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In topography and climate Nigeria is typical of West Africa with its humid heat and mangrove swamps along the coastline which extends for 700 miles. The interior of Nigeria consists principally of tall, tropical forest. In the extreme North the climate is hot and dry, and the vegetation is that which identifies it with the Sahara Desert which it borders. The nights in the northern portion of Nigeria often become quite cool, requiring blankets for comfortable sleeping.
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*From the Impact of the African Social Revolution on the Development of Education. A research project at Oxford University, England, 1953-54, and still in progress. This paper is drawn from Chapter IV of the larger study and is limited to a phase of the work in the Gold Coast only. ing the way, although beset by urgent demands from the African masses for education, passionate and insistent demands on a scale that find no counterpart in the modern world.1 The Gold Coast rush for education may...
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In the above Table paternal grandparents and maternal grandparents have been combined as the patterns are very similar. Out of 476 pairs of granflparents for whom information was available, 329 or nearly 70 per cent werf totally illiterate; the standard of literacy was purposely kept very low, so that anybody who had attended school at all, for however short a period, was reckoned literate. By the same standard about s5 per cent of the parents (i.e. both parents) were illiterate. It is...
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HE jumping-off point for the nursing education conference sponsored by the World Health Organization Regional Office for Africa, last September 28-October 7, in Kampala, Uganda, was a comparative survey of the various types of preparation in nursing in 15 countries of equatorial Africa. The survey had been made during 1953 by WHO Nursing Consultant Jane McLarty and the report was supplemented by statements from the representatives at the conference of five countries that had not been...
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International Review of MissionVolume 43, Issue 3 p. 294-300 THE TRAINING OF CHRISTIAN MINISTERS IN NON-BRITISH AFRICA M. SEARLE BATES Ph.D., M. SEARLE BATES Ph.D.Search for more papers by this author M. SEARLE BATES Ph.D., M. SEARLE BATES Ph.D.Search for more papers by this author First published: July 1954 https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1758-6631.1954.tb03791.xRead the full textAboutPDF ToolsRequest permissionExport citationAdd to favoritesTrack citation ShareShare Give accessShare full text...
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