimillionaire American businessman; founder-spokesperson of the "Wendy's" fast-food restaurant chain (equivalency diploma) 
 
• Martin Van Buren: 8th President of the United States (little formal education; began studying law at age 14 while an apprentice at a law firm, later became a lawyer) 
 
• Andrew Carnegie: Self-made multimillionaire American businessman and philanthropist (elementary school dropout) 
 
• John Chancellor: American television journalist; evening news anchorman 
 
• "Colonel" Harlan Sanders: Self-made multimillionaire American businessman; founder-spokesperson of the "Kentucky Fried Chicken/KFC" fast-food restaurant chain (elementary school dropout; later earned a correspondence course law degree) 
 
• Samuel L. Clemens ("Mark Twain"): Best-selling American author and humorist (elementary school dropout) 
 
• Christopher Columbus: Italian explorer (little formal education; home schooling/life experience; went to sea in his youth) 
 
• Davy Crockett: Early American frontiersman; U.S. Congressman (Tennessee Representative); died at the battle of the Alamo (little formal education - less than six months; home schooling/life experience) 
 
• Charles Dickens: Best-selling British author (elementary school dropout) 
 
• Joe DiMaggio: National Baseball Hall of Fame inductee; Presidential Medal of Freedom recipient 
 
• Sir Francis Drake: British explorer; knighted in the United Kingdom (little formal education; home schooling/life experience; went to sea in his youth) 
 
• George Eastman: Self-made multimillionaire American inventor; founder of the "Kodak" roll film camera, corporation, and chemical company 
 
• Thomas Edison: Self-made multimillionaire, most famous and productive inventor of all time; invented the filament electric light bulb, phonograph, and motion picture camera; electrical power usage pioneer; Congressional Gold Medal recipient; knighted (France: bestowed the rank of Chevalier, (had no formal education - home schooled) 
 
• Benjamin Franklin: American politician - diplomat - author - printer - publisher-scientist - inventor; co-author and co-signer of the U.S. Declaration of Independence; one of the founders of The United States of America; face is pictured on the U.S. one-hundred dollar bill (little formal education [less than two years]; home schooling/life experience) 
 
• Clark Gable: Oscar-winning actor 
 
• George Gershwin: Oscar-nominated and most celebrated American songwriter-and classical composer; Congressional Gold Medal recipient 
 
• Amadeo Peter Giannini: American-born founder of "Bank of America" 
 
• Cary Grant: Oscar-winning actor 
 
• W.T.Grant: Self-made multimillionaire American businessman; founder of the "W.T. Grant Company" department store chain 
 
• H.L. Hunt: Self-made billionaire American oil industrialist (elementary school dropout) 
 
• John Huston: Oscar-winning American film director-actor (The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, The Maltese Falcon, The African Queen, etc.) 
 
• Elton John: Oscar-winning songwriter-singer; Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee; knighted by the United Kingdom 
 
• Andrew Jackson: 7th President of the United States (no formal education; home schooling/life experience) 
 
• John Paul Jones: Scottish-born American Revolutionary War U.S. navy commander; famous quote: "I have not yet begun to fight." (little formal education; home schooling/life experience; went to sea in his youth) 
 
• Henry J. Kaiser: Self-made multimillionaire American businessman; founder of "Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical Corporation," "Kaiser Steel," etc. 
 
• Kirk Kerkorian: Self-made billionaire American businessman 
 
• Ray Kroc: Self-made billionaire American businessman; founder of the "McDonald's" fast-food restaurant chain 
 
• Jerry Lewis: Actor-comedian-singer-entertainer-humanitarian; knighted (France: Chevalier [or Chev.] Jerry Lewis) 
 
• John Major: British Prime Minister 1990-1997 
 
• William Shakespeare: British playwright; best-selling British author 
 
• George Bernard Shaw: Nobel Prize-winning Irish-born British playwright; best-selling author 
 
• Frank Sinatra: Oscar-winning actor-singer; Presidential Medal of Freedom recipient; Congressional Gold Medal recipient 
 
• John Philip Sousa: American composer-conductor (elementary school dropout) 
 
• Zachary Taylor: 12th President of the United States (little formal education; home schooling/life experience) 
 
 
• George Washington: 1st President of the United States; former general; Chairman of the Constitutional Convention; U.S. nickname: "The Father of Our Country"; face is pictured on the U.S. one dollar bill and twenty-five cent coin (quarter) (no formal education; home schooling/life experience; went to sea in his youth) 
• William Faulkner: Nobel Prize-winning and Pulitzer Prize-winning American author; screenwriter (dropped out of high school in second year; later attended University of Mississippi but did not graduate) 
 
• Herman Melville: Best-selling American author and writer of Moby Dick, arguably the greatest novel of all time. 
 
• Liza Minnelli: Oscar-winning actress-singer 
 
• Robert Mitchum: Oscar-nominated actor 
• Claude Monet: French painter (elementary school dropout)  
 
• David H. Murdock: Self-made billionaire American businessman  
 
• Florence Nightingale: History's most notable nurse; best-selling Italian-born British nursing book author (no formal education; home schooling/life experience) 
 
• Thomas Paine: American Revolutionary War era political theorist; best-selling British-born American author; famous quote: "These are the times that try men's souls." (little formal education; home schooling/life experience) 
 
• Millard Fillmore: 13th President of the United States (little formal education - six months; home schooling/life experience; studied law while serving as a legal clerk with a judge and law firm; later became a lawyer) 
 
• Will Rogers: American author-humorist-lecturer-actor-entertainer; famous quote: "I never met a man I didn't like." 
 
