Vocational education and training - VET
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Uganda. Assessment methodologies and determinants of employability and skills level among Technical and Vocational Education Training (TVET) graduates in Central Uganda

Uganda. Assessment methodologies and determinants of employability and skills level among Technical and Vocational Education Training (TVET) graduates in Central Uganda | Vocational education and training - VET | Scoop.it

Globally, unemployment persists because skill levels and learner capabilities are not in tandem with job market requirements. Using logistic analysis, the present study probed determinants of employability of 150 graduates of Technical and Vocational Education Training (TVET) in Central Uganda and further predicted factors influencing their skills level by applying Tobit regression. On a 1 to 5 scale, skills averaged at 3.3. Employability depended on the skills level, age, gender, possessing a national award and disability status whereby the disabled had less likelihood of being employed. Class size, the training period, age and gender of the graduate significantly explained skill level of graduates. It was reported that the main methodology used to assess the graduates was class-based written testing. The paper argues that administrators of training institutions originate a special training and assessment methodology for the disabled. Class sizes should also be small and manageable for learners to be adequately trained and assessed. The study further proposes that the training period be longer and learners attend for the entire period to acquaint themselves with work-world demanded capabilities.

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Uganda’s schooling system doesn't politically empower young people

Uganda’s schooling system doesn't politically empower young people | Vocational education and training - VET | Scoop.it
It is highly questionable whether schools are democratic change agents that stimulate individual political agency in Uganda. The bigger question probably is, should schools take on that role?

If yes, then it is important to acknowledge that educational institutions are embedded in and dependent on surrounding social, political and economic structures. In other words, the education sector alone is not the magic bullet for democratisation, economic growth or poverty alleviation. It can only make its contribution towards systemic change at large.

For this change to happen, there needs to be a shift in thinking among education sector planners and actors (not just in Uganda) about the purpose of education.
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Africa’s Youth Employment Challenge: New Perspectives

Africa’s Youth Employment Challenge: New Perspectives | Vocational education and training - VET | Scoop.it
Who are the youth and what is the problem? Are entrepreneurship and self-employment the solution? And what about youth aspirations? Such questions are addressed in this issue of the IDS Bulletin, drawing from the literature on how development research affects policy and noting that it says little about how young researchers move into policy engagement.
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Rethinking the role of TVET in Future Work and Lifelong Learning, in light of Digitalization and the 4IR 

This report provides a general snapshot of the digitalization of TVET and skills systems in a set of countries. The primary data are derived from a desktop literature review on 8 countries, namely Angola, Gabon, Liberia, Ivory Coast, Mauritius, Morocco, Rwanda and Uganda and a set of questions administered through a questionnaire to experts and practitioners in the TVET sectors of Ivory Coast, Mauritius, Morocco, Rwanda and Uganda.
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Uganda. Should university teachers be required to work in industry?

Uganda. Should university teachers be required to work in industry? | Vocational education and training - VET | Scoop.it
The report recommends that prospective higher education tutors seek employment in industry for a period of not less than two years before being licensed to teach at universities and other institutions of higher learning and after they have “appreciated society and employer demands”.
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Job creation in Uganda and Sri Lanka

Job creation in Uganda and Sri Lanka | Vocational education and training - VET | Scoop.it
These infographics explore Uganda and Sri Lanka's progress in providing productive employment, and its relationship to economic transformation.
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