In 2010, I was disappointed
when the then Minister of Education, Mr. Teteh-Enyo, directed the military to
prepare tents for possible accommodation of secondary school students. It was one
of the consequences of the late President Mills’ decision to prematurely reverse
the four-year secondary school policy to three years, swelling the intake for
that year. Many Ghanaians had cautioned Government against the reversal,
because the nation needed time to determine the effectiveness or otherwise of
the four-year system. Backed by the National Association of Graduate Teachers,
the Government, true to its campaign promise, reversed the policy. That
decision did not augur well for Ghanaian education.
In 2019, I am apprehensive
that the Government is negotiating with the Technical Universities to migrate the
latter’s salary to university level, which
migration is leaving out effective pedagogy, hands-on training, learner
competency, despite efforts to centralize Technical/Vocational Education. Currently,
TUs largely operate dated curricula, so most graduates do not meet industrial
standards. TUs compete with traditional universities in developing programmes,
when they should be tailoring programmes to specific industrial needs. Even industry
is wary of the porous skills TU graduates present to the workplace.
Subsequently, it is
imperative to upgrade, not only TU salaries but the entire learning system, if
this nation has even the slightest hope of getting that hollow conversion from
polytechnic to TU fleshed out to competency-based training (CBT). That goal is effectively
hampered by the current high numbers in the classrooms, the marginal input of
industry in curriculum design and implementation, poor classroom methodologies,
poor investment in teaching/learning resources, to name these. Consequently, competent
hands-on training is currently endangered.
Quality has rapidly
disappeared from the system, paving the way for commercialization of
information. Elsewhere, institutions
design curriculum to meet changing times, leaner and industrial needs. Classroom
knowledge is geared toward resource-based learning, current turbulence of climate
change, migration, polarization of wealth and abject poverty, youth
unemployment, population increase, gender inequality, international relations, extremism,
to mention these. Other nations ensure that learners are prepared for the
Knowledge Economy, accessible through the Internet. Information Communication
Technology enables teachers/learners to positively navigate the turbulent global
tides for competent skills and knowledge. Yet, the initiators of the conversion
failed to invest in the TUs, the dynamism required to accentuate competent
knowledge in the prevailing socio-cultural, geo-political and economic reality.
Driven by individual,
community, national, and global demands, education elsewhere is learner-centred,
not teacher-centred; neither is it exploited for political power. Learning
institutions package pragmatic knowledge which might render graduates assets to
community, rather than reduce the human agency of learners. In certain communities, governments rely on
learning institutions to drive development by adapting school curricula to
generational, industrial, global needs and aspirations. That dynamism is
missing from Ghanaian vocational education.
Logically, the teeming
unemployed numbers of both lay and educated youth, the rapid increase in crime
rate across the country should compel the TUs to design innovative long- and
short-term programmes that endow various categories of learners with sustainable
marketable skills. There must be a shift from the old, boring dry classroom
method where teachers talk and students listen. Contemporary youth are labelled
digital natives, hence, professional
programmes run by the TUs should be oriented by information technology, which
requires strategic investment, which investment is manageable due to annual IT fees
paid by students.
Additionally, TUs have also
received a big helping hand through the national digitization programme; the
institutions should tap the digital database for classroom simulation. It is
time that Ghanaian TUs replicated the technological transformation of the
blackboard which has resulted in appreciable flexibility in higher education. Furthermore,
Google has brought virtual reality to the institutional doorstep; the Google
classroom is a super space for synchronous and asynchronous interaction. There
are numerous other technological interventions currently being explored by
dynamic educational institutions for effective teaching/learning approaches,
even as industry offers glimpses into new, adaptable technological openings.
Yet, many TU classrooms are
not spaces which effectively utilize technology to provide life-long learning
skills to learners. Many teachers fail to take advantage of learning materials
and communities, available online, which continue to inject so much currency
into classroom approaches. Worst of all, a cross-section of teachers limit
learners to scanty, poorly-packaged information, instead of directing learners
to the vast quality information available online. To a large extent, information
is dumped on learners, who simply memorize and reproduce such for marks. In the
Vocational/Technical classroom, that approach is a rich recipe for
dysfunctional graduates; that is our current location.
Amidst this regressive reality,
TU salaries are being migrated in isolation. Unacceptable! There is a cliché
among Ghanaian Trade Unions that the only language government understands is
strike. Conversely, the only language unions understand is money. Therefore, why
is the Government not driving a very hard bargain to compel the TUs to transform
their classrooms into learner-centred spaces where teachers impart 21st
Century knowledge?
The oversight bodies are
just as culpable; the academic audit conducted by the NCTE, which catapulted
the migration process was as baffling as it was sad. It neither focused on
instructional nor industrial parameters. Institutions elsewhere treasure instructors
who possess knowledge across disciplines; the auditors slighted a cross-section
of such teachers. Consequently, the audit has actually deepened the theoretical
trend of the TUs at a time when they desperately need to enrich hands-on
training.
Technical/Vocational Education
has been labelled a disadvantaged relative of grammar education. No country lives
that statement better than Ghana, the only losers being the youth, supposedly
being prepared for the mantle of future leadership. It is improper to
systematically focus on the well-being of teachers to the neglect of learners.
The migration should simultaneously benefit teachers and the taught. If the
nation genuinely believes that Technical/Vocation Education can snatch the
youth from the doldrums that make them highly susceptible to anti-social
behaviour, let effective pedagogy be Government’s bargaining tool in the current
TU salary migration negotiation.
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