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‘To be resilient and constantly learn’ – a core transition strategy amidst difficulties!

As a tradition of our UNESCO Chair Gulu summer schools, we create conversational spaces for our students, lecturers and volunteers. We often start with individual reflections to enable everyone to make a connection to the theme. Using participatory learning tools such as paired interviews and think-write-share, we prompt participants to build relationships with each other in a meaningful way. This warms up and fires up participants to build social relationships. They forge human links which are so important not only for the rest of the summer school duration but also future collaborations. Of Course we desire to have communities of like-minded participants to grow voluntarily to facilitate continuity of learning relationships and collaborations.

Our summer school introductory sessions are always full of fun but are also intentionally designed for participants to make them think deeply about the theme. They begin to develop their own learning agendas; and hope is alway for each of them to develop learning journals to keep in their learning trajectory during and after the summer school. The July 2024 Summer School under the theme “finding your way into the education-work transition: mental resilience and social entrepreneurship” began on 16 Jul at Gulu University main Library. We presented the following three prompters to trigger the minds of the participants:

  • Reflect on individual life journey as a student from compulsory education to vocational or university education to identify transition enablers, barrier and strategies
  • Reflect on individual life journey as a graduate from vocational or university education to the world of work to transition enablers, barriers and strategies
  • Reflect on individual life journey as an academic or professional moving upward or stagnating to identify transition enablers, barriers and strategies
  • Think about all the above in a context where work, trade and business environments are either conductive or constrained.

These ignited everyone to reflect on the enablers, barriers and strategies in their life journeys as students, graduates and practising professionals. The family and community support system was identified as a real transition enabler by most of the summer school participants. The ‘individual’ as an enabler of own transition was vivid in the opinion of many participants. For instance, P*4 remarked that “support systems of family, friends and social networks; and individual effort” is key.

The participants reflected on real obstacles and barriers in their transitions. Social status was recognised as the real influence in the individual journeys within the education, work and  entrepreneurship fields. There was a strong remark which implied that  “how you are raised when (what time) and where in the world” has the greatest influence on one’s transition. However, the faith in the ‘individual’ as the core asset to navigate barriers and turn enablers into transition resources was vivid in the reflections of most participants. 

Reflecting on their ‘navigation strategies, the summer school participants offered some advice to those facing difficult transitions: According to p6, “locus of control; and self efficacy” is critical. P4 thinks that “Keeping awake looking at all the possibilities” is so crucial in opening new ways of dealing with transition difficulties. P5 has the view that getting unstuck you need to “talk with others about your idea and ask for ideas and advice; and be a good listener” (p5). “Be creative within your limits” is what p6 thinks to be among the key ways of taking advantage of what is within ‘your circle of influence’. This connects with p7’s advice to “Use available resources [so as] to make a difference, [and that] bigger things are built from scratch”. P8’s advice is a set of interrelated strategies “One thing a day gets you closer to your goals, keep being creative in any way you can, find yourself, do what you love, believe in yourself, there is space for you out there, there is space for everyone”. 

All in all,  the insights of p2 who posited that “… to be resilient, and constantly learn” constitutes a  core transition enabler and strategy strengthens the thesis that links ‘agency, resilience and lifelong learning’.  I often argue that to ‘constantly learn’ is a personal responsibility that is realisable through individual and intentional decision making. The decision making phenomena is not free from the routines of the troubles, challenges, obstacles and setbacks at home, work and in all the other domains of our lives. But the resilience to bounce back on one’s education or work trajectory through generating and using new knowledge, skills and attributes  is key.

I must say it is alway a rewarding experience to be part of our UNESCO Chair Gulu Summer Schools. The UNESCO Chair on Lifelong Learning, Youth and Work is coordinated by the University of Groningen and Gulu University. The Chair has so far organised six summer schools; two held in the Netherlands.  This sixth edition brought together very interesting young talents as well as experienced middle and senior professionals from the Netherlands, United Kingdom, China, Greece, Japan, Lithuania, Italy and Uganda.  The power of co-creating learning experiences no matter the age, social status or levels of academic and professional backgrounds is always vivid. 

P* is short for ‘participant’

Youth & societal perceptions

Conceptualizing youth as resource, social problem!

Youth Learning Festival 2018 (YLF5) Scholars

The implications of conceptualizing youth as resource or social problem can be too hard to comprehend in the daily routine of parents, teachers and other social actors as they guide and support young people. Yesterday, the 27 September 2019 at the fellowship of Rotary Groningen Oost, I had a very rewarding exchange on the same with a club of distinguished Dutch men and women. We undertook an impromptu perception check on the common understandings of youth. We also reflected on the common phenomenon of youth resistance. We debated a little about the manifestations of the perceptions in the two contexts – what society in Uganda and the Netherlands, think. The slides below guided our conversation. What do you think about this conversation?