• Frederick Henry Royce: Self-made multimillionaire British businessman; co-founder-designer of the "Rolls-Royce Motor Cars Company"; knighted (United Kingdom: Sir Frederick Henry Royce) (elementary school dropout) 
 
• Edmond Safra: Lebanese-born billionaire banker-philanthropist 
 
• David Sarnoff: Russian-born American radio and television pioneer; given the title "Father of American Television" by the Television Broadcasters Association 
 
• William Saroyan: Oscar-winning screenwriter; Pulitzer Prize-winning American playwright 
 
• Vidal Sassoon: Self-made multimillionaire British businessman; founder of "Vidal Sassoon" hairstyling salons, academies, and hair-care products 
 
• Walt Whitman: Best-selling American poet (elementary school dropout) 
 
• Orville & Wilbur Wright: Aviation pioneers; Congressional Gold Medal recipients 
 
• Grover Cleveland: 22nd and 24th President of the United States; face is pictured on the one-thousand dollar bill, which is no longer printed; (dropped out of school to help family earn income; studied law while serving as a clerk at a law firm, later became a lawyer) 
 
• Irving Berlin: Oscar-winning American songwriter-composer; film story writer; Presidential Medal of Freedom recipient; Congressional Gold Medal recipient 
 
Ultimately, what distinguishes the aforementioned individuals from the rest of us is their passion for learning that transcends the structured environment of the classroom. Instead of limiting their education to formal schooling, they were curious about the world around them. With their fearless spirit of exploration and their desire to experiment, these individuals discovered their true passions and strengths, which they built upon to achieve success later in life.  
 
Imagine what a loss for the world it would have been had Thomas Edison decided to conform to the system, and invest his time in doing homework, rather than pursuing his love for invention. What if Walt Disney had confined his learning to the requirements of his school's curriculum, and followed only the guidance of his teachers, rather than his own internal motivation. His extraordinary animated features may have never been created.  
 
Ultimately, formal education - by placing the control of learning in the hands of teachers and administrators, and imposing rules and requirements on students - stifles the natural love for learning. We must learn from these exceptional individuals who had the courage to defy the coercive force of formal education and carve their niche in our history 
 
 
• H.G. Wells.......best-selling British author (dropped out to help family earn income; later returned and went on to college) 
 
• Jim Clark........self-made billionaire American businessman; founder of "Netscape"; first Internet billionaire (17, U.S. Navy) 
 
• Jimmy Dean..........singer-songwriter-actor; self-made multimillionaire American businessman; founder of the "Jimmy Dean  
 
Foods" brand sausage business (16, U.S. Merchant Marines; 18, U.S. Air Force) 
 
• Andrew Jackson......7th U.S. President; face is pictured on the U.S. twenty dollar bill (13, U.S. Continental Army; orphaned at 14; little formal education; home schooling/life experience; studied law in his late teens and became a lawyer) 
• Leon Uris..........best-selling American author (Exodus, etc.) (17, U.S. Marines) 
 
• Walter L. Smith.....former president of Florida A&M University (equivalency diploma, at age 23) 
 
• W. Clement Stone....self-made multimillionaire (some sources indicate billionaire) American businessman-author; founder of "Success" magazine (elementary school dropout; later attended high-school night courses and then some college) 
 
• Jack London.......best-selling American author (dropped out at 14 to work; later gained admission to the University of California; left after one semester) 
 
• Arthur Ernest Morgan....American flood-control engineer; college president-author; appointed by President Roosevelt to be director of the Tennessee Valley Authority public works project (left high school after three years; later attended the University of Colorado for six weeks) 
 
• Ray Charles.........singer-pianist; Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee 
 
• Cher......Oscar-winning actress-singer 
 
• Maurice Chevalier.... Oscar-winning actor-singer; French Legion of Honor inductee/Medal recipient (note: rank bestowed in 1938  
 
• Pierce Brosnan......actor 
 
• Ellen Burnstyn......Oscar-winning actress 
 
• Raymond Burr.......actor 
 
• Sammy Cahn.......... Oscar-winning American songwriter-composer 
 
• Michael Caine.......Oscar-winning actor; knighted (United Kingdom: Sir Michael Caine) 
 
• Glen Campbell.......country music star 
 
• Daniel Gilbert......Harvard University psychology professor (equivalency diploma) 
 
• Dizzy Gillespie.....musician-composer (received honorary diploma from high school he attended)  
 
• Patrick Henry.......American Revolutionary War era politician; Virginia's first governor; famous quote: "Give me liberty, or give me death!" (little formal education; home schooling/life experience; later studied on his own and earned a law degree) 
 
• Peter Jennings......Canadian-born American television journalist; evening news anchorman 
 
• Ansel Adams.........American wilderness photographer; photography book author; Presidential Medal of Freedom recipient 
 
• Julie Andrews.......Oscar-winning actress-singer 
 
• Louis Armstrong.....singer-musician 
 
• Brooke Astor........wealthy American socialite-philanthropist-author; Presidential Medal of Freedom recipient 
 
• Pearl Bailey........singer-actress; Presidential Medal of Freedom recipient 
 
• Lucille Ball........actress-comedienne-producer; Presidential Medal of Freedom recipient 
 
• Bill Bartman........self-made billionaire American businessman 
 
• Count Basie.........bandleader-pianist 
 
• Jack Benny.......... comedian-actor-violinist 
 
• Humphrey Bogart.....Oscar-winning actor 
 
• Peter Bogdanovich....Oscar-nominated American film director-screenwriter (The Last Picture Show, Paper Moon, Mask, etc.) 
 
• Whoopie Goldberg....Oscar-winning actress-comedienne 
 
• Benny Goodman.....bandleader-clarinetist 
 
• Lew Grade.........British film/TV producer (TV: The Avengers, The Saint, Secret Agent, The Prisoner, The Muppet Show, etc.); knighted (United Kingdom: Sir Lew Grade) 
 
• Philip Emeagwali....supercomputer scientist; one of the pioneers of the Internet (high-IQ high-school dropout; left school in native Nigeria due to war conditions and lack of tuition money; continued to study on his own and earned an equivalency diploma; later won a scholarship to Oregon College of Education in the United States; transferred after one year to Oregon State University) 
 
• Danny Thomas........actor-producer-humanitarian (actor: Make Room for Daddy/The Danny Thomas Show; co-producer: The Dick Van Dyke Show, The Andy Griffith Show, etc.); Congressional Gold Medal recipient 
 
• Peter Ustinov.......Oscar-winning actor  
 
• Hiram Stevens.......American-born engineering inventor; knighted (United Kingdom: Sir Hiram Stevens) 
 
• Patrick Stewart..... actor-writer-producer-director; former captain of the Enterprise on TV's Star Trek: The Next Generation and in films. 
 
