At a time when many institutions of higher learning are
grappling with mistrust, disconnect and strained relationships between
management and student leadership, Pwani University has demonstrated a
refreshing and progressive approach to governance.
The recent student leadership induction and team building programme
held at Voi Safari Lodge from June 11–13 was not merely a retreat; it was a
bold statement on the importance of dialogue, partnership, mentorship and
shared responsibility in institutional development.
Led by the vice chancellor Prof James Kahindi, the
university’s top management intentionally created a platform where student
leaders and administrators could engage openly on issues affecting governance,
education, leadership, accountability, and student welfare.
This initiative deserves commendation because it reflects
visionary leadership anchored on inclusion, consultation and collective
responsibility.
In his keynote address on transformative and visionary
leadership in higher education, Prof Kahindi underscored the need for
universities to move beyond rigid administrative structures and embrace
participatory leadership models that empower all stakeholders.
His message resonated with the realities of modern
governance: institutions thrive not through authority alone, but through
collaboration, trust-building and shared vision.
Indeed, transformative leadership is about creating leaders,
not followers. By engaging student leaders directly, the vice chancellor
demonstrated confidence in young people as legitimate partners in institutional
growth.
This is the hallmark of progressive governance. Universities
are not only centres of academic and research excellence; they are incubators
of future national leaders. When students are treated as partners rather than
adversaries, institutions cultivate responsible leadership, innovation, and
civic consciousness.
Similarly, the Deputy vice chancellor for academic and
student affairs prof Rose Ruto Korir, delivered a timely and impactful
presentation on student welfare, governance and leadership accountability.
Her presentation highlighted an often-overlooked reality:
effective student leadership must go hand in hand with responsibility,
integrity and service to the student body.
Student welfare remains central to academic success and
institutional stability. Issues such as mental wellness, accommodation, inclusivity,
academic support, safety and fair representation cannot be effectively
addressed without meaningful engagement between management and student leaders.
Prof Korir’s emphasis on accountability reminded student
leaders that leadership is not about privilege or political posturing, but
about stewardship, ethical conduct, and advocacy grounded in the common good.
Equally important was the presentation by the Deputy vice
chancellor for administration, finance and planning Prof Hellen Mondoh, on
strategic resource management and sustainability. In an era of financial
constraints facing universities across Kenya and beyond, it is crucial for
student leaders to appreciate the realities of institutional planning,
budgeting and sustainability.
Often, conflicts between students and management arise from
misinformation or lack of understanding regarding institutional capacities and
priorities. By exposing student leaders to these conversations, Pwani
University is nurturing informed leadership capable of engaging constructively
rather than confrontationally.
Prof Dr Halimu Shauri’s presentation on “research and
innovation leadership for community impact” underscored a fundamental shift in
the role of universities- from being mere centres of knowledge generation to
becoming catalysts for societal transformation.
Effective university leaders must therefore create an
environment that supports inquiry, innovation, collaboration and the
translation of knowledge into solutions that improve people’s lives.
Perhaps one of the most intellectually stimulating moments
of the programme was the debate challenge led by outgoing and incoming student
leaders on the topic: “Should Administration be involved in Student
Leadership?” This debate captured the essence of democratic engagement within
institutions.
While student leadership must remain independent and
representative of student interests, administration cannot be completely
detached from leadership development processes. Constructive involvement
through mentorship, policy guidance, dialogue and institutional support is
essential in cultivating mature, ethical and visionary student leaders.
What Pwani University has demonstrated through this
initiative is a powerful lesson for other universities, counties and even
national governance structures. Development cannot be achieved in silos.
Sustainable progress emerges when leaders deliberately create platforms for
participation, consultation, and consensus-building among stakeholders.
The Pwani University initiative reflects the African
philosophy of collective responsibility: that leadership is a shared journey.
When university management and student leaders sit together, engage openly,
challenge ideas respectfully and jointly envision the future of their
institution, they create a culture of ownership and mutual accountability.
Such cultures reduce conflict, strengthen institutional
cohesion and enhance problem-solving.
Moreover, this approach nurtures future leaders equipped
with practical governance experience. Today’s student leaders are tomorrow’s
governors, legislators, policymakers, scholars and corporate executives.
Universities
therefore have a responsibility not only to educate students academically but
also to shape their leadership values, emotional intelligence and governance
competencies.
As institutions across the country search for sustainable
governance models, the Pwani University experience offers an important
reminder: collaboration is not weakness; it is strength. Dialogue is not
compromise; it is wisdom. And leadership is not about control; it is about
inspiring people to work together toward a shared vision.
In a world increasingly divided by mistrust and polarisation,
institutions that embrace participatory governance will not only survive — they
will thrive. Pwani University has shown that when management and student
leadership walk together, institutions move forward together.
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