The School of Public Health at the 糖心Vlog and Technology (KNUST), Kumasi has completed a three-day academic leadership training programme in partnership with Brunel University London.
The event, organised by the school鈥檚 Mentorship and Training Committee, forms part of a memorandum of understanding signed between the two institutions to boost collaboration.
The training brought together faculty and academic leaders from both universities to strengthen leadership, raise research visibility and promote long-term partnerships.

Speaking on grantsmanship, Professor Nana Anokye, a health economist at Brunel University, stressed the need to build the right team, develop innovative ideas and form strategic collaborations.
He advised early-career researchers to start small with internal and seed funding, build credibility, network with successful grant winners, and seek mentorship.
鈥淔ollow the requirements, know your unique selling point, and don鈥檛 feel you must always lead a grant application,鈥 Prof. Anokye said. 鈥淪tart with colleagues, build collaborations and grow from there.鈥
He also advised researchers to develop a grant-writing trajectory, from background reviews to full draft writing and to seek feedback from peers and successful grant winners.
鈥淐reate space in your workload for grant research before other duties take over,鈥 he added, noting that strategic time management can make the difference between success and missed opportunities.

Dr. Kofi Akohene Mensah of KNUST reaffirmed the university鈥檚 mentorship policy, calling mentorship 鈥渁 gift that keeps giving鈥 and 鈥渁 vital compass for navigating the academic journey.鈥 He said effective mentorship is not limited to one person but to anyone who can guide and teach well.
鈥淢entorship is about showing and telling,鈥 he said, emphasising that mentees should define their boundaries early and respect those of their mentors. 鈥淥nce your boundaries are set, stay within them and seek permission if you need to cross. Acknowledgement is as important as confidentiality.鈥
Dr. Mensah also urged academics to be proactive in seeking feedback, open to constructive criticism and deliberate about building relationships that foster trust and accountability. He noted that mentorship should be a two-way learning process, with both mentor and mentee benefiting from the exchange.
Other faculty members also shared their experiences navigating academic challenges and building professional networks.
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| Edith Asravor (URO) & Emmanuel Offei (URO) |