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Career for life??? May be is just a myth!

Career for life??? May be is just a myth!

Do you agree that a career is a ‘lifelong process of work-related activities’ (Hall, 2002)? Are you already thinking about your work-related activities since you graduated? Can you cluster them under a single discipline, profession or labour market sector? ‘Senior’ participants at the UNESCO Chair Gulu #SummerSchool24 offered some food for thought to their ‘junior’ counterparts. Read on!

It was part of the several participatory workshops during the the UNESCO Chair Gulu Summer School at Gulu University in July 2024. I conducted two separate sessions for senior and young participants for them to reflect about their career trajectories. I started with the senior participants, and asked each one of them to say anything about their lived experiences in relation to career development.

Listening to the senior participants, it became clear to me “career talk” is as always not only a little confusing but also controversial. None of the individuals could clearly articulate that they had come through a clear path of childhood dream careers to their present work. Moreover majority of them were already years into their work lives. One of them, a senior academic in education and social change research trajectory, said that just afters months of of graduating as an engineer she switched to psychology.

After cordially chatting through their several very compelling and enriching life stories of senior and middle level career professions, I requested each one of them to gift their young participants. Here are some of the top five advices:

You don’t have to have a career path already figured out by a particular age; Keep exploring your passion (s) and you will never know which one will end up as your career (p1)
Verbalise your dream even if they will not come true, it will help you to know who you are (p2)
Be flexible about your career, understanding that it is not a one day discovery but every day (p3)
Career is a journey, many factors involve in directions along the path, open and close possibilities. But learn to listen to your internal voice. Follow it. Learn to bring yourself to whatever you do (p4)

When the young participants entered the participation space, I prompted them to write the key things that come to their mind when they think about ‘career’. Read what they think:

Career is about waking up everyday, choosing a path to follow, earning and spending, connect with fellows in the field’ (p7)
Career refers to my point of interest that leads me to my dream (p8)
An activity, occupation for a significant period of time to fulfil a person’s desire, interest and growth (p9)
Career is connected to passions, dreams, hobbies, interests, vision (individual/shared), emotions / feelings (p11)

I am not sure what could be your take away from this learning encounter! But I want to imagine that you should be imagining what really a career is. May be you are wondering whether you have ever given your peers, friends, colleagues or students the right career advise.

As you continue to reflect deeply and widely about how complex or easy it is or it has been for your career development and advancement, let me make one argument. I argue that the idea of supporting or accompany people in their career development is more complex today than it were decades ago be it in developed economies or poor countries in the global south. Current and future education-work transition uncertainties and insecurities particularly in Uganda and similar contexts requires a re-imagination of career support and guidance.

P* is short for ‘participant’


*Robert Jjuuko, PhD | robert@adultslearnuganda.org | LinkedIn Robert Jjuuko | Research Gate Robert Jjuuko | ORCID https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1628-7080

Capital theory, mental resilience and agency: The desired intersection in complex education work contexts!

I think, “Finding Your Way in the Education-Work Transition: Mental Resilience and Social Entrepreneurship” as a theme is a perfect call to focus on the individual journeys young people make in the complex social context where access to lifelong learning, formal jobs and business opportunities are constrained. May I trigger a conversation in your mind about the link between the three concepts ‘capitals, mental resilience and agency’; and how they are or should unfold in your transition? Let me do that under three segments.

First, I would like to challenge you to reflect on who you are in this world? What influence do you have on your own life? What difficulties do you encounter to live a life of your own terms yesterday, today and tomorrow? How do you deal with the everyday difficulties as well as opportunities in your quest to successfully transition within the education and labour market dynamics?  Or you could be a blessed actor with all the enablers of a good life in your midst thus a satisfied transitioning actor?  But if you are a hustler like me, can I ask you what compels your imagination and actions to keep going despite the numerous historical, socio-cultural and political impediments?

Second, I invite you to imagine a little about my own personal life. Let me tell you that I am a product of a non-linear education-work transition. I have seen how the complex mix of personal and social factors have impacted my life and who I am today and yesterday. I visualise the interwoven impact of several circumstances. Certainly, my family background competes for the top position.  My incomplete schooling history is a real factor.  My values and personal resources including skills and competences are strong in the mix.  My social relationship with relatives, friends and colleagues cannot be excluded in the mix.  Coincidentally my work for more than 15 years is partly related to accompanying young people in their education-work transitions. Majority of the participants in my practical and research interventions do have demographic identities and biographies with poor family and social backgrounds just like me. Some are actually zigzagging between education and work.

