Technical University in Ghana: The Impediments
“For far too long vocational learning has been seen as the poor
relation of academic learning”. John Hayes, MP, Minister of State for Further
Education, Skills and Lifelong Learning, UK.
One
of the reasons this nation is experiencing stagnant growth across sectors is
that it has consistently failed to utilise education to address its needs. Decades
of compromising educational standards have yielded a horrible reality of
generations whose porous skills effectively bar them from securing jobs. The
number of unemployed graduates was expected to hit 271,000 in September 2015, though it might have
reduced bynow. Governments may not have created
adequate jobs over the years, and nations across the globe may be experiencing
employment mismatch, but it is equally undeniable that educational institutions
have also failed to produce the type of human resources needed by industry, and
Ghanaian learning institutions are major culprits. This article focuses on
polytechnics and technical universities in the country.
The irony of employment mismatch is that whilst
energetic youth are unoccupied, employers have positions that cannot be filled.
When learning institutions pretend to impart knowledge or run moribund
curricula, they produce graduates whose skills are dated. One graduate who
completed a programme in Textiles Technology in one Ghanaian polytechnic is
currently with GTP. When I inquired about the relevance of the programme to the
work on the field, the reply was numbing: “It is like one and two.What we were
taught in the programme is completely different from what pertains in industry,
but I’m happytohave this opportunity to learn”. Then there was an appeal: “Please
speak to the school authority to get things changed”.
Not every graduate will share this negative experience;
yet the fact remains that industry keeps complaining about the poor skills
graduates bring to the job. Whilst some programmes may be dated, some courses
have appreciable currency, but they are handled so poorly by faculty that
students barely gain from the courses. Paradoxically, the graduate quoted above
pursued a programme in textiles technology, which presupposes that the programme
would reflect current learning and manufacturing trend. Academic Departments
that claim to be running technology courses have a responsibility to refine
programmes to match technological trends. Due to the rapid evolution of
technology, if Technical/Vocational programmes do not match industrial trends,
graduates lose, and so do communities and nations. Ghana is experiencing that.
The success of the polytechnic concept rests on the
currency of hands-on curricula; innovative teachers also bring current trends
to their teaching, so even when curricula review or change is delayed, learners
do not lose. Teacher innovation stems from quality action and applied research,
which shed light on teaching, industrial, environmental, socio-cultural and
entrepreneurial dynamics, to mention these. When institutions, teachers and the
taught are aware of these forces at work, they can embark on skill acquisition
paths that simultaneously fulfil personal, community, national and global aspirations.
Products of such learning environment neither wallow in the house nor offer
mediocre services; they excel at assigned tasks and bring innovation to the job
and community.Industry desires such smart graduates. Technical universities in
the country must aspire to that.
The Nation was not able fulfil the polytechnic
concept before it prematurely hurdled to the technical university arena. In
November 2017, I asked 19 first year students to comment on the statement, “[t]he
Technical University Concept in Ghana is a misnomer”. They acknowledged in
their writing that the concept is not being practiced; many others share that
sentiment. That acknowledgement highlights a conundrum: Institutions are
designated technical universities, but their activities belie their label. The
fundamental reasons for that contradiction are academic.
This is the era of knowledge economy, operational
through the Theory of Mind – the human capacity to understand issues affecting
self and others, accepting and respecting differences.The application of acquired
knowledge has yielded abundant information on diverse issues, some previously
undreamt of; communication technology is at a peak due to the availability of dynamic
information. Excellent reading, comprehension and analytical skills are crucial
in accessing available information for knowledge. However, our basic education
has become so porous that products have severe reading and comprehension
challenges. Due to poor monitoring and institutional compromises, even struggling
pupils are pushed through to the secondary schools. Over there, due to
staggering numbers and fixation on extra-classes, students do not receive much
help. The compromises continue up to the tertiary level where majority and the
promising opt for traditional universities, leaving the polytechnics to absorb
the extremely weak ones. Technical university status has not changed that
anomaly.
The telling effects of the porous work being done at
the primary and secondary levels are felt most acutely in the polytechnic and
technical university classrooms. When students have stark reading and
comprehension challenges, operating the knowledge economy is such a chore,
because learners barely understand the forces that motivate humans to tackle
issues of education, communication, globalization, quality and standards, gender
inequality, extreme poverty, sanitation and hygiene, safe waste management, health,
free trade, migration, maternal/infant mortality, population explosion, peace
and security, religious fanaticism, terrorism, unemployment, youth empowerment,
corruption, political delinquency, job security, tolerance, information technology,
social media, fake news, deforestation, child molestation, natural disasters,
climate change, to mention these, at local and international levels. When
learners lack appreciation for issues impacting their daily existence, the
probability that they will be critical thinkers and assume conscientious attitude
tends to be low, sometimes impossible. That is the bane of Ghana, but polytechnics
and technical universities get saddled with majority of such poor human
elements.
