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Danida Development Days 8 - 9 June 2009. 2. PRESENTATION OUTLINE. The Object of COTVETSpecific FunctionsOur GoalFormal Public TVET Institutes in GhanaInformal Apprentice Training National TVET Qualifications FrameworkRecognition of Prior LearningSkills Development Fund Conclusion.
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1. Danida Development Days 8 - 9 June 2009 1 COUNCIL FOR TECHNICAL AND VOCATIONAL EDUCATION AND TRAINING (COTVET), GHANA
PRESENTATION BY
DANIEL BAFFOUR-AWUAH, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
AT DANIDA DEVELOPMENT DAYS, COPENHAGEN
8 – 9 JUNE 2009
2. Danida Development Days 8 - 9 June 2009 2 PRESENTATION OUTLINE The Object of COTVET
Specific Functions
Our Goal
Formal Public TVET Institutes in Ghana
Informal Apprentice Training
National TVET Qualifications Framework
Recognition of Prior Learning
Skills Development Fund
Conclusion
3. Danida Development Days 8 - 9 June 2009 3 OBJECT OF THE COUNCIL The COTVET ACT (Act 718, 2006) was passed with the object to co-ordinate and oversee all aspects of technical and vocational education and training in the country.
4. Danida Development Days 8 - 9 June 2009 4 SPECIFIC FUNCTIONS Formulate national policies for skills development across the broad spectrum of pre-tertiary and tertiary education, formal informal and non-formal;
Co-ordinate, harmonize and supervise the activities of private and public providers of technical and vocational education and training, including the informal sector
5. Danida Development Days 8 - 9 June 2009 5 SPECIF FUNCTIONS CONTINUED Rationalize the assessment and certification system in technical and vocational education and training
Take measures to ensure quality in delivery of and equity in access to technical and vocational education and training
Maintain a national database on technical, vocational education and training
6. Danida Development Days 8 - 9 June 2009 6 SPECIF FUNCTIONS CONTINUED Facilitate research and development in the technical and vocational education and training system;
Source funding to support technical and vocational education and training activities
Facilitate collaboration between training providers and industry to promote
demand driven curriculum development and placement, and
national internship programmes
7. Danida Development Days 8 - 9 June 2009 7 SPECIF FUNCTIONS CONTINUED Promote co-operation with international agencies and development partners;
Issue annual reports on the state of skills development in the country;
Advise Government on all matters related to the management and improvement of the technical and vocational education and training system
8. Danida Development Days 8 - 9 June 2009 8 OUR GOAL To ensure that the unemployed particularly the youth are given competitive, employable and entrepreneurial skills nationally and globally within the formal and informal sectors.
To ensure that graduates coming out of our formal, informal and non-formal TVET institutions are endowed with employable and entrepreneurial skills.
9. Danida Development Days 8 - 9 June 2009 9
10. FORMAL PUBLIC TVET INSTITUTIONS Danida Development Days 8 - 9 June 2009 10
11. INFORMAL APPRENTICE TRAINING IN GHANA Informal apprenticeship training remains the largest provider of skills and is responsible for some 80-90% of all basic skills training in Ghana, compared to 5-10% from public training institutions and 10-15% from NGO for-profit and non-profit providers Danida Development Days 8 - 9 June 2009 11
12. INFORMAL APPRENTICE TRAINING Labor force data for Ghana in 2000 shows that there were 207,047 economically active persons (15 years and older) in apprenticeship training (GSS - Ghana Statistical Service, 2005),
NVTI estimates there to be a much higher number than this; ‘not less than 500,000’ (NVTI Director)
A senior member of the 2002 Anamuah-Mensah group indicated ‘no one in Ghana knows how many apprentices there are’ Danida Development Days 8 - 9 June 2009 12
13. INFORMAL APPRENTICE TRAINING (CURRENT SITUATION) Currently, about one of every three youth in the 20-30 age group has experience as an apprentice, compared to one in four youth fifteen years ago. The percentage of young women doing an apprenticeship has doubled in the last fifteen years (World Bank, 2008a). Danida Development Days 8 - 9 June 2009 13
14. EDUCATIONAL FRAGMENTATION
Source, Palmer and Ahadzi Danida Development Days 8 - 9 June 2009 14
15. RELEVANCE INFORMAL APPRENTICE TRAINING Work based and practical, close link between training and production
Allows for a gradual building up of informal enterprise network (eg suppliers, customers etc)
More effective than formal pre-employment training
Offers possibility of finding employment with their masters after graduation
Danida Development Days 8 - 9 June 2009 15
16. QUALITY OF INFORMAL APPRENTICE TRAINING Finds it difficult to connect to technological advances
Delivers training in enterprise of varying quality
Provides trainees with little, if any theoretical understanding of the on-the-job process they learn
Training-production balance is biased towards production Danida Development Days 8 - 9 June 2009 16
17. FUNDING OF INFORMAL APPRENTICE TRAINING Cost borne by apprentice and family members
Made up of two types, commitment and graduation fees, paid at the start and graduation respectively
Some trades require that the apprentices bring certain items before they start the training (eg carpentry {tool box}, dress making {own machine)
Masters provide small amount on daily basis to cover feeding and sometimes transportation (chop money) Danida Development Days 8 - 9 June 2009 17
18. COSTING OF INFORMAL APPRENTICE TRAINING IN URBAN AREAS Danida Development Days 8 - 9 June 2009 18
19. Danida Development Days 8 - 9 June 2009 19 NATIONAL TVET QUALIFICATIONS FRAMEWORK
20. Danida Development Days 8 - 9 June 2009 20 NATIONAL TVET QUALIFICATIONS FRAMEWORK (Continued)
21. RECOGNITION OF PRIOR LEARNING (RPL) The acknowledgement through EVALUATION of a person’s skills and knowledge acquired through previous training, work or life experience, which may be used to grant credit in a unit standard” - MQA
Danida Development Days 8 - 9 June 2009 21
22. Danida Development Days 8 - 9 June 2009 22 SKILLS DEVELOPMENT FUND The SDF is a challenge fund catering for the skills needs of the formal as well as the informal sector. It is being made available for pre-employment initiatives as well as initiatives addressing the needs of continuous skill upgrading.
23. PURPOSE OF THE SKILLS DEVELOPMENT FUND As a response to the private sector’s call for an adequately qualified labour force and
Secondly, the urgency of providing new entrants to the labour market with gainful, employable skills.
Danida Development Days 8 - 9 June 2009 23
24. BUDGET: SKILLS DEV FUND Danida Development Days 8 - 9 June 2009 24
25. SDF SUPPORT TO INFORMAL APPRENTICE TRAINING Orientation of master craft persons in improved pedagogies and entrepreneurial
Payment of commitment fee for the rural poor in selected priority sectors
Training materials for on the job training
Start up kits
Improve the perception of TVET
Improve access
Improve quality of delivery
Cost sharing with parents Danida Development Days 8 - 9 June 2009 25
26. Danida Development Days 8 - 9 June 2009 26 CONCLUSION Highest commitment from Government, economic operators and local trade associations, parents
Adequate resources
Synergies between ongoing projects and programmes
Highly motivated staff