Tough As Nails: Female Scientists Rise Up In Nigeria
Four hours. That’s how much time physicist Rabia Salihu Sa’id has each day to get her research done at Bayero University in Kano, Nigeria.
“Each day, my university is giving me only four hours of electricity. I can’t do research in four hours!” Sa’id says, laughing, despite her frustration.
She studies how deforestation may change air temperatures in Nigeria. Computing power is essential for her research.
“Think! You are concentrating and the power goes off! You try to use the battery, and the battery starts beeping. Then you have to close it and leave,” she says. “The ideas are gone by the time you come back. It’s difficult — you have to start all over again.”
The Forgotten Female Programmers Who Created Modern Tech
Working as a professor isn’t an easy job anywhere. But scientists in many low-income countries, such as Nigeria, cope with problems unheard of elsewhere. Universities commonly lack the funds to support research, while students have no access to computers or the Internet.