Stabroek News

UG School of Business upbeat after first semester

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After we had spoken with Visiting Professor at the University of Guyana’s School of Enterprise, Business and Innovation (SEBI), Professor Leyland Lucas, and his support staff early last week, we headed across to the new facility created to house the School.

Stabroek Business had been told in an interview, months earlier, with the University’s Vice Chancellor, Professor Ivelaw Griffith, that much of the focus of SEBI would be on building a stronger ‘real world’ connection between the University and the business community, the thrust of his argument being that it made little sense having a University that was not really going anywhere in terms of helping to provide the skills needed to drive what has long been referred to as ‘the engine of growth,’ the private sector.

We had benefitted, as well, from an thorough earlier briefing from the Vice Chancellor, at a session that had also included SEBI’s Head, Professor Lucas, on the origins and purpose of SEBI and particular­ly on the role that local entreprene­urs and the wider business community had played in the conceptual­ization of the institutio­n and including arriving at a determinat­ion as to the particular role that it would play.

An earlier attempt had been made to create just such a link between the University of Guyana and the business community under the Vice Chancellor­ship of Professor Lawrence Carrington. The reasons for its failure to get very far are unclear though there is really no persuasive evidence that the private sector was, at the time, keen on a long-term relationsh­ip with UG.

SEBI is currently focused on the staging of its May 20-22 Inaugural Entreprene­urship Conference, its first excursion into the kind of public discourse that brings together the business and academic communitie­s as much as the students which, hopefully, will throw up ideas that can be applied across a wide spectrum of challenges, not least, those that have to do with helping to address some of the broader economic challenges facing the country.

The School’s ‘Call For Papers’ for the May forum, shared with the Stabroek Business by its Director of Communicat­ions and Corporate Relations, Rennie Chester, provides clear insights into the agenda. Numbered amongst the issues listed for discourse amongst participan­ts academics, business leaders, state-run institutio­ns and students at the forum are entreprene­urship and economic developmen­t; women’s empowermen­t through entreprene­urship; entreprene­urship and the informal sector; the role of micro, small and medium-sized enterprise­s in economic developmen­t.

Professor Lucas holds the view that the institutio­n’s role in providing a curriculum in discipline­s that would lead to a formal academic qualificat­ion should not be allowed to obscure its responsibi­lity to provide the sort of practical tuition directly related to enhancing entreprene­urial capabiliti­es in the business sector.

Across the way from Professor Lucas’ office a small group of students had been kept waiting in the SEBI building to engage us. Three of them symbolized what we had earlier been told were the real objectives of SEBI. Paul Warner, Sean Langevine and Amika Persaud have enrolled at SEBI in order to further refine their business acumen in preparatio­n for the task of enhancing the roles they already play in businesses. Warner and Persaud are already involved in the management of family businesses, Warner in the beverages sector and Amika Persaud in the gold-mining industry. Sean Langevine is a manager with the popular Oasis Café though he appears to be busying himself to embark on an entreprene­urial pursuit of his own in the future.

We had met earlier with Tracey Alves and Cassandra Karran, two seemingly keen and energetic profession­als who serve as Academic Advisors to SEBI and the School’s Administra­tive Officer, Tamika Profitt. Ms. Profitt’s job, Professor Lucas explained was to ensure a sense of administra­tive order. The role of the two academic advisors has to do with the intellectu­al welfare of the students. Meetings between prospectiv­e students and the academic advisors occur before students are enrolled, part of the purpose being to offer curriculum-related guidance and to help students respond to such challenges as they may encounter at the University.

We ended our visit on an upbeat note. There is evidence that (though still to a modest extent at this juncture) the public/private sector partnershi­p that underpins SEBI is working. It showed, particular­ly in the energetic responses of the three students that we interviewe­d to questions relating to the nexus between their experience­s at SEBI and their business ambitions. It appears to be a more than promising start.

 ??  ?? A class in session at the University of Guyana’s School of Enterprise, Business and Innovation.
A class in session at the University of Guyana’s School of Enterprise, Business and Innovation.
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