Tertiary education curriculum should address specific national development needs

Date:

Share post:

Dr Kwame Boakye, Chair of the Governing Council, Sunyani Technical University, has called for tertiary education curriculum and administration to be matched to the specific knowledge and skills requirements of Ghana’s national development agenda.

He said most tertiary education institutions in the country were running generic skills education and training instead of focusing on the specifics of nation building and development.

Dr Boakye made these remarks during a panel discussion on the topic “Relations Between the State and Public Universities in Ghana.”

The event, organised by the Ghana Academy of Arts and Sciences (GAAS), is the sixth in a series of Policy Dialogues on Motivating Higher Education Reforms in Ghana.

The project seeks to gather evidence, share information and provide a platform for building consensus and contributing to policy formulation on higher education in Ghana.

Dr Boakye said the operation of tertiary education institutions should be geared towards the building of the human capital for national development.

He urged the state to support and partner tertiary institutions to develop research and programmes in line with the national development needs.

Dr Boakye urged tertiary institutions to provide career guidance for their students to know what they could gain from their course of study.

Prof. Mamudu Akudugu, National President of the University Teachers Association of Ghana (UTAG), said the state should recognise the universities as national stakeholders in development and engage them in their policy formulation and development plans.

He said the expertise of universities were not properly utilised by governments in their activities.

Prof. Nana Akua Anyidoho, a consultant on the policy dialogue, urged public universities to reduce dependence on government subvention through increasing their internally generated funds.

“Public universities should promote the capacity of their university leadership to meet the challenges of the time,” she added.

Emerita Prof. Takyiwaa Manuh, Chairperson, GAAS Project Management Committee, said the project examined the past, present and future reforms in the higher education sector and offered a platform for open and objective discussions.

She said at the end of the project, an international conference would be held to share the findings with local and international stakeholders to learn from comparative experiences.

Related articles

ICU-Ghana urges workers to work hard towards full economic recovery

Mr Morgan Ayawine, General Secretary of the Industrial and Commercial Workers' Union (ICU) in Ghana, has encouraged workers...

Monaco condemn ‘unacceptable’ Singo racist abuse

The goalkeeper required 10 staples to close a cut in his face after being caught by Singo's boot when the...

Nunez scores as Liverpool sink Southampton cup hopes

Nunez ended his six-game barren run as he and Harvey Elliott scored to give Liverpool firm control in...

Akatsi South: Two young men found dead with body parts removed at Klokpui

Two unidentified young men believed to be of Fulani extraction have been found dead at Klokpui, a farming...