Before I proceed to the third segment of my conversation, can I ask you a question? In your experience as a student, graduate or even a lecturer; have you ever encountered a moment of transition as a ‘monster’?  I mean you are working but it is not like work. And simultaneously you are studying or upgrading your qualifications to eventually get good work opportunities but it is like the link between the two is a myth. Your realise that education is not the only transition passport to work – the reality is a haunting one. You are aware that other credentials such as ‘who are your parents orwhich ethnic grouping do you belong to’ actually matter most! 

I am not sure what you think now. But before I hear you, permit me to share with you a little bit of my empirical evidence regarding a group of young people’s agency and resilience amidst the ‘transition monster’. In my action research-based PhD on youth transition at a higher vocational training institution in Uganda, I got a privilege to hear stories of how young people dream and yearn to live a good life as Agricultural professionals. I heard stories of young people’s resilience and relentless determination to overturn the history of poverty in their families through the good use of their dream agricultural qualifications. Aware of the existing labour market barriers and inequalities, many students and graduates were on a trajectory to nurture and expand important social relationships with individuals in positions of power and influence. Those who suffered at the hands of prospective employers, especially at the stage of applying for jobs, never exhibited any resignation signals.  For instance, an animal science graduate said:

I started on the search for jobs from 2013-2014, I would read adverts from newspapers and apply, I would be called whenever I applied, but there were issues that always challenged. There was a time I went for an interview and while on the panel, the executive director mentioned that they could employ me. But later I didn’t get the job. There was [another] time I went for an interview and I was interviewed at 11:43 am [in the morning] at some farm in Kampiringisa in Mpigi. They needed an extension worker but I was interviewed from the Ministry of Agriculture. I could answer questions to panellists who were sleeping/dosing. From that point I hate searching for jobs because that time I reached home in Wobulenzi at around 01:30 Am [after midnight]. I also found it hard with corrupt actions in various offices. (Jjuuko, 2021, p106)

I want to imagine that you if have never experienced such dehumanisation, your friend, colleague or community member has ever. I also remember related cases of failed enterprises created in the course of young people’s transition from high school to vocational and higher education. But fresh in my mind are the voices that seemed to declare: ‘no, I will move on’.   The crave for self-determination, volition and autonomy despite the social and institutional barriers to successful transition was louder.  Do you find a connection between my story and the stories of the participants in my PhD research? I think the time is now for me to turn to my third and last segment.  This segment is about who we are yesterday, today and tomorrow in the context of what we as individual social actors can and cannot do to shape our lives in the midst of societal forces, interests and systems.  It is also about what resources (economic, social, cultural) that we command or able, willing and prepared to seize.  Indeed, it is also about the conversion of either one, all or a combination of these capitals into a ‘resourceful package’ to drive our transition trajectories.

Pierre Bourdieu posits that these resources are enablers and can help social actors to withstand domination and marginalisation to claim or reclaim a social status. These ‘capitals’ and the related social reproduction theory (SRT) is the subject of our sessions today and possibly tomorrow morning. As observed by Darmody and others, ‘Bourdieu’s theories facilitate our understanding of the interplay between social capital and other forms of capital, which is crucial to understanding the process of social reproduction’ (Darmody, Robson & Mcmahon, 2012, p22). I propose that you make a choice of how the knowledge of ‘capitals’ can inform your multiple identities (transitions) as a student, graduate, entrepreneur, parent or a university professor. I trust that the sessions will harness our critical awareness of the place of these capitals (absent, present, latent or substantial) in our constant struggle to create and determine a life that we have reason to value.  

Some readings

Bourdieu, P. (1986). Forms of Capital. In J. Richardson (Ed.), Handbook of Theory and Research for the Sociology of Education (pp. 241-258). Greenwood Press.

Jjuuko, R. (2021). Youth Transition, Agricultural Education and Employment in Uganda: PhD Thesis. University of Groningen. 10.33612/diss.192191164

Johnstonbaugh, M. (2018). Conquering with capital: social, cultural, and economic capital’s role in combating socioeconomic disadvantage and contributing to educational attainment. Journal of Youth Studies, 21(5), 590-606.

Roberts, S., & Li, Z. (2017). Capital limits: social class, motivations for term-time job searching and the consequences of joblessness among UK university students. Journal of Youth Studies, 20(6), 732–749.

