Newly Revised Curriculum Of Kenyan SWAMI Institute Tested
The World Council of Credit Unions, Inc.
(WOCCU),
in coordination with Strathmore University of
Nairobi, Kenya, recently held the first of three
intensive training sessions for management and
board members of African Savings and Credit
Cooperatives (SACCOs). Funding for the program,
called the Strathmore-WOCCU African Management
Institute (SWAMI), has been provided by the
United States Agency for International
Development (USAID) and CUNA Mutual Group
Foundation.
WOCCU and Strathmore were able to offer
scholarships to promising students thanks to the
generous support of American Heritage Federal
Credit Union, the Pennsylvania Credit Union
Association (PCUA) and a coordinated effort
between the Southeast Regional Credit Union
School and the Louisiana Credit Union League
(LCUL). Two leaders from PCUA and LCUL,
assistant vice president Rick Myxter and CEO Anne
Cochran respectively, also volunteered their
time, leading informative workshops.
Tier one of the SWAMI, which ran from November
8-
13, focused on financial management, marketing,
good governance and accounting principles, with
the ultimate goal of ensuring institutional
sustainability among SACCOs. Tiers two and three
will be held in July and November of 2005.
This three-tiered approach marks a departure
from
the format of prior training programs developed
by WOCCU and Strathmore. "In creating the
current system, organizers considered the
feedback of past participants, the need to focus
on the training of board members and managers,
and the success of the tiered approach as used at
credit union training schools in the US,"
explained Catherine Ford, WOCCU project manager.
The SWAMI curriculum is comprised of two
parts,
one for each of the two groups of students—the
SACCO Certified Manager Programme for the
management students and the SACCO Board
Leadership Program for the board members. Twenty-
seven SACCO managers and over thirty SACCO board
members representing South Africa, Kenya and
Seychelles make up the first class of the SWAMI.
"It is very exciting to see so many students
from
all over Africa participating in the Institute
this year," said Anne Cochran, who has
volunteered her time and expertise over the past
year to creating the Institute. "It has been a
resounding success so far, with terrific
evaluations on the courses and teachers. I
strongly believe that in the near future the
Institute will come to represent a hallmark of
SACCO professionalism."
Management students studied financial
accounting,
governance, WOCCU's PEARLS financial monitoring
system, marketing and policy development. Board
members arrived near the end of the program for
training on governance and policy development and
then joined management students for combined
classes at the end of the session.
Upon successful completion of their
assignments,
students will proceed to tier two in July. After
completing all three tiers, SACCO managers and
board members will be awarded the Certified SACCO
Professional Designation (CSP). Everyone is
looking forward to seeing this first SWAMI class
graduate in November 2005.
El Consejo Mundial de Cooperativas de Ahorro y Crédito es la asociación gremial y agencia de desarrollo para el sistema internacional de cooperativas de ahorro y crédito. El Consejo Mundial promueve el crecimiento sustentable de las cooperativas de ahorro y crédito y otras cooperativas financieras en todo el mundo a fin de facultar a las personas para que mejoren su calidad de vida a través del acceso a servicios financieros asequibles y de alta calidad. El Consejo Mundial realiza esfuerzos de defensa activa en representación del sistema global de las cooperativas de ahorro y crédito ante organizaciones internacionales y trabaja con gobiernos nacionales para mejorar la legislación y la regulación. Sus programas de asistencia técnica introducen nuevas herramientas y tecnologías para fortalecer el desempeño financiero de las cooperativas de ahorro y crédito y profundizar su alcance comunitario.
El Consejo Mundial ha implementado 290 programas de asistencia técnica en 71 países. A nivel mundial, 51,000 cooperativas de ahorro y crédito en 100 países atienden a 196 millones de personas. Obtenga más información sobre el impacto global del Consejo Mundial en www.woccu.org.
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