Wednesday 26 August 2015

Top 3 benefits of promoting vocational education in Africa

Industries and governments in Africa seem to have woken up to the need of skilled labor – and this is why they’re aggressively promoting vocational education and training among their youth. To speed up the entire process, they’re increasingly joining hands with private companies that offer customized vocational education in Africa.


For long, there wasn’t robust infrastructure in place for the development of vocational education and training – but the landscape is gradually changing and paving way for a skilled Africa.


Herein this blog post, we’ll walk through the top 3 benefits of vocational education – here’re they:


#1 Vocational education makes you job-ready

Formal education that you receive in school, college or university is good – but it doesn’t have much connect with skills that you’d need to get a job. But vocational education in Africa has been designed to prepare youth for their choice of industries. Whether it is retail or automobile, insurance or telecom, you can take up a relevant course and enter the industry of your choice.


#2 Vocational education leads to consistent supply of skilled talent for the industry


Industries cannot survive unless supported by a large base of skilled talent. Businesses of all shapes and sizes in Africa have already begun to feel a shortage of technically oriented youth.

The solution lies in promoting vocational education among youth – parents and teachers have to look beyond formal education and encourage their kids and students to try their hands in vocational trades.


#3 It’s beneficial for the economy at large

The world is going to need a lot of skilled manpower in the coming years. Africa has to have a ready force of talented individuals if it is to compete in the global arena. For this, it needs to heavily invest in its infrastructure and run campaigns to reach out to the youth to convince them for pursuing vocationally oriented courses.

Vocational education in Africa needs to be revamped at a large scale – governments and private companies are doing their bit, but what is needed is a more focused approach and strategy.