By Kefa Senoga
(final of four parts – UCU postgraduate focus)
By the time Challote Mbabazi completed her Bachelor of Arts with Education from Uganda Christian University (UCU) in 2020, she had saved up to sh5million ($1,357) from the pocket money her parents gave her during her undergraduate studies.
This savings became her lifesaver for the next two years – especially since the Covid-19 pandemic in 2020 led to the global closure of operations, including Ugandan schools where Mbabazi would be employed. Those places she planned to teach were shut down until 2022.
However, as expected, the demand for food did not wane during that two-year period. The natural choice of a business for Mbabazi was setting up a grocery shop, which she did near the UCU Main Campus in Mukono. But when the business expanded, she relocated it to Hoima, her hometown in western Uganda. That business is still located there to date.
While the food store income was sufficient, Mbabazi’s satisfaction with the work was not. She enrolled for a UCU postgraduate program in Master of Human Resource Management in Education.
“Education adds value to a person,” Mbabazi says, adding that she hopes to leverage her postgraduate knowledge to grow her business.
She is currently employed as an ICT teacher at St. Cyprian High School in Kyabakadde, Mukono district.
From her master’s course, Mbabazi says she has learned invaluable lessons on interpersonal relations, particularly in working with teaching staff, non-teaching staff, and managers within the education sector.
“I now understand better how to retain and develop talented people in any kind of organization, especially for schools,” Mbabazi says.
She also highlights mentoring as a key takeaway from her course. She had already started mentoring students, particularly those in the ICT club where she serves as the patron at her current school.
Mbabazi believes that schools must consider hiring a human resource professional within their administration, something uncommon in Ugandan schools. As a result, headteachers typically handle HR responsibilities in most schools.
Through the skills and knowledge that Mbabazi has gained in her master’s course, she says she has learned that HR managers are trained to create productive workplaces that can lead to improved outcomes.
Despite the widespread bias against a career in teaching due to low pay, Mbabazi argues that it’s important for more people to join the profession, to be able to nurture the future generation.
One of the notable challenges Mbabazi points out during her graduate studies is the struggle to balance work with school.
“Sometimes you would have work assignments to handle, with a proposal to defend and course work to hand in, and yet you also are the teacher on duty,” she noted.
And that was not the only challenge Mbabazi faced as a working student. She also had challenges with balancing school and her role as a wife and mother. The 28-year-old mother of two says that in such circumstances, it’s important to remember that you have interests and ambitions of your own, in addition to being a mother. This understanding inspires you to be determined and to make appropriate plans.
While pursuing her undergraduate studies at UCU, Mbabazi competed for guild presidency, but was unsuccessful. She, however, was appointed a leader in charge of education matters in the university’s guild government of that year.
Mbabazi explains that her aspirations for leadership didn’t end there. She remains determined to pursue leadership roles and sees herself serving in a public office later in life.
She completed her primary education at Bwikya Primary School in Hoima, then attended Jinja Secondary School for her O’level, proceeding to Mpoma Girls School, where she completed her A’level.
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