Darmody, M., Robson, K., & Mcmahon, L. (2012). Young people and social capital: transition from primary schools to lower secondary level in Ireland. Irish Journal of Sociology, 20, 19-38.

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*Robert Jjuuko, PhD is a Ugandan Educationist, Researcher and Development Consultant | robert@adultslearnuganda.org | LinkedIn Robert Jjuuko |Twitter RJjuuko1 | Research Gate Robert Jjuuko | ORCID https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1628-7080

The Community of Practice Love at Njeru, Uganda

ICT Community of Practice Getting into the ICT Social Innovation Cycle

Community of practice (CoP) is arguably one of the dearest concepts or theories for scholars and practitioners who love ‘practical knowledge’ co-creation through practice. Communities of practice are groups of individuals with a common interest that band together, relating and interacting regularly, to learn from each other and to build their capabilities for better performance in their different life domains as as workers, community members, and family heads. In their monumental contribution to the growth and expansion of CoP, Wenger and others (Lave and Wenger, 1991; Wenger, 2004) offer a powerful credence to the social theory of learning. They offer a compelling impetus to participation as a core of democratic production and utilisation of knowledge by the social actors who constantly aim to shape their life and work realities.

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The 2021 Education Review Commission Should Redeem Uganda’s Education!

Ugandans will soon see another round of policy recommendations by another Education Policy Review Commission (EPRC) appointed in 2021, headed by Hon Amanya Mushega one of the country’s education architects’ in the 1990s when the monumental Government White Paper on Education (GWE) unleashed fundamental ideals and principles to democratise education in all its forms. Many individuals and organisations should have submitted pertinent views to the EPRC by close of the deadline on 28 Feb 2022, and I trust that those views and opinions will receive due consideration. I implore the Commission to redeem Uganda’s education. Make bold recommendations to democratise and broaden the vision of education. I request the Commission not to repeat the history of shrinking our education to ‘schooling’. The lessons from the processes and outcomes of your predecessor commissions (eg. Phelps Stokes Commission, Castle Education Commission and Prof Senteza Education Policy Review Commission) should haunt you enough to do a job that befits the demands and aspirations of 21st century Ugandans and their children’s children.

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Living a DREAM and learning to LEARN

Living a DREAM and learning to LEARN: Perspectives from the 7th INTALL Winter School

Author with colleagues in the same comparative group

Dreams! Everybody has them, I am not talking about the ‘sensations that occur in our mind during sleep,’ I am talking about aspirations, the ambitions that we cherish when we are growing as people and as career developers.

Well, I have been living my dreams – from studying abroad to traveling around the world. But, perhaps the most exciting of the dreams I have so far lived was being part of the 7th INTALL Winter School 2020 at the University of Würzburg in Germany at the beginning of February. For two weeks, I did not only live my dream, a dream I missed in 2017, but have also acquired lots of experience that I believe will enhance my career and personal life.

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Lifelong Learning, Youth and Work

Lifelong learning; my learning journey with UNESCO Chair on Lifelong Learning, Youth, and Work, Gulu University.

Ever since I decided to go back to school after a ‘forced’ break for 3 years, I have become an ardent fun of learning. Some of my colleagues have given me titles to this effect (not mentioning them here). Truth is, we should embrace learning all the time because the world we live in is changing now and then. So, what is the purpose of this blog post? Whereas I have a lot to share about my learning experiences, in this article, I want to narrate my journey with UNESCO Chair.

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What makes a good mentor

Many of us must have used the word mentor at some point in our life. While growing up, I always heard questions like who is your mentor?  And the quickest answer would be either my dad, mam, pastor, or a favorite teacher.

Over the years, mentorship has found a place in many disciplines. Today, many organizations are rooting for mentorship programs as a way of building capacities for those developing their careers. Universities are assigning continuing students to freshers as their mentors, but are they mentoring? Many organizations assign new employees to senior staff for mentoring, but is it what they do? My first job as a cook, I was attached to an experienced cook to be my mentor, but was he? My point is that many have used the word ‘mentor’ even when they are doing something different.

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ICTSkills4YouthWork Identity Research

Addressing the predicament of the poor in Uganda’s education system

YLF5 Scholars

In the second half of next year 2020, we[1] formally launch our passion-driven and knowledge generating work-based ICT training initiative for youth with incomplete schooling in Uganda. During the initial two-year phase, the ICT Skills4Life-Work Identity initiative, will engage 10 pioneer youth through a learning community approach to develop and nurture a work-related training model. The learning community is being co-created by IT professionals, educationists, employers, IT entrepreneurs and parents/guardians in and around Njeru and Jinja

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