Nana Prioritises Technical Education

President Akufo-Addo commissions new administration block, ICT centre and Library for the School

President Akufo-Addo says the goal of his government is to make Ghana a world-class centre for skills development and the leading country in Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) delivery in Africa.

According to President Akufo-Addo, “We want to emphasize the importance of TVET, and redeem the misconception that technical and vocational education is inferior and patronized only by less endowed students.”

It is for this reason that on March 15, 2018, the President, at the National Conference on Technical and Vocational Education, in Koforidua, in the Eastern Region, outlined government’s strategic policy on TVET.

To this end, he stressed that government has taken the decision to align and bring all public TVET institutions in the country under the direct supervision of the Ministry of Education to streamline their curricula and improve coordination for their training, with the Deputy Minister for Education, Barbara Asher Ayisi, going to be specifically responsible at the Ministry for technical and vocational education.

“The five-year Strategic Plan for TVET will result in the setting up of a TVET Service and TVET Council, and a dedicated division of the education service for technical and vocational education which would have its own Director General,” he said.

President Akufo-Addo made this known on Saturday when he attended the centenary celebration of Asuansi Technical Institute at Asuansi in the Central Region.

The President told the gathering that government is tackling the perennial infrastructure problems of the TVET sector.

Work, he said, will start soon on the construction of 20 modern TVET institutions in various areas of the country, together with the upgrading of some 35 National and Vocational Training Institutes across the country and the elevation of colleges of education that specialize in technology.

The President added that a major revision of the curricula of TVET schools is underway to make them relevant to Ghana’s changing economy.

“We recognise that science, technology and technical skills rule industry and you rule yourself out if you are not appropriately equipped. Every child must be offered the opportunity to bring out her inherent talents for innovation. It is in the laboratories and workshops that young people get the opportunity to expand their imagination and develop the skills that would equip them for the modern world,” he said.

President Akufo-Addo commented, “We need to modernise all aspects of our lives and we need skilled people to lead the modernisation process. If we are to transform the structure of our economy from one dependent on the production and export of raw materials to a value-added, industrialised one, then students from technical institutions, such as yours, are crucial.”

Citing the example of Germany, which has an abundance of well-qualified, technical employees in business and industry, the President indicated that the ‘dual system’ of Vocational Education and Training has been credited for Germany’s excellent economic performance, and her consolidation into a mighty and industrial power.

“Countries such as Austria, Slovakia, Switzerland and South Korea have emulated this system. We, also, in Ghana, need to emulate them,” he stressed.

President Akufo-Addo commissioned an ICT laboratory, library and an administration block for Asuansi Technical Institute, which was constructed by government in partnership with the African Development Bank, under the ‘Development of skills for Industry Project (DSIP).’

The President also cut the sod for the construction of an auditorium for the school.

 

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