Travel Destinations: Greater Accra and Gotland

I have two homes. One in Ghana and one in Sweden. Having two homes is normal to me, it is my life.

In Ghana my life centers around the Greater Accra area: the capital Accra, my hometown Tema and my workplace roughly an hour north east of Accra. In Sweden, I hail from the island of Gotland, more particularly the village Brissund and then the cosmopolitan city of Malmo in the very south thanks to my siblings who moved there.

This week, I stumbled across tourist information of my two homes provinces and WOW! they look great! I can’t believe how lucky I am to share my time between these two places…

1. Ghana: Greater Accra (as described by Virgin Atlantic)

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2. Sweden: Gotland (as described by the campaign GotlandJordenRunt)Screen Shot 2013-04-11 at 1.55.13 PM

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

So when are you coming to visit?

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Two books on my List: Ghana Must Go and Americanah

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I always come back to reading. Recently most often on a Kindle as I adore new fiction and with a Kindle get my fix in seconds after pushing the button! Buy! (I also love that I get a sample of every book, by the first couple of pages you just know, you know?) This month, I plan to devour these two books.

1. Ghana Must Go by Tayie Selasi

This book has been very hyped, for instance by the Economist, suggesting

“the brouhaha is well deserved. Ms Selasi has an eye for the perfect detail: a baby’s toenails “like dewdrops”, a woman sleeps “like a cocoyam. A thing without senses…unplugged from the world.” As a writer she has a keen sense of the baggage of childhood pain and an unforgettable voice on the page. Miss out on “Ghana Must Go” and you will miss one of the best new novels of the season.”

I like the clever title, the fact that it discusses Ghana in a literary way and the fact that a Ghanaian novelist is hyped! Its exciting. See also, or hear, rather Penguin’s Debut Author Program with an interview with the author. She was also on BBC this morning…Did I say hyped?

2. Americanah by Chimamanda Ngozie Adichie

Well, for this book, there has been much less hype than I would have expected. But then again, I am a huge lover of Ngozi Adichie’s literature and have read all her books, hoped to meet her and used some of her novels for teaching, so I might be biased. This book, she promises in a Guardian interview is a “unapologetically old-fashioned love story”. I simply can’t wait!

What books are on your list?

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April Fool

Since a week, I do not have access to Internet from home. Few things are more painful for a blogger and Twitter add…I mean, user. I have written all these marvelous blog posts in my mind, but when the working day is over and it is time to type and upload them, the ADSL light is having a disco instead of indicating the steady supply of WORLD in my home.

The customer service person for my internet service provider suggested I turn to my back up provider. Solid advice.

But when that also fails? And your back up ISP hangs up on your call to customer service after three minutes…every time you call?

Then it is time to accept the April Fool badge and go to bed early. 

 

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10 Years Later, Five Years Wiser

On the eve of an October night back in 2002, I met a young man in a student pub. We locked eyes, danced and changed phone numbers. 10 years later, he is my best friend, the father of my child and the one person on earth who annoys me the most!

Anyways, you are now thinking, why is Kajsa HA wasting my time with this today? Well, today is the day we have been married for five years. We were married in Ghana in 2008, watched the Perfect Picture in 2009, went to a Kojo Antwi concert in 2010, had our daughter in 2011 (with no connection to the aforementioned concert!) and spent most of 2012 worrying about accomodation.  It has not always been easy (see “annoys” above), but for better and worse, we are a team.

Kweku, I want to thank you for challenging and inspiring me to be a nicer and wiser person. 

Kajsa and Kweku at 10

 

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#BlogCamp13: Still Overwhelmed

BlogCamp 13 collageSaturday 23 March 2013, Ghana’s second blogcamp or conference for bloggers took place. In the evening Ghana’s forst Social MEdia awards were held at the same venue. It was amazing and two days later, I am still tired and slightly overwhelmed.

I will not tell you about everything that happened (Kinna did that already very well), neither will I talk about my trip to the venue (far less interesting than Kofi Larbi’s), but just offer some thoughts – as one of the cofounders of BloggingGhana – the organizing body behind the event:

1. Do we really have 400 people plus in Ghana interested in blogging to the point they spend a whole day, and transport costs, learning more? Amazing!

2. BloggingGhana has been about friendships since the very beginning. I have made some of my most important friendships in this group and what made me happy on Saturday was that new friends seemed to be all around. Many people also met their Twitter or Blog friends in person for the first time. I had some experiences like that as well! Kinna wrote:

I wasn’t privy to any such conversation, but I’m sure there were all manners of hooking up going on! Lots of smiling, lots of hugs, some shade and a world of happiness!

