Technology

Discard wrong notions about TVET …African leaders urged

By Ghana News

Copyright ghanamma

Discard wrong notions about TVET …African leaders urged

The Deputy Minis-ter of Education, Dr Clement Abas Apaak, has urged African leaders to discard the long-standing perception that Technical and Vocational Edu-cation and Training (TVET) is a pathway reserved for students with weak academic abilities.

He said rather TVET must be embraced as a first-choice op-tion if the continent was to build a skilled workforce capable of driving socio-economic transfor-mation.

Dr Apaak made the call at the Africa Skills for Jobs Policy Acade-my currently underway in Nairobi, Kenya.

The four-day programme, which opened on Tuesday, brought together policymakers, experts and private sector players to deliberate on reforms to strengthen TVET across Sub-Saharan Africa.

Being organised by the World Bank, in partnership with the Government of Kenya and the Inter-University Council for East Africa, programme aims at ad-dressing youth unemployment by aligning training programmes with labour market needs and promot-ing upskilling in priority sectors.

“There is this tendency to be-lieve that it is students who are less competent academically who are to take up technical and vocational education and training. We have a concerted plan of action to change this mindset. Vocational and tech-nical education cannot be a second option. It must be a first option,” he stated.

Dr Apaak explained that the government was deliberately expanding access to technical insti-tutions across the country.

Out of about 900 second-cy-cle schools in Ghana, he said, fewer than 300 were technical and vocational institutions, a situation the government was determined to improve.

He also pointed to the intro-duction of the National Appren-ticeship Programme as part of measures to support young people outside the formal school system.

The initiative, he said, was designed to cater for about 1.5 million Ghanaian youth who were neither in school nor in training, stressing that “This programme is to put them through competen-cy-based training, certify them, and deploy them into the labour market.”

The Deputy Minister empha-sised that repositioning TVET and scaling up opportunities would not only reduce unemployment but also help Africa achieve sustainable development.

He noted that his outfit was im-plementing a comprehensive skills development framework, which earmarks significant investment for modernising technical institutions, upgrading equipment and retrain-ing instructors.

These reforms, he said, were aimed at aligning training with emerging labour market demands, particularly in technology, green energy and industrial processing.

BY TIMES REPORTER

🔗 Follow Ghanaian Times WhatsApp Channel today. 🌍 Trusted News. Real Stories. Anytime, Anywhere.✅ Join our WhatsApp Channel now! https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029VbAjG7g3gvWajUAEX12Q