For their final year practical
project, a group of engineering students designed and assembled a two-seater
vehicle, expected to enhance movement of security personnel on campus. They
used scrap metal for the body work, demonstrating waste upcycling. That the
learners identified needs in their community and attempted to address such is a
target of technical universities, also an expectation Technical/Vocational
Education. That the students felt a sense of achievement was so obvious. The
elation in their voices was infectious, just as it was refreshing to observe
the happiness on their faces as they explained the processes and challenges they
experienced whilst working on the project. After congratulating them and
sharing their happiness, I asked two pragmatic questions:
What powered their vehicle?
“Petrol”, they responded. I continued: In the era of fossil fuel emission,
climate change what could have been the best source of energy for their vehicle?
They answered: “Electricity”. I could tell immediately that my questions had prompted
them to re-think their project. I then advised them that if they revisited and
worked assiduously on the concept, targeting electricity, they may even get a
collaboration from a car company. I wondered if the supervisor had raised the
issues above. They just might have produced the institution’s first electric car.
That would have been a feat for that technical university.
Student
project in 2019, powered by petrol
Surprisingly, among the teachers
of the department are auto-electricians, engineering designers who could have
spearheaded an electric car project, an auto-engineer explained to me. He
furthered that the institution’s sculpture department, which utilizes fibre
products could have utilized that for the body. The welding section could have
taken care of the fabrication. This could, indeed, have been an opportunity for
a multi-departmental collaboration in applied research. Why did the
institution’s Office for Research and Innovation not forge that teamwork?
Initially, I was surprised that
all the pointers above had eluded project stakeholders; my surprise turned into
pain, and then confusion, as to why these young ambitious learners had been
guided into missing a golden opportunity to undertake a project that would have
been so relevant to our times, and which could have empowered them with
competent industrial skills. Furthermore, producing an electric car, which
would have emitted water, harmless to the environment, would have indirectly
legitimized the current Government’s agenda on climate change. Instead here is
one more petrol-fuelled vehicle which will compound carbon monoxide emitted into
the atmosphere.
Indeed, the institutional vision
and primary targets come into major play here. Has the institution targeted research
in electric cars? What is the mandate of the auto-engineering department? Is that
department environmentally-conscious? Does the institution align its
engineering targets with national, global climate change agenda? Above all, is
the institution’s overall curriculum abreast with the times?
Curriculum practice decrees that
curriculum should be lived; in other words, school curricula should align with
individual, community, national and global needs. Higher education, especially,
has major responsibility in charting quality education that solves societal
needs in order to lend quality to human existence. The technical university concept is rooted in
utilizing current technology to provide sustainable solution to human needs, to
improve quality of life. Ghana continues to benefit immensely from quality
research done elsewhere, which has improved the lot of humanity. So how are our
learning institutions contributing to such relevant knowledge? The project in
question demonstrates how school curricula can yield moribund outcomes, rather
than pragmatic ones.
The
teaching and environmental implications of the project are huge and do not even
align with national and global environmental protection agenda. At the last Climate
Change Summit in Austria, the President of Ghana was eloquent about steps Ghana
was taking to protect the environment. In a discussion with imminent personalities,
he reiterated, amongst other laudable goals, that Ghana will honour the Paris
Accord. However, climate change agenda for Ghana cannot be pragmatically
pursued without high-powered research from its higher institutions. So when
technical universities fail to engage in research that can effectively combat
fossil fuel emission, what does that bode for national efforts to mitigate
global warming?
The question becomes
even critical when one considers the strenuous efforts of institutions elsewhere
aimed at overturning the effects of global warming. The UK has already launched
its first hydrogen powered train, in its bid to address climate change;
University of Edinburg is a major stakeholder. On a related issue, Germany is
going to phase out diesel vehicles in 2020; an engineer tells me that would
pre-empt NOx particles from harming the Oxone Layer. Similar research from
various communities has yielded diverse innovations for environmental protection.
If a technical university is not actively engaged in research that directly
addresses climate change, the least it can do is stop producing equipment that could
harm the environment, thus, retard society’s progress.
In even worse
situations, I have seen technical university projects in which students
assemble rickshaw and other tri-cycles, termed pragia and aboboyaa respectively
in local parlance, which all run on 2-stroke engines. One engineer shared that
recent research in the country has indicated that carbon monoxide emission from
one aboboyaa is equivalent to
emission from 3 vehicles. If that outcome is accurate, the situation is simply
unacceptable, and I reiterate that that if we cannot help the world fight
climate change, then we should definitely not hold it back.
International
automobile companies are establishing assembling plants in the country. We can
be sure that they will be bringing along 21st Century car
technology. Are the auto-engineering departments across the technical
universities imparting current technological skills that would enable their
products to compete in such high-tech companies? Are learners being equipped
for auto-mobile functions or menial jobs in the car industry? It is about time the
institutions paid serious attention to research, teaching/learning for quality
input required to produce graduates who can support and transform the country’s
industries. Food for thought.
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