• Kemmons Wilson.......self-made multimillionaire American businessman; founder of the "Holiday Inn" hotel chain 
 
• Kjell Inge Rokke.....self-made billionaire Norwegian businessman 
 
• David Puttnam.......Oscar-winning British film producer (Chariots of Fire, Midnight Express, etc.); knighted (United Kingdom: Sir David Puttnam) 
 
• Anthony Quinn.......Oscar-winning actor 
 
• Julie London....... singer-actress 
 
• Sophia Loren.......Oscar-winning actress; best-selling Italian-born author; former model (elementary school dropout) 
 
• Joe Louis..........boxer; Congressional Gold Medal recipient 
 
• Roy Rogers..........actor-singer-guitarist 
 
• Walter Nash.......New Zealand Prime Minister 1957-1960; knighted (United Kingdom: Sir Walter Nash) 
 
• Olivia Newton-John.... singer-actress; British-born Australian author 
 
• Rosa Parks.........U.S. civil rights activist-pioneer; Presidential Medal of Freedom recipient; Congressional Gold Medal recipient 
 
• Mary Pickford......Oscar-winning actress; early Hollywood pioneer; co-founder of "United Artists Corporation" (little formal education [six months]; home schooling/life experience) 
 
• Sydney Poitier.....Oscar-winning actor (elementary school dropout)  
 
• Frederick "Freddy" Laker.... self-made multimillionaire British businessman; airline entrepreneur; knighted (United Kingdom: Sir Frederick [or Freddy] Laker) 
 
• Tommy Lasorda...... baseball team manager; National Baseball Hall of Fame inductee 
 
• David Lean.........Oscar-winning British film director (Lawrence of Arabia, Dr .Zhivago, etc.); knighted (United Kingdom: Sir David Lean) 
 
• Anton van Leeuwenhoek....Dutch microscope maker; world's first microbiologist; discoverer of bacteria, blood cells, and sperm cells) 
 
• Richard Branson.....self-made billionaire British businessman; founder of "Virgin Atlantic Airways," "Virgin Records," etc.; knighted (United Kingdom: Sir Richard Branson) 
 
• Isaac Merrit Singer....American sewing machine inventor; self-made multimillionaire founder of "Singer Industries," "I.M. Singer and Company," etc. (elementary school dropout) 
 
• Alfred E. Smith.....New York Governor; 1928 Democratic U.S. Presidential candidate (elementary school dropout) 
 
• Charles Chaplin.....Oscar-winning actor-writer-director-producer; knighted (United Kingdom: Sir Charles [or Charlie] Chaplin) (elementary school dropout) 
 
• Sean Connery........Oscar-winning actor; knighted (United Kingdom: Sir Sean Connery) 
 
• Jack Kent Cooke.....self-made billionaire Canadian-born American media businessman 
 
• Noel Coward.........Oscar-winning actor-director-producer-playwright-composer; knighted (United Kingdom: Sir Noel Coward) (elementary school dropout) 
 
• Joan Crawford....... Oscar-winning actress; former dancer 
 
• Charles E. Culpeper....self-made multimillionaire American businessman; early 1900s' owner and head of "The Coca Cola Bottling Company" 
 
• Robert De Niro......Oscar-winning actor-producer; knighted (France: Chevalier [Knight] of the Legion of Honor; Chevalier [or Chev.] Robert De Niro) 
 
• Gerard Depardieu....Oscar-nominated actor; knighted (France: Chevalier [or Chev.] Gerard Depardieu) (elementary school dropout) 
 
• Richard Desmond.....self-made billionaire British publisher 
 
• Thomas Dolby........ musician-composer; music producer 
 
• Joe Lewis........self-made billionaire British businessman 
 
• Carl Lindner.......self-made billionaire American businessman 
 
• John Llewellyn.....U.S. Labor leader pioneer; for 40 years until his retirement, president of the United Mine Workers' Union 
 
• Marcus Loew........self-made multimillionaire American businessman; early Hollywood pioneer; founder of the "Loews" movie-theater chain; co-founder of "MGM" studios (elementary school dropout) 
 
• Mary Lyon.........American women's education pioneer; early American teacher; founder of Mount Holyoke College (America's first women's college) 
 
• Sonny Bono...........singer-songwriter-actor; U.S. Congressman (California U.S. Representative) 
 
• Duke Ellington......Oscar-nominated American composer-bandleader; Presidential Medal of Freedom recipient 
 
• Ella Fitzgerald.....singer; Presidential Medal of Freedom recipient 
 
• Aretha Franklin....singer; Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee 
 
• Horace Greeley.... American newspaper publisher-editor; U.S. Congressman; 1872 U.S. Presidential candidate; co-founder of the Republican party in the United States 
 
• Thomas Haffa......self-made double-digit billionaire German media businessman 
 
• J.R. Simplot.......self-made billionaire American agricultural businessman 
 
• Robert Maxwell.....self-made billionaire British publisher 
 
• Rod McKuen.........best-selling American poet (elementary school dropout)
 
Coker
36. 29-10-2009 08:33
 
Exceptions to the rule
Coker, 
 
What percentage of the world's population (Historical in aggregate) do these exceptional individuals represent? Less than .00000000000000... and the zero's can go on for almost an eternity. This would mean that in the world and most especially in Liberia there is almost a 0% chance that someone will reach the heights of success in any intellectually demanding field without some level of education.
 
V.R.
37. 29-10-2009 08:59
 
Serious Problem
The ignorance is astounding! The people don't value education then when the honest educated people are successful or dishonest educated people fool them....they ask why and cry bloody murder!? This is sickening. Its no wonder why we are so backwards.
 
V.R.
38. 29-10-2009 09:22
 
Glorified PhDs
V.R. 
You and Mr. TheLiberianPeople are operating from the antiquated mindset that has kept Liberia backwards: If a man has a Ph.D., irrespective of how he got it or what contribution he has made to the country, just bring out the red carpet. If he has travelled to America, bring out the red carpet. If he is a white man, bring out the red carpet. I think you catch my drift.  
 