That was indeed the feeling!

3. I wasn’t expecting feeling moved by that the US ambassador came by, but his speech contextualized BloggingGhana in ways I haven’t fully before realized. Hearing things like this constituted an aha-moment for me (click on link above for the whole speech):

We applaud Blogging Ghana for its efforts to encourage hundreds of Ghanaians to express themselves on a broad array of topics affecting daily life. …We support events such as this because we know that honing communication and information technology skills will directly be transferable to the expansion of business opportunities between the U.S. and Ghana, one of our highest priorities.  We agree with the visionaries who founded Blogging Ghana:  In the next five years more and more people are going to find employment utilizing their social media expertise.

4. The glamour of the Social Media awards were also surprising (I should have changed my clothes!) and can be credited to aforementioned diplomat, our own Nana Darkoa of Adventures from winning the Best Blog category and the organizers of the award, Fred and Golda for their attention to detail, for instance to the beautiful physical awards! (bottom left in the collage above)

5. We have already started to plan #BlogCamp14! We started around lunch time on Saturday! It will be better, bigger and more intense. We will also think of a way of making the event more sustainable, likely by roping in some of the attendees as contributing members of our organization. Watch out!

Trust me, I have so much more to say about this day and all the people I met/highfived/laughed with/gave my contacts to/directed to the right session, but talking to so many people, both in mics and face to face is tiring. I still feel exhausted. Thankful. Overwhelmed.

And Inspired.

 

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Blogs I Read: AntiRhytm

There is a blogger that quite stands out from all the rest in the Ghanaian blogosphere in two ways, tirelessly he posts like clockwork Monday through Friday (although a lil’bit less recently) and the subject matter is always snapshots of Ghanaian life carefully crafted in words. as you have already guessed, I love this blog!

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AntiRhytm

Ghanaian poetry the way you have never seen it before, in seemingly impressionist style, he sketches the street or office life in Accra.

The blogger Nana Yaw Asiedu is also the originator of (now deleted) The Flirt Files, poetry blog about romantic office situations(!) and Makola Law, a helpline for legal questions in blog format.

This blogpost is part of a series of  Blogs I Read.

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How to Carry a Baby Ghana Style: Video

I have written on this topic before, here for YouTube tips and on when I met a Ghanaian mother who carried her baby like a European, in front, but I have fogotten to post the video I made myself about a year ago with my daughter and nanny playing the lead roles.

Of course my clip is better edited, music included, and explains this West African wisdom better than all competitors out there on the web, or what say you?

 

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Wednesday in Ghana

6.01 I wake up, shower and get dressed.

6.20 The lights go off, but I am ok because I had already prepared for work! I make coffee on the gas stove (only crazy folks rely on electricity for cooking!)

7.00 I leave with my coffee cup and some sandwiches in my car which I will eat in the traffic jam I am foreseeing closer to Accra.

8.04 I get stopped at a police barrier to show my licence. As the policeman is holding it, he tells me that he once wanted to marry a white lady. Any white lady – blonde, brown hair, even red! he says and glances above my eyes. Now he is married to a Ghanaian. He asks when I will be back before he waves me off.

8.15 I fill my car with petrol at the regular gas station and is greeted with a smile, “Hi Mrs Adu!”

8.27 I pick up a nurse who is going in the same direction on the gravel road that is the last leg of my trip. She proceeds to tell me her life story.

8.34 I drop the nurse off  (“God bless you!” she says as she steps out onto the dusty road) and arrive at work (yes, my commute is 1,5 hours)

9.25 I still haven’t gotten Internet to work at work and I open the window as the AC also does not work. Light off?

10.00 I go to my first class of the day. We talk about the election case currently in the Supreme Court (can there be any winners?) and discuss President Mahama’s autobiography and we conclude we can learn much from history.

11.45 I have office hours and console some students who did not do well in their recent exam. I also have a short meeting with my new coworker.

12.45 I go for lunch. I have fried rice, chicken and yam balls. The side order of avocado is today twice as expensive as yesterday.

13.30 My next class. ACs still not working, I wipe my forehead many times as a panel presentation and discussions proceed. A wild debate breaks out on weather or not Achimota school is an “elite” school.

16.00 The secondary school girl I sponsor has still not come. She said she’d come an hour ago. I leave some money with the receptionist and take off.