Technical universities evolve from technical
institutions which rigorously pursue academic excellence; they are not created
by political appendage, as was done in Ghana. Logically, therefore, they pursue
high-powered, innovative and applied research, engendered by super reading,
comprehension and analytical skills. Teachers and learners appreciate the
issues that affect humanity and not only address such through innovative
research but also apply knowledge to improve human existence. We are all
beneficiaries of such research. On the contrary, the products admitted into
Ghana’s technical university classrooms are not equipped for such quality
academic research; a lot of the teachers equate research with promotion. Most students
are incapable of close reading which can help them to grasp the underlying
principles of their chosen fields and strive for innovation. Logic and
reasoning are endangered species in such spaces. At best, students observe and replicate
existing works; but superficial knowledge cannot yield the type of intellectual
excellence which characterizes technical university work, and which pushes
communities and nations forward. Yet, the learners are not just lazy or dumb;
primary and secondary education failed to endow most with the fundamental
skills for advanced studies, for university work.
The real offence lies in the inability of the
universities to appreciably fill the huge gaps of knowledge created by porous educational
foundation. Students with weak skills are shoved into advanced programmes when
they should be taken through immersion courses in literacy, numeracy and
communication, which can help and prepare them for diploma/certificate or
professional programmes. The worst academic move made by the polytechnics in
the past was to marginalize diploma programmes for the Higher National Diploma
programmes. The consequence is that students who have no basics from the
secondary school are plunged into advanced professional programmes, some of
which are handled quite superficially. Logically, many complete with porous
skills, compounded by appalling communication skills. Some are maintained by
the institutions, therefore, the knowledge they impart is somewhat deficient.
Many others have become the foundation for technical university. It is a
vicious cycle.
What is worse, hands-on training has been slipping
for years, whereas technology necessitates practice. A cross-section of
polytechnic and technical university teachers are myopic and limit their
students to information teachers have produced in hand-outs or books instead of
exposing students to diverse academic research material which can stimulate
intellectual development. Students pass the courses of such teachers if they
purchase such nauseous materials. Even introductory ICT is taught in that skewed
manner, so how would learners grasp the basics of information technology in
order to utilise such for innovation in their professional courses? In the end,
secondary students who are ill-prepared for the tertiary classroom are further
limited by unethical teaching practices. Instead of intellectual,
socio-cultural and entrepreneurial development, learners are infantilised and
packaged off to industry, ill-prepared for the competitive workforce.
The systems have continued to lack the flexibility
which hallmarks Technical/Vocational systems elsewhere. The polytechnic
concept, among others, offers a legitimate option to learners who do not want
to study for a lengthy period, who want to combine studies with work. Such
categories desire to intersperse studies with learning over a stretched period
or take a terminal course for life-long skills. Proactive institutions have
designed professional programmes that accommodate different categories of
learners, even those with learning challenges. Not every learner desires a
higher diploma or degree studies. It is crucial that the system is redesigned
to attract diverse categories of learners, with a special focus on the teeming
hawking youth/unemployed in disguise. Of course, accommodation does not imply
compromising standards, so whether learners enrol in full-time or part-time
programmes, diploma or certificate courses, they must possess literacy and numeracy
skills, which equip learners for competent professional training and practice.
Sadly, Ghanaian polytechnics have consistently compromised
admission standards; those converted to tertiary universities have maintained
the status quo. The calibre of students admitted determines the level of
intellectual work done in the classrooms; majority have a lackadaisical
attitude towards academic work. A cross-section of teachers is equally
apathetic about teaching. When Technical/Vocational students lack the desire to
study, and teachers are dispassionate about practical teaching, government facesa
diabolical combination for a national disaster, and that aptly summarises
Ghana’s situation. A technical university concept is inoperable in such an
environment.
The Minister quoted above has also asserted that in spite of “many
calls over the years for greater parity of esteem between academic and vocation
qualifications, in practice this has meant making what is practical more
academic, to the detriment of both”. Ghana’s situation is worse due to deteriorating
educational standards, poor monitoring, pathetic investment and poor
appreciation for technical education, to name four. Another difference is that
the UK consistently refines its system. In 2009, the Secretary of State for
Education commissioned an educationist to evaluate the vocational system and
recommend effective measures for improvement. The outcomes can be found in the
Wolf Reports available on-line. Most importantly, Government has been
implementing the recommendations.
It is not enough to acknowledge that Technical/Vocational
education is crucial for national development. The system has been ailing for
decades and requires radical attention. Unless the porous structures are
rigorously rectified, any funds sunk into the system will, at best, replicate
defective training systems. In principle, Ghana has an empowering
Technical/Vocational framework, but the implementation is flawed, and to a very
large extent, leading agencies have lost focus of the human-centred natureof
the system. That goal can be recaptured, because sankofa,wonkyi, which literally translates, it is not a taboo to go
back for what one has forgotten. If for nothing at all, the young blood fleeing
the country for slavery, torture and horrible death on deserts, in Libya and
Europe should make us retrace our steps,
restructure the Technical/Vocational system, targeting skills, job security and
dignified existence.
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