Contrary to Mr. TheLiberianPeople's farcical assertion that a person with a Ph.D has reached the top of his profession, such person has only accomplished a personal achievement. We applaud him for it. But until such achievement can be translated into a benefit for the country, we should be under no obligation to adulate him and compensate him exorbitantly merely on the basis of his personal achievement. Incidentally, at what juncture do you propose that we adulate our market women who have tirelessly strove to keep our economy going or are they not worthy as their U.S educated counterparts? 
 
Do you think there were not qualified career journalists at the Information Ministry who could have run that institution? Yet, we opted for a Ph.D in Theology simply because he is a Ph.D from America. You and I had a very lengthy discussion about Bropleh during his confirmation process. I argued at the time that in view of the fact that Bropleh had directly financed the divorce of a woman he was having an affair with and he was directly instrumental in the break-up of that marriage, he was exhibiting a lack of emotional intelligence necessary to head an institution such as the Information Ministry. You, on the other hand, argued that he had a Ph.D so he was qualified. Today Bropleh is being accused of embezzlement. Do you now see the importance of emotional intelligence? 
 
I consider myself an educated person so it is a stretch for you and Mr. TheLiberianPeople to assert that I am denouncing education. In America, unemployed Ph.Ds are a dime a dozen. If America thought, as Liberia does, that Ph.D is the panacea for all ills, all of these Ph.Ds would be gainfully employed. Yet, in Liberia, where we do not have the institutions to award Ph.Ds nor are we giving the average Liberian the opportunity to pursue it, we make it the foremost standard of success. How than are the least privileged among us, and that will be the majority of us, expected to succeed? 
 
What does it say in the President's confidence in our own institutions when she declared that she could not fire corrupt officials in her government because there were no qualified Liberians to replace them? We may wish that all of our institutions were manned by Harvard and MIT graduates, but until we can foster the means for Liberians to become such, this is a pipe dream. Until than, what we have is our current resource pool. Leadership dictates that we utilize this resource pool to its fullest capacity and not denigrate and dismiss it. Again, when our Ph.D finance minister bailed out on us and left for greener pastures, we turned to a local talent who does not have a Ph.D. We turned our own argument for Ph.D on its head in this scenario. It was the right thing to do. We should do more of it. 
 
Local Liberians must be given the opportunity and support to succeed. For US$ 50,000, we could have tapped a local talent to run Maritime Affairs. Instead we opted to pay in excess of half a million U.S. dollar for our foreign-educated compadre to run a glorified motor vehicle registry that has always autonomously produced revenue. Go figure! 
 
My broader point is that society has come up with all kinds of egotistical labels to classified the human being and decide who is more important than the other. If you have more money than you are more worthy than anyone that has less. If you have more education, you are more worthy than anyone that has less. This is the mindset that engenders corruption – everyone is striving for that “more money” so as to be respected. In the final analysis, this is all superficial as with money or no money, exotic education or not, we are all still human beings deserving of the same respect.
 
K. Koiquoe Wilson
39. 29-10-2009 09:43
 
TLP
There is something wrong when you begin to treat the diaspora Liberian differently from the native Liberian. 
The majority of Liberians earn about $70.00 a month so when you pay one Liberian $450,000 a year which is about $37, 000 a month that is a problem. 
Also you seem to be misunderstanding what the contention is so let me lay it out, 
I want Liberians to be educated so lets make that our priority. Lets invest monies into adult education, vocational education, and technical education that way we won't have to hire a Nigerian to run our army, Liberians will own their own banks, and determine their own destinies. 
 
How did Liberia incur three billion dollars of debt? I see you decide to become a humorist but you did not answer the question, but I think we have to learn from past mistakes we have made. 
When a government spends astronomical figures on the superficial, and neglects its citizenry we will always be in debt.
 
Corvah Zazay
40. 29-10-2009 14:28
 
Who is not excited?
Mr. TheLiberianpeople TLP, 
In post number 22, you're saying to someone that he or she is not "excited about successful Liberians". 
 
I don't get the gist of your argument. Be mettlesome and speak your mind, man.  
Are you referencing your man Wilson without mentioning his name? Wilson does not say it's wrong to obtain PHDs. According to him, a lot of accomplished businessmen/politicians have made it to the pinnacle without a PHD. I concur with that! 
 
Most Liberians who have acquired PHDs/MDs or JDs sometimes act as if the world owes them something. In America and I believe in most developed nations of the world, a PHD degree holder shows respect and thinks outside of the box! We have the complete opposite in Liberia. Example, a fellow I knew in a Midwestern city once told his audience "please address me as Dr__"! 
 
By the way, who are you referencing in post 22?
 
F. S. Hney
41. 29-10-2009 19:20
 
That Book people-oooo
This is an interesting topic, brother. In my view, not a single degree holder in Liberia is educated. This is Dr. this and Dr. that, has nothing concrete to show for it. Let's put aside technology, because we would say Liberians don't have the tools and equipments.  
 
I can only agree to the latter to escape market noise. What about textbooks? For example, Dr. of economy could produce Liberian own economy textbooks that subscribe to Liberian economic system. 
 
Dr. of political science could produce textbooks highlighting Liberian political system; and the list goes on and on.  
 
One British philosopher says, "Education is not only the degrees and grades obtained, but the flexibility of the mind to tackle existing situation and solve complex problems." 
 
In general if they can apply the philosophy above, they are educated. That education is obtained by means of ingenuity.  
 
The late Matthew Gbeh, to me was one of Liberian educated men. He produced Liberian made shoes while he did not have formal or so-called western education. 
 
My last word to us Liberians around the world pursuing formal education, our education would be meaningless if, white man continue to aid us with forensic science to solve our murders and other crimes.  
 
 
F. S. Hney go home; K. Koiquoe Wilson go home; Corvah Zazay; V.R. go home; Coker go home; TheLiberianPeople go home; Kaka Kola go home; Liberia go home; KMS go home.  
 
Don't only go home for politics, to do something visible for Liberians to see and be proud of. Kaka Kola and K. Koiquoe Wilson, computer engineers, programmers, analysts, technicians go home to computerize the system in Liberia.  
Thank and God bless you all. I love you.
 
KMS
42. 29-10-2009 20:05
 
REALLY - DR. SAYEH BAILED OUT?????
It is amazing how we Liberians never see the good work of other Liberians - all we know is to criticize others even when criticism is not warranted. 
 
