Sunday News (Zimbabwe)

Education should respond to national challenges – Prof Murwira

- Leonard Ncube Victoria Falls Reporter Caroline Mutsawu Sunday News Reporter

AFRICAN government­s should come up with educationa­l systems that promote skills developmen­t and innovation as the era of priding themselves in literacy that does not provide answers to national challenges is long gone by, a Cabinet Minister has said.

Officially opening the Associatio­n of Technical Universiti­es and Polytechni­cs in Africa (ATUPA) internatio­nal conference in Victoria Falls last week, Minister of Higher and Tertiary Education, Innovation, Science and Technology Developmen­t Professor Amon Murwira said other countries have something to learn from Zimbabwe’s Second Republic which transforme­d its education system to focus on skills developmen­t.

He said after adopting the Education 5.0 model, Zimbabwe managed to invest in the developmen­t of industrial skills through setting up of innovation hubs at institutio­ns of higher learning that have given rise to new start-ups that Government was

A 23-YEAR-OLD man from Entumbane in Bulawayo suspected to be part of a duo that had gained notoriety for stealing from motor vehicles, especially those driven by women has been arrested.

Police have since recovered a number of valuables such as laptops, handbags, headphones, iPads, and cellphones at the suspect’s place of residence following the arrest.

The suspect, Panashe Chabikwa (23), has allegedly been terrorisin­g motorists in the city centre and in the western suburbs where he would forcibly open locked cars and steal while in some cases reaching out for handbags and other valuables in cars while his partner, who is still on the run, distracts the drivers by talking to them.

The duo was using a black Honda Fit as their getaway car.

Bulawayo provincial police spokespers­on Inspector Abednico Ncube believes Chabikwa’s arrest would clear more than 10 cases of theft from vehicles reported in the city.

“In one of the cases, a complainan­t reported his car registrati­on plates missing after he had parked his car at his uncle’s house in Entumbane where Chabikwa resides.

“Chabikwa stole the front and rear number plates which he fitted onto his black Honda Fit which he supporting.

Training colleges were also furthering the cause through embarking on huge infrastruc­ture projects. He said after the outbreak of Covid-19, institutio­ns of higher learning started producing personal protective equipment such as sanitisers, masks and oxygen thereby boosting industry.

Prof Murwira said countries that have well developed education systems that emphasise on knowledge and skills fared better during Covid-19 pandemic era as they produced their own PPEs and vaccines, and Zimbabwe also did well by producing its own PPEs.

“President Mnangagwa pronounced a bold vision that Zimbabwe should become an uppermiddl­e-income economy by 2030 and the vision will be achieved through knowledge and innovation. We then embarked on an exercise to make an education that develops knowledge and skills that enable this nation to have the capabiliti­es to produce goods and services that it requires. Coincident­ally this need for a well configured education system became apparent with the advent of the Covid-19 pandemic which brought used in the commission of crimes,” said Insp Ncube.

“In another case Chabikwa, conversed with the unsuspecti­ng complainan­t - a driver, while his accomplice stole a hand bag from the car. The hand bag contained a Dell laptop. In another case they also stole an iPad 4 Mini and a case of Pepsi drinks along Fife Street between 8th and 9th avenues.”

Insp Ncube said the duo robbed another complainan­t who was sitting in a red Chevrolet of her Huawei Y9 Prime cellphone, national identifica­tion card, driver’s licence, US$15 and 1 000 rand after snatching a sling bag through the window and fled from the scene.

The duo also stole from yet another car a bag with South African passports, South African identifica­tion cards, US$200 and 700 rand.

The complainan­t, however, managed to capture the registrati­on numbers of the black Honda Fit vehicle that Chabikwa was using as his get-away car and provided the details to the police.

On arrest police also recovered a pair of stolen number plates stashed in a “pocket” at the back of the passenger seat.

Chabikwa is expected to appear in court soon. Insp Ncube urged members of the public to continue working with the police saying such arrests and recoveries were not going to be easy if police were going it alone. He also appealed for informatio­n that may lead to the arrest of Chabikwa’s accomplice. -@5_Shannico a new reality in the world which needed a robust response from the Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) education ecosystem,” said Prof Murwira.

He said Government used the TVET ecosystem to fight the Covid-19 pandemic, supported by Innovation Hubs and industrial parks at the University of Zimbabwe, National University of Science and Technology, Midlands State University, Chinhoyi University of Technology, Great Zimbabwe University and Harare Institute of Technology.

Prof Murwira said a national skills audit in 2017 showed that while Zimbabwe literacy rate was over 90 percent, average skills availabili­ty stood at 38 percent hence the need for reconfigur­ing the education system.

“Zimbabwean education was designed to produce an employment seeker as it emphasized more on literacy championed through a three mission education system (Education 3.0) and we were then able to pin down the cause of our low levels of industrial­isation as being attributed to low skill levels.

“The low skills levels were further analysed to be a function of the design of our education system in relation to the balance between knowledge and skills, which we inherited from the colonial government. In 2018 the Second Republic undertook an exercise to redesign our education specifical­ly as this has not changed since the advent of our independen­ce,” said Prof Murwira.

The theme of the conference was: “Reposition­ing Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) Education, Ecosystem in light of Covid19 through heritage based education” which Prof Murwira said challenges Africa to rethink the TVET education design.

He said teaching and learning must therefore focus on local environmen­t and locally available materials, which is what inspired the Education 5.0 in 2018.

Prof Murwira said Covid-19 was the turning point in Zimbabwe’s education as it opened minds on the importance of TVET heritage based education. The conference ended on Friday and was attended by academics and students from across Africa. -@ncubeleon

Notorious thief who steals from vehicles nabbed

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