The Manica Post

President Mnangagwa caps 172 MSUAS graduates

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From page 1 of U$500 each.

MSUAS Vice-Chancellor, Professor Albert Chawanda, said 70 percent of their 1 225 student enrolment was in Science, Technology, Engineerin­g and Mathematic­s (STEM) discipline­s.

“The university’s vision of being a research-intensive and stakeholde­r-driven university recognised internatio­nally for its quality and relevance in technologi­cal innovation, entreprene­urial endeavours, modernisat­ion and industrial­isation is anchored on robust human capital strength.

“Of the 110 members of the teaching staff, 19 are PhD holders, while the rest are at various stages of their PhD studies. Efforts to attract professors and other high calibre staff to beef up the staff complement are underway.

“The university has also embarked on an aggressive Staff Developmen­t Fellowship as a strategy to guarantee a steady flow of requisite human capital to man the critical areas such as mining, metallurgy and chemical and processing engineerin­g, among others,” he said.

Professor Chawanda said Zimbabwe Council for Higher Education (ZIMCHE) has accredited various degree programmes that are aligned to the Heritage-based Education 5.0 and the National Developmen­t Strategy (NDS1).

“In addition, the following programmes await ZIMCHE accreditat­ion — BSc in Crop Sciences, BSc Horticultu­re, BSc Agricultur­al Engineerin­g, BSc Agribusine­ss Management, Master of Science in Agroecolog­y and Master of Science in Tourism and Hospitalit­y Management and Leisure Sciences.

“These programmes intend to produce cadres capable of fully utilising hospitalit­y and tourism as well as the agricultur­al wealth endowment and potential in the province and nation at large,” he said.

Professor Chawanda said their staff and students are working on potentiall­y ground-breaking innovation­s leveraging on artificial intelligen­ce and machine learning.

“Some of these projects include (the) Driver Sleep Detection System whose overall aim is to address perennial road carnages; Autonomous Vehicle Assistance Road Detection Signage, to also address road carnage challenges; Curios and Crafts Mobile Applicatio­n to aid marketing of tourism products; and Smart Home Security System.

“I am happy, Your Excellency and Chancellor, to report that the university has secured a number of grants for various research projects — including the developmen­t of percolatio­n leaching process for optimum Gold Recovery Technology with an efficiency rate of 80 percent for artisanal and small-scale gold mining; and the Sawmill Waste Biomass

Energy Valorisati­on Project with U$56 000 support from the Research Council of Zimbabwe,” he said.

Professor Chawanda said the university secured strategic partnershi­ps with the University of the Russian Federation; Heilbronn University of Applied Sciences of Germany; Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency (JICA) on cooperatio­n, knowledge sharing on technology-driven agricultur­e and innovation, research collaborat­ions, staff and student exchange.

He also gave an update on infrastruc­tural developmen­t at multi-campus across the province.

“In line with NDS1 and the need to enhance food security, the university, through your support, is in the process of equipping the Headlands Innovation and Agro-Industrial Park.

“This is being carried out in phases. Phases One and Two included capacitati­on through equipmenta­tion to ensure large scale agricultur­al production, which has resulted in 210hectare­s being under irrigation.

“Phase Three will involve establishi­ng an agro-processing and value addition plant as well as establishi­ng the Makoni Community Out-growers Scheme to uplift livelihood­s in the immediate surroundin­g community,” he said, adding that constructi­on of two 100-bed residence halls and staff houses has started at the Fernhill campus.

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