The
chronic shortage of skilled information has been the main stumbling
block in the development of modern information systems and services
in Africa. The inadequacy or in some respect absence, of skilled
manpower for the efficient management of information has been
widely expressed by African information workers as well as others
in various international seminars and workshops. It has also been
stressed in various published and unpublished reports.
One
of the main reasons for the chronic shortage of information specialists
in Africa is the lack of fully developed educational and training
programs in information science. It is in this regard that the
School of Information Science for Africa (SISA) has been established
SISA was established, in 1990, with the assistance of the International
Development Research Centre of Canada (IDRC) and UNESCO to respond
to the urgent and growing need in Eastern and Southern Africa for
high-level manpower, who can research, design, implement, operate
and manage information systems and services at the local, national
and regional levels. It aims at preparing, through its graduate
as well as short-term training program and refresher courses, students
for careers in the information field, and providing the much needed pportunity for professionals presently employed in African information
organizations to enhance their professional skills and to gain additional
knowledge in the information area.
The name of the Department was changed from SISA to Department
of Information Science with the merger of Computer Science unit
of the Department of Mathematics and SISA forming Faculty of Informatics
in September 2002.