These are the facts about the great work Dr. Sayeh did for Liberia notwithstanding the unwarranted attack on her and the total clueless understanding of what she did for Liberia by Mr. Wilson. 
 
In a whirlwind two-and-a-half years on the job, Ms. Sayeh oversaw a series of reforms that have set her still-fragile country on a stronger path. Among her successes: significant revenue expansion and progress on expenditure management, adherence to a balanced cash-based budget and economic governance reforms. Perhaps most significant: she spearheaded the drive toward clearance of Liberia’s protracted arrears to the IMF, World Bank and the African Development Bank, as well as the restructuring of the nation’s bilateral debt, making it possible for the country to access much needed new external sources of finance—including a PRGF facility from the IMF. 
 
Dr. Sayeh is even in a better position today to greatly help Liberia financial future than when she was Finance Minister - that is totally lost on our learned friend, Mr. Wilson. 
 
TLP
 
TheLiberianPeople
43. 29-10-2009 20:27
 
VR
Hey VR my always thinking along archaic lines friend, Here are some fun facts for you. 
There are 307,814,202 people living in the United States, of these people 2.5 million have Phds and there 800,000 physicians accounting for 1 percent of the population. 
 
EDUCATION IS VERY IMPORTANT so is DETERMINATION, THIRST AND PASSION. 
 
 
James Murdoch Chairman and CEO, Europe and Asia, News Corp. 
 
Age: 36  
Marital status: Married  
Highest Education: High school  
 
Rupert Murdoch's youngest son (and only grown offspring in an executive role at News Corp.) now oversees the company's newspaper, broadcasting, and satellite businesses in Europe and Asia. All this has made James the central international figure in the most global of the media giants -- not to mention the likely successor to take over his father's empire. 
 
Enemy: The BBC and all publicly funded broadcasters, whom Murdoch openly rails against. 
 
Executive quirk: Raised the legs of his desk to let him work and use his computer standing up. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Aditya MittalCFO, ArcelorMittal 
 
Age: 33  
Marital status: Married  
Highest Education: Bachelor's degree  
 
Many an heir has been accused of not paying his dues, but the son of Indian steel tycoon Lakshmi Mittal cut his teeth as an investment banker at Credit Suisse First Boston, then joined his father in 1997--and worked his way up to become the company's well-respected CFO.  
He's led a strategy of growth by acquisition, most notably orchestrating the $38 billion takeover of European rival Arcelor. Now he has to reduce the company's debt by $10 billion. 
 
New duties: In May he joined the board of French luxury goods firm PPR 
 
 
Biz Stone and Evan WilliamsCo-Founders, Twitter 
 
Ages: 35 and 37  
Marital status: Both are married  
Highest Education: High school (for both)  
 
The microblogging service has amassed 21 million monthly unique U.S. visitors in under four years. It became so critical to the dissemination of news during elections in Iran this year that the U.S. government asked Twitter to postpone a scheduled upgrade.  
The only thing missing? A business model. Its founders, Williams and Stone (a third, Jack Dorsey, is still chairman), aren't in a rush. But with a fresh round of capital raised at a $1 billion valuation, their investors might be. 
 
Track record: Williams sold blog service Blogger.com to Google in 2003. 
 
 
 
Tiger WoodsGolfer 
 
Age: 33  
Marital status: Married  
Highest Education: Some college  
 
How powerful is the Tiger Woods brand? Consider that as soon as golf's No. 1 lost his $8-million-a-year deal with ailing GM, AT&T grabbed the empty ad space on his golf bag. Or that Woods' $100 million annual haul from tour wins and endorsements makes him the world's-highest-paid athlete and the first to hit $1 billion in career earnings. Or that revenues at Nike Golf have grown six-fold since signing Woods in 1996.  
Then there's the "Tiger effect": When he was injured last year, viewership dropped by half for a CBS tournament he usually headlines. 
 
 
 
 
Senior Managing Director, Blackstone 
 
Age: 39  
Marital status: Married  
Highest Education: Bachelor's degree  
 
The native Chicagoan went straight to Blackstone from Wharton in 1992 and fast became a star in its real estate division, best known for the $39 billion purchase of Equity Office Properties in 2006.  
Gray immediately flipped hundreds of buildings in the portfolio for $30 billion just before the market crashed -- and put in just 50% of the equity for the properties he retained, making the deal one of the smartest of the era. Gray now has $12 billion to invest, more dry powder than any other firm. 
 
Sports allegiance: "Rabid" Cubs fan is warming to the Yankees 
 
 
Founder, Centaurus Advisors 
 
Age: 35  
Marital status: Married  
Highest Education: Bachelor's degree  
 
The baby-faced billionaire started as a numbers whiz on the natural-gas desk at Enron, emerged from that disaster to start his own fund in 2002 at age 28, and last year turned in the third-best hedge fund performance, after John Paulson and James Simons, who is retiring.  
Since starting his fund, Arnold has returned at least 80% every year -- including reported gains of over 200% in 2007, when he took the short side of Amaranth's disastrous bet on natural gas. 
 
Next big thing: He's spending $100 million to build new natural-gas storage caverns, making him a key middleman in the energy economy. 
 
 
Marc Andreessen 
• Andreessen launches fund (7/6/09) 
• Andreessen's tech outliers (7/23/09) 
Founder, Netscape, Opsware, Ning, Andreessen Horowitz 
 
Age: 38  
Marital status: Married  
Highest Education: Bachelor's degree  
 
The Wisconsin native majored in engineering because he had read engineers had the highest starting income among college graduates. The bet paid off: Five years out of the University of Illinois, Andreessen sold his first startup, Netscape Communications, to AOL for $4.2 billion.  
Since then he's started two companies: software firm OpsWare (sold to HP in 2007 for $1.6 billion) and social-networking platform Ning. In July the eBay, Facebook, and HP board member launched a $300 million venture capital fund. 
 
Stress reliever: "Hard alcohol." 
 
 
Lorenzo SimonelliPresident, CEO, GE Transportation 
 
Age: 36  
Marital status: Single  
Highest Education: Bachelor's degree  
 
GE loves to boast that more than half its revenues come from outside the U.S. So it's no surprise that its youngest division chief ever is from Italy.  
The first non-American to run the company's $5 billion transportation business was personally tapped by CEO Jeff Immelt last July to head the business, based in Erie, Pa. (it makes locomotives and large vehicle engines) -- a role long considered a stepping stone to greater things within GE. 
 
