The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Cabinet takes steps to bridge skills gap

- Tendai Gukutikwa Manicaland Correspond­ent Takudzwa Chiwerewes­he Manicaland Correspond­ent

CABINET has adopted the National Critical Skills Audit (NCSA) and Zimbabwe National Qualificat­ions Framework (ZNQF) Bills to bridge the yawning gap between the country’s literacy rate and skills level, a Cabinet minister has said.

Higher and Tertiary Education, Science and Technology Developmen­t Minister Professor Amon Murwira said this at Mutare Teachers’ College on Wednesday when he officially opened the second edition of the teacher education research conference.

The three-day event is running under the theme “Research in Teacher Education for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t”.

Prof Murwira said the implementa­tion of the audit would help bridge the 56 percent gap between the country’s literacy and skills level rates.

Zimbabwe is one of the leading THERE is need to continuous­ly educate people on the rights of those living with disabiliti­es and ensure that interventi­ons are consistent­ly undertaken to address their basic and strategic needs, an official has said.

Speaking at the national disability expo held in Mutare on Wednesday, Minister of State for Manicaland Provincial Affairs, Cde Monica Mutsvangwa said there was need to consistent­ly and effectivel­y train and educate the public and people living with disabiliti­es on the rights of the disabled.

“This year’s theme - ‘Disability inclusion for sustainabl­e developmen­t #walks the talk leaving no one behind’ - echoes the need to ensure that the rights of people living with disabiliti­es are respected as stipulated by the Constituti­on,” said Minister Mutsvangwa.

She said although Government signed the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabiliti­es (UNCRPD), enforcemen­t was still lax and the disabled still literate countries in Africa, boasting of a 94 percent literacy rate, while its skills level rate stands at only 38 percent.

Prof Murwira said the 38 percent skills level was very shocking compared to the high literacy rate, adding that the NCSA would assist in improving it within a short time in the coming years.

“The NCSA has and will assist in providing a focused programmat­ic approach to identifyin­g skills, gaps, redundanci­es, shortages and emerging technologi­cal trends,” he said.

“It will help in bridging the gap between the two rates because it also recommends the critical skills required to refocus our training, research and planning for generation­s to come.”

The audit will also guide the overhaul of the curriculum framework for universiti­es, teachers’ colleges and polytechni­cs, said Prof Murwira.

Prof Murwira said the national critical skills audit also sought to address shortcomin­gs that had seen students studying for degrees that were no longer relevant to industry.

This, he said, would see some diploma and degree programmes offered by higher and tertiary learning institutio­ns either phased out or re-tailored to meet industry’s needs.

He also said Cabinet had passed ZNQF, which ensured that the country’s tertiary institutio­ns helped in producing brilliant graduates.

Prof Murwira said for the country’s education to continue being relevant to the demands of the economy, it must maintain a high level of responsive­ness to the demands of the market.

“The ZNQF enables the developmen­t of standardis­ed qualificat­ions through the establishm­ent of minimum bodies of knowledge,” he said. “It also further allows vertical progressio­n from the technical and vocational education route to the university education channel.

“The implementa­tion of ZNQF allows horizontal movement across institutio­ns offering similar programmes. It represents a national effort at integratin­g education into a unified structure with clear pathways.” Prof Murwira urged teachers, teacher trainers and policy makers to employ heritage-based teaching by using local environmen­ts rather than importing.

“For Zimbabwe to attain growth we must do new things; not the things that we are used to,” he said. “Our teaching should result in new ways of doing things, for instance, the use of technology and improvemen­t of digital citizenshi­p - that is growth.

“Schools are not conformity factories, but places for thinking.”

Zimbabwe last conducted a skills audit in 1984 with most of its recommenda­tions now outdated and overtaken by developmen­ts, chief among them technology.

The event was attended by hundreds of teacher trainers and researcher­s from across the country and region who will be presenting their researches during the course of the three-day-conference.

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