16.25 I stop on the roadside to buy fruits. I buy a bag of sun warm mangoes and a bag of avocados for 10 GHC (5 USD)

17.40 I come home, but immediately leave again to buy “sachet water”, 500ml drinking water in plastic bags packed in bags of 30. I buy four packs at 1.50 GHC each (75 US cents).

17.45 I return a call to a colleague, she is standing there with  a school girl who is looking for me…?

18.00 Electricity is still not back.

18.20 Electricity comes back! I make dinner and eat.

19.00 I play with my daughter and call my parents in Sweden on Skype. We discuss the upcoming summer holiday.

20.30 After having tried to write this blog post two times, my daughter finally is tired enough to let me.

20.52 I watch the latest episode of Girls with our nanny.

21.20 I go to bed. I might read a few minutes before I fall a sleep.

This is a very ordinary day for me. It has electricity, water and infrastructure challenges, but also human warmth (sometimes a tad too much for my taste), good food and surprises. Always surprises.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Photos from Ashesi Career Fair 2013

Today the Ashesi career fair took place. It was a big event with more than 60 employers visiting the campus. There were roll ups and folders and chocolates and CVs and students in business wear and public announcements and handshakes and business cards and elevator pitches and cameras and even Selma was there! 

I think what impresses me most with this event is how involved our students are, all 500 of them. This is not just for the soon-to-be-graduates, but freshmen volunteer as hosts for the visitors, students MC the event, students learn about where the might want to go in the future or where they can get an internship.

That engagement and apparent student ownership of the event makes me think it was a useful day for all!

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This Week: Ashesi Career Fair

A brand new week is ahead, and this is an especially exciting one with  Ashesi University College’s career fair  and  BlogCamp13 taking place.

The career fair is the most visible event where our students to meet corporate Ghana (and in some cases, the world) and vice versa, but I think it is just the tip of the iceberg of what Ashesi does in way of making our graduates employable.

The Career Services with competent Ophelia Sam at the helm invites employers to interact with the university directly, to accept vacation interns, to talk to our students. Every contact is followed up through visits, surveys or meetings. The feedback Ashesi gets from employers on what they are looking for is fed into the plans for the university and communicated to us lecturers.

Maybe that is one of the reasons to why I will be attending the fair on Tuesday, it matters to me too! Report to follow.

Nationally, there is a big debate on how graduates are not being employed, even after years of university education, See Joseph Quaye Amoo’s text here or Bayor Cephas Kanyiri’s analysis. The latter talks about “a very big gap between academia and industry” as a main cause for the unemployment of graduates.

What is the role of active career services in solving this problem?

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Blogs I Read: Book Blogs

I love book blogs. For someone who loves reading they are icing on the cake in the best possible way.  They are at times like substitute book clubs, discussing every possible aspect of a piece of literature and at other times, like beautiful notice boards, helping you navigate the depths of information out there.

In Ghana there are two book blogs to “write home” about.

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1. Accra Books and Things – All Ghanaian literary releases, events and personalities get featured on this blog which also covers library issues and other things you did not know you were interested in!

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2. Kinna reads

Kinna reads and writes about her readings. She has also introduced me to high tech reading lists, challenges and a host of international, especially African, book blogs.

I am proud to say that both originators are friends of mine and active members of BloggingGhana. Below I caught them at a book event last year, Kinna to the left, Nina slightly further away from the camera.

Ghana book bloggers Kinna and Nina

 

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Grading Papers, Marking Exams: My Strategy

It is mid-semester break, that is: it a break for students and rather a surge of work for lecturers! Within one short week, all manuscripts have to be graded! So how do I do it?

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1. Prepare, Prepare, Prepare

A well thought-out exam with carefully crafted questions and instructions makes for an easier read. Times 50, 60 or 130.

2. Time your progress

If you have three working days, 6 hours effective time each day – that is 18 hours. Divide that in the number of papers you have to grade and try to meet the target.

3. Bribe yourself

Coffee works for me. The occasional dinner with a friend if I have done my pensum.

4. Take stats

How many of your students started with question 3? How many failed question 5? Misspelled a keyword? Forget to paragraph answers? Take note and create statistics that you can share with the students for a better understanding of their understanding of the course.

5. Remember the individual

I find this makes the reading more interesting. Is this particular student “getting it”? Is this answer “alternative” rather than “wrong”?

Oh, now off to dinner! 

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