Mentor: Paolo Fresco, former top executive of GE International and chairman of Fiat. 
 
Attention, ladies: He has no spouse or kids -- and a family estate in Tuscany. 
 
 
Tim Armstrong 
• Turning AOL around (7/23/09) 
CEO, AOL 
 
Age: 38  
Marital status: Married  
Highest Education: Bachelor's degree  
 
In 2000, as a Google sales executive charged with persuading companies to advertise on the company's search pages, Armstrong had a brain wave: What if Google contracted with media content companies to sell ads on their platforms too?  
The idea became Google's $6 billion AdSense network and Armstrong's big break, landing him a new job as head of sales in the Americas.  
 
This past April he was named to the top job at AOL, where he's applying his peculiar mix of Internet and publishing experience to transform your mom's digital service provider into a content destination. 
 
Geeky hobby: bird watching. 
 
 
Kevin Plank 
• Under Armour's high-tech shoes (1/26/09) 
• Create a selling product (3/30/09) 
Founder and CEO, Under Armour 
 
Age: 37  
Marital status: Married  
Highest Education: Bachelor's degree  
 
Tired of shapeless athletic wear that kept him damp under his uniform, the former University of Maryland football player came up with a stretchy, snug-fitting alternative. The resulting performance T-shirts cornered what's now a $1 billion performance underwear market.  
Under Armour had revenues of $725 million last year; its logo has become ubiquitous in gyms and high schools and on the street. Now Plank has his eye on Nike and the $5 billion running-shoe market. 
 
Taking one for the team: Last year Plank cut his salary from $500,000 to $26,000 after the company missed its sales goals. 
 
NEXT: Jay-Z and Steve Stoute 
 
 
Jay-Z and Steve StouteRoc Nation, Translation Advertising 
 
Ages: Both are 39  
Marital status: Jay-Z is married, Stoute is single  
 
Jay-Z is co-founder of Roc-A-Fella Records and the Roca-wear clothing brand (sold for $204 million in 2007) and the former president of Def Jam. His latest album is his 11th to hit No. 1, the most by any solo artist ever.  
Stoute, former EVP of Interscope Records, founded marketing firm Translation Consultation & Brand Imaging, which paired Justin Timberlake with McDonald's for "I'm Lovin' It" before he sold it to Interpublic.  
 
The pals now run a division that helps giants like State Farm and Johnson & Johnson reach the urban market. 
 
 
 
Meredith Whitney 
• Whitney builds her own firm (9/15/09) 
• Wall Street's new regulations (9/15/09) 
Founder and CEO, Meredith Whitney Advisory Group 
 
Age: 39  
Marital status: Married  
Highest Education: Bachelor's degree  
 
A prescient call that Citigroup was undercapitalized pushed the financial analyst into the spotlight. But before her words moved markets, she built her reputation on years of tough, accurate calls. Clients know her for warning in 2005 that the rise in subprime borrowers could spark economic woes; for calling Bear Stearns shares worthless at $30; and for predicting early in '09 that financials would rally.  
Her latest call may test her track record: She downgraded Goldman Sachs to neutral. 
 
No hierarchy: Her staff gets to meet everyone who stops by, like John Thain. 
 
 
Pony" Ma HuatengFounder and CEO, Tencent 
 
Age: 38  
Marital status: Married  
Highest Education: Bachelor's degree  
 
Who says you can't make money off a social network? Ma's Internet services empire, Tencent, based in Shenzhen, China, leveraged its massive reach -- it has 450 million active instant-messenger users -- into $1 billion in revenue last year.  
Inspired by early instant-messaging programs, Ma and a childhood friend launched their own service, QQ, in 1999. Once he had a captive audience, he added paid services like gaming and online dating.  
 
Sales increased 78% in the first half of this year, to $788 million; Ma's stake is now worth $3.6 billion. 
 
 
Seth MacFarlaneCreator and Executive Producer, Family Guy 
 
Age: 36  
Marital status: Single  
Highest Education: Bachelor's degree  
 
Meet the highest-paid television writer and producer in history. Family Guy, the raunchy animated parody MacFarlane created a decade ago, is now a $1 billion franchise.  
In year two of a $100 million-plus contract that keeps him at the network until 2012, MacFarlane is also shepherding a spinoff called The Cleveland Show, his third in primetime. And while Fox was waffling over his contract extension last year, he signed a deal with Google to produce online comedy sketches.  
 
This year Family Guy earned an Emmy nod for a comedy series--the first animated show to do so since The Flintstones in 1961. 
 
Hobby: Playing Cole Porter tunes on his piano 
 
 
Max LevchinCo-Founder, Paypal; Founder, Slide 
 
Age: 34  
Marital status: Married  
Highest Education: Bachelor's degree  
 
At 23, Ukranian-born Levchin road-tripped to Palo Alto, where he pitched an investor on his idea for the first online payment system, PayPal.com. When eBay paid $1.5 billion for it in 2007, Levchin banked $34 million.  
His latest venture, Slide.com, has yet to become the next breakthrough, but Levchin's a leading Valley thinker whose early stakes in other companies like Yelp.com are closely watched. 
 
Little-known legacy: Helped created the Gausbeck-Levchin fraud test, the alphanumeric jumble you're asked to type before making a transaction online. 
 
 
Josh JamesFounder and CEO, Omniture 
 
Age: 36  
Marital status: Married  
Highest Education: Some college  
 
James dropped out of Brigham Young University a month shy of graduation to start an Internet company in nearby Orem, Utah. Today his web analytics firm Omniture, which measures real-time Internet traffic and sells that data to blue-chip customers, has more than $300 million in revenue.  
James's stake, currently worth $19 million, is about to become more valuable: Adobe has announced it will acquire the company for $1.8 billion, a 45% premium. 
 
Wheels: Audi R8 (he sold his Porsche 911 to his best childhood friend). 
 
Family: James has five daughters, ages 3 to 12. 
 
