This week, one of Nigeria’s notable Scientist and
Professor of Physics, Francisca Okeke will feature on African Voices, CNN’s
International weekly half-hour programme highlighting Africa's most engaging personalities.
Watch Francisca as she explains her journey to becoming University of Nigeria’s first female Dean of Faculty of Physical Sciences and how her father’s effort greatly influenced her choice career.
In the programme, Okeke recounts her childhood ordeals in the south eastern part of Nigeria, where education for the girl child was not that important, and how the aftermath of the Biafra war and violence almost to put an end to her education.
CNN
Watch Francisca as she explains her journey to becoming University of Nigeria’s first female Dean of Faculty of Physical Sciences and how her father’s effort greatly influenced her choice career.
In the programme, Okeke recounts her childhood ordeals in the south eastern part of Nigeria, where education for the girl child was not that important, and how the aftermath of the Biafra war and violence almost to put an end to her education.
She tells ‘African Voices’: “When I was a child, I would wonder about the changing colour
of the sky and the ability of airplanes to fly in the atmosphere without falling
back to earth”.
Discovering that physics
could answer these questions, Okeke was motivated to become a scientist and was
one of only two women in her physics undergraduate class of 30 students in
1980. She went on to become the first female Head of Physics Department at the
University of Nigeria, and later, the first female Dean of the Faculty of
Physical Sciences.
Some
of her accomplishments include being a fellow of the Japanese Society for Promotion
of Science, the Nigerian institute of Physics, Nigeria Academy of Science,
Africa Academy of Science. She is a recipient of the prestigious Laurel United
Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Award for Women in Science
Laureates, for her discovery of certain particles in the atmosphere.
‘African
Voices’ hears how Okeke has contributed greatly to the development of physics
at both secondary and tertiary levels in Nigeria, and aims at increasing the
number of women in physics in Nigeria and across Africa. “Physics means
everything to me. There was a lecture I gave in my inaugural lecture, I
concluded by telling the world that physics is life, and life is all about
physics. And that is the summary of it all. If you look around us, that I am
talking now, and you are hearing me, it's just physics, application of
physics,” concludes Okeke.
To watch Francisca
Okeke’s story, tune in to CNN International’s ‘African Voices’ on Friday, 7th November
at 1030 with repeat broadcast on the following days:
Saturday: 1630
Sunday: 0430, 1230, 1930
Monday: 1130, 1830
Tuesday: 0530
Wednesday: 10:30Sunday: 0430, 1230, 1930
Monday: 1130, 1830
Tuesday: 0530
CNN
No comments:
Post a Comment