Vuk'uzenzele

Specialise­d artisan centre offers five in-demand trades

- More Matshediso

Tshwane South Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) College at Pretoria West Campus is the first in South Africa to have five specialist trades for artisanal skills.

This is according to Deputy Minister of Higher Education, Science and Innovation Buti Manamela who recently opened the Gandhi-Mandela Centre of Specialisa­tion for Artisan Skills at the college.

The centre offers mechanical fitting, millwright, electrical, boilermake­r, and fitting and turning courses.

Deputy Minister Manamela says centres of specialisa­tion are well positioned to prepare students for the workplace, or for self-employment, by ensuring they are taught the skills employers need. The Gandhi-Mandela Centre of Specialisa­tion for Artisanal Skills is one of the 30 centres that will be rolled out across the country.

The centre was named after India's civil right's leader Mahatma Gandhi and South Africa's former President Nelson Mandela. The two countries signed a Memorandum of Understand­ing (MOU) in 2018 to set up the Gandhi-Mandela Centre of Specialisa­tion for Artisanal Skills in South

Africa.

In 2018, the department announced it intended to launch 26 centres of specialisa­tion, prioritisi­ng 13 occupation­al trades that are in high demand to curb the shortage of trade skills, and to reduce unemployme­nt and poverty.

“The centres of specialisa­tion are located at 19 TVET colleges across the country. They were provided with resources to upgrade their workshops and equipment to deliver effectivel­y on these much-needed skills,” he says.

Through the National Skills Fund, the department allocated R150-million to fund the initial set-up costs. The government of India injected R48-million worth of equipment and tools as part of the MOU it signed with the South Africa in 2018.

“This investment has enabled us to increase the number of centres of specialisa­tion from the 26 initially planned, to 30,”says Minister Manamela.

Daniel Ramnarain (24) is an apprentice mechanical fitter at the college and is one of the first students to use the world-class equipment.

“I have completed my phase 1 assessment. I am currently working as part of my apprentice­ship, and this prepares me for the work environmen­t, ” he says.

Ramnarain is currently working at Matimba

Power Station in Lephalale Limpopo as a trainee apprentice.

He still has to complete phase 2 and 3 of the course, and pass a trade test, before he graduates.

“The centre teaches us about using machines and strategies to make production faster,” he says.

Ramnarain plans to further his studies and become a mechanical engineer. “I would like to get as much work experience as possible and open my own business,” he says.

 ?? ?? Daniel Ramnarain is an apprentice mechanical fitter at the new Gandhi-Mandela Centre of Specialisa­tion for Artisan Skills at Tshwane South TVET College.
Daniel Ramnarain is an apprentice mechanical fitter at the new Gandhi-Mandela Centre of Specialisa­tion for Artisan Skills at Tshwane South TVET College.

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