 
 
Tony Hsieh 
• Zappos fits with creative types (1/21/09) 
CEO, Zappos.com 
 
Age: 35  
Marital status: Single  
Highest Education: Bachelor's degree  
 
Hsieh ran a pizza business at Harvard and sold his first company, ad network LinkExchange, to Microsoft for $265 million at age 24. He joined online shoe bazaar Zappos as a consultant and investor in 1999; the next year he became CEO.  
He's grown it from $1.6 million in sales to $1 billion, largely by encouraging fierce customer loyalty (Zappos has free, eerily fast shipping both ways). In July, Amazon said it would acquire it for $850 million. 
 
Test of faith: He offers $2,000 to any new recruit to leave the company during training to weed out the half-hearted. 
 
 
 
Danny RimerPartner, Index Ventures 
 
Age: 39  
Marital status: Married  
Highest Education: Bachelor's degree  
 
He lives in London, but the Canadian-born Rimer is one of Silicon Valley's most successful VCs, thanks to a string of home-run exits: He invested in Skype a year before eBay bought it for $2.6 billion; he was an early investor in voice portal TellMe, which sold to Microsoft in 2007 for $800 million.  
Other hits include Internet radio website Last.fm, acquired by CBS for $280 million, and open-source database MYSQL, sold to Sun Microsystems last year for $1 billion. 
 
Next move: He's now focused on cloud computing and e-commerce, with stakes in mobile-payment service Boku and online ticket exchange service Viagogo. 
 
 
 
Rio CaraeffPresident and CEO, Vevo 
 
Age: 34  
Marital status: Single  
Highest Education: Bachelor's degree  
 
Can he save the music business? Caraeff grew Universal's mobile division until it became 45% of the parent's digital revenues, then headed all of digital for the leading label.  
Earlier this year he was tapped to run Vevo, the high-profile partnership between YouTube and record labels Universal and Sony designed to extract profits from music videos on the web (they're hugely popular, it turns out). Now EMI and Warner Music Group are mulling joining the venture, boosting its potential. 
 
Do-gooder: Caraeff spends a week a year volunteering at an animal shelter in Utah. 
 
 
Erin BurnettAnchor, CNBC 
 
Age: 33  
Marital status: Single  
Highest Education: Bachelor's degree  
 
CNBC's feisty "Street Sweetie" is a household name among Wall Street watchers and a rising star at the cable network. During Wall Street's meltdown last fall, ratings for her Street Signs hit a record high as CNBC surged.  
Now she's moving to deliver market news to more than just day traders: She explains the economic crisis on Meet the Press and guest-hosted NBC's Today in June.  
 
Burnett, who started out as an analyst for Goldman Sachs, is staying in cable for now: CNBC has locked her up through 2011. 
 
Power of persuasion: She got her break in TV after writing a "stalker letter" to then-CNN anchor Willow Bay. 
 
 
Charles Best 
• Getting classroom projects funded (8/21/08) 
Founder and CEO, DonorsChoose.org 
 
Age: 34  
Marital status: Married  
Highest Education: Bachelor's degree  
 
Kiva may be bigger, but Best was first: As an underfunded high school social studies teacher in the Bronx in 1999, he cooked up an idea for a website where donors could choose to fund projects posted by teachers.  
DonorsChoose.org has since raised $36 million for 2.2 million students and drawn luminaries like Stephen Colbert to its board. 
 
Regrets: Picking the name Donors-Choose: "It works as a literal indication of how our website works, but it doesn't stick in people's brains." 
 
Missed career: Best took the NYPD entrance exam while a senior at Yale but opted for teaching instead. The NYPD was still holding a spot for him until a few years ago. 
 
 
Wendy ClarkSVP, Integrated Marketing and Communications Capabilities, Coca-Cola 
 
Age: 38  
Marital status: Married  
Highest Education: Bachelor's degree  
 
In the year since Clark was tapped to oversee marketing at the megabrand, she's cut the number of creative agencies from 80 to 40 and pushed for greater collaboration among the heads of advertising, design, interactive, and sports and entertainment marketing.  
Reporting to CMO Joe Tripodi, Clark is in charge of messaging for 500 brands in 200 countries.  
 
It's a big step up from her previous role as head of marketing for AT&T, where she was praised for rebranding the stodgy telecom under the slogan "Your world. Delivered." 
 
First job: She worked for McDonald's as a teenager
 
coker
44. 29-10-2009 20:47
 
AFTER THE HEAVY LIFTING BY DR. SAYEH....
After the heavy lifting of putting a totally nonexistent financial system on the right track by Dr. Sayeh, it is easy to bring in a so-called local talent. 
 
But at the time when our financial system was suffering under billions of dollars of debt with no structure or credibility, this woman used her vast knowledge to put us on the path of sound financial road. With all due respect to so-called local talent - I do not see any local talent with the technical knowledge to pull off what Dr. Sayeh did. 
 
It is just disingenuous of Mr. Wilson who is seeking greener pastures in the US and who has not offer his service to impart some computer knowledge to Liberia will have the audacity to criticize someone who has done more for Liberia in the tune of billions of dollars. It is just incredible. 
 
PS - Mr. Hney, you'll have to follow the various postings to answer your own question I'm not going to babysit you. 
 
TLP
 
TheLiberianPeople
46. 29-10-2009 21:41
 
FACTS ABOUT DR. SAYEH!!!
Mr. Wilson, 
 
Your assertion that my thinking is what has kept Liberia backwards is, at best, laughable. Please submit a rebuttal to the statements and concrete examples I provided. Until you can...you have no valid argument!
 
V.R.
47. 30-10-2009 02:04
 
FACTS ABOUT DR. SAYEH!!!
Hi Mr. Winkelman, I would first like to say I greatly enjoyed your article, and I just decided now I will be reading your article instead of reading the Boston Globe or the New York Times every morning before attending classes. I think it is very authentic that you allow people to have his or her input or whatever you want to call it.  
 
I truly believe that having a degree play a major role in getting a stable job. Degree can also allows one to dream further of future accomplishment, however, there are great amount of wealthy people in the world that do not have a college degree but they still know the value of getting a decent college education. For example, Bill Gates dropped out of college but still managed to put together one of the brilliant ideas that has change the world forever, ironically Gates travels around to world to support education and convince young scholars to take advantage of education. To be frank, I doubt that Gates would hire anyone to run his multi billion dollars company without a college degree. 
 
To get to the main point, college degree is valuable where ever you go. Without a college degree, it is more difficult to achieve your goal or get to the top. Us Liberians need to work hard to get our name back on the continent of Africa and to the rest of the globe. For example, I was in Ghana doing a medical research this past summer, and from watching young Ghanaian my age striving to school and attempting to achieve his or her goal of getting a high school or college degree inspired me. Us Liberian should be more aggressive on getting a degree instead of preaching about running a computer software program without a college degree (Kaka Kolo).. Thank for the article, God bless...
 
Vote for me in 15 yrs to be pr
48. 30-10-2009 02:05
 
FACTS ABOUT DR. SAYEH!!!
Hi Mr. Winkelman, I would first like to say I greatly enjoyed your article, and I just decided now I will be reading your article instead of reading the Boston Globe or the New York Times every morning before attending classes. I think it is very authentic that you allow people to have his or her input or whatever you want to call it.  
 
I truly believe that having a degree play a major role in getting a stable job. Degree can also allows one to dream further of future accomplishment, however, there are great amount of wealthy people in the world that do not have a college degree but they still know the value of getting a decent college education. For example, Bill Gates dropped out of college but still managed to put together one of the brilliant ideas that has change the world forever, ironically Gates travels around to world to support education and convince young scholars to take advantage of education. To be frank, I doubt that Gates would hire anyone to run his multi billion dollars company without a college degree. 
 
To get to the main point, college degree is valuable where ever you go. Without a college degree, it is more difficult to achieve your goal or get to the top. Us Liberians need to work hard to get our name back on the continent of Africa and to the rest of the globe. For example, I was in Ghana doing a medical research this past summer, and from watching young Ghanaian my age striving to school and attempting to achieve his or her goal of getting a high school or college degree inspired me. Us Liberian should be more aggressive on getting a degree instead of preaching about running a computer software program without a college degree (Kaka Kolo).. Thank for the article, God bless...
 
Vote for me in 15 yrs to be pr
49. 30-10-2009 13:10
 
OUTSTANDING LIBERIANS!!!!
Dr. Antionette M. Sayeh, Director of African Department at the IMF, Dr. Toga Mclntosh, Executive Director to the World Bank-representing 22 countries, including Liberia, Mr. Francis Karpeh, Executive Director at the African Development Bank, representing five countries including Liberia. 
 
 
The Africa Chief of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) says significant reform and progress are taking place in Liberia, and the Liberian people must celebrate because their government and country are moving in the right direction.  
 
 
"Congratulate yourselves, try to celebrate, be happy because a lot of good things are happening here," Dr. Antionette M. Sayeh, Director of African Department at the IMF, said yesterday at a press conference in Monrovia.  
 
 
On Tuesday, the former Finance Minister and Dr. Toga Mclntosh, Executive Director to the World Bank-representing 22 countries, including Liberia-and Mr. Francis Karpeh, Executive Director at the African Development Bank, representing five countries including Liberia, attended the country's Economic Management Team's meeting chaired by President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.
 
 
Top minds (Sirleaf, Sayeh, Mclntosh and Karpeh dicussing Liberia's financial future -what not to be proud of as Liberians.  
 
No matter the malaise from the pessimists, there are many outstanding Liberians out there and it is about time we celebrate them instead of the daily unfounded criticism. 
 
TLP
 
TheLiberianPeople
50. 30-10-2009 14:29
 
Go Home?
Sir KMS, 
Your request for me to go home is being studied. I am very glad because you have invited yourself to go home as well. I am very positive that when all of us get to Liberia, we'll make a unique difference in the overall development process of the country. 
 
I was hoping that you'd lead the way, since you're much younger, vibrant and versatile. However, including me in the pitch intrigues me greatly. Rest assured, your proposal is being studied. 
 
Jobs...... 
Going back home does not show the totality of the problem. In fact, going back home is the best that an African could do after he/she has studied and stayed here (particularly me) for a very long time. The nagging question becomes: "Where are the jobs and how does one re-settle in one's country with a breed of American-born children"?  
 
I would love to go home, but it's not an easy decision to make. On the whole, your invition is well-received. Maybe one of these days, I'll just pack my rags and head for the tropics! How's that for an answer? 
 
Later.
 
F. S. Hney


 

Quotable Quote!

“Start by doing what's necessary; then do what's possible; and suddenly you are doing the impossible.”  ~ St. Francis of Assisi

Subscribe

Enter your email and click on subscribe to receive LiberianForum updates via email!

Most Recent Comments

Ellen Is Not a Saint
Contemporary Writer
True Patriot, A contemporary writer is a writer who adapts ...
03/09/10 00:22 More...

Ellen Is Not a Saint
Elen must win
I don't think she is a Saint or should be compared to one. W...
02/09/10 23:33 More...

Ellen Is Not a Saint
The voices will never be mutted.
Konneh, Here they go again on this very forum.There are ...
02/09/10 20:49 More...

Ellen Is Not a Saint
Great saint.
Ellen is a saint because she is the mother of the civil/powe...
02/09/10 17:05 More...

From a National Icon, to a Political Bastard
NPP NECONPU
I know if Taylor was in Liberia the merger of NPP with CDC w...
02/09/10 15:53 More...

Ellen Is Not a Saint
Ellen shouldn't be a saint......
Ellen is not a saint and shouldn't be one in the literal sen...
02/09/10 13:37 More...

Group supports recommendation to increase civil servants salaries
what pisses me off is that the senate and representataives a...
02/09/10 10:54 More...

Ellen Is Not a Saint
Good Points
If the worse thing that can be said about the president base...
02/09/10 10:33 More...

Ellen Is Not a Saint
Freedom of expression is not credited to Ellen, rahter it ca...
02/09/10 09:39 More...

A Rebuttal to: “Charles Taylor: A Man Betrayed”
A Little Education for the So-calledConc
So-Called Concerned Liberian, For you to say Femi Fani Kayo...
02/09/10 08:55 More...

Put together by ImaDesigns! © LiberianForum.Com 2003-2010