Showing posts with label YOUTH. Show all posts
Showing posts with label YOUTH. Show all posts

Friday, November 16, 2012

Beyond Your Certificate- What can you Do?




Do you know that “Job readiness” is lacking in Nigeria, Kenya and Egypt?
Do you know that Sectors that drive GDP growth do not create the most jobs?
Do you know that The informal sector represents more than 80% of total employment in sub-Saharan Africa? (Mo Ibrahim Fact 2012)

Do you also know that in many countries, the most educated people are the least employed? thus, what are you doing to alleviate yourself? “The demands of leadership have changed. The highest levels of leadership require mastery of a new task: job creation” “Job creation is the new currency of all world leaders”(Clifton, J 2011)

Join the discussion and learn the Step by step guide in creating a successful and profitable business around your passion. Entrepreneurship is one of the tools that can help curb the issue of unemployment in our nation. As an author rightly said " I don't want to be a passenger in my own life time", We have to take charge of our own time.

More so, the seminar will create a platform for Networking and mentorship. This will avail youth the opportunity to meet people who are thriving in their own business and seek their opinions.

Where will you be this Sunday November 18th 2012?

Don't miss this opportunity.

 

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Youth education and the future of Africa



"Every man who knows how to read has it in his power to magnify himself, to multiply the ways in which he exists, to make his life full, significant and interesting" - Aldous Huxley

The 21st century has shown that without education, a man is incomplete as Education is the bedrock of every society.  Whether formal or informal education, the society thrives on learning and dissemination of information.  Moreso, Education is widely accepted as a leading instrument for fostering economic growth and development in a globalised world. For Africa, where growth is essential, and if the continent is to climb out of poverty, education is particularly important.

In 2004, it was estimated that 38 million children in Sub-Saharan Africa had never been to school. As a result they have been deprived of experiences integral to full physical, social and emotional development. (http://www.gaps.org.au/activities/36-education/71-education_2state).  According to the Mo Ibrahim Foundation facts and figures on African Youth (2012), Africa is the only continent with a significantly growing youth population. In less than three generations, 41% of the world’s youth will be African. By 2035, Africa’s labour force will be larger than China’s. On the continent, too many African young people are neither employed, nor studying, nor looking for a job. Moreso, the report states that literacy is growing but Africa still lags behind the rest of the world. Current African educational levels are lower than China’s and India’s and Only 2/3 of students progress from primary to secondary education in Africa while the Youth unemployment increases with education level in Africa.

In Nigeria, Nearly 9 million primary school-age children are out of school in Nigeria (Mo Ibrahim facts and figures 2012). The class strength in a typical public primary and secondary institution is over 60 with inadequate infrastructure to meet the needs of the students. In addition, stiffing government policies affect the growth of education. In Benin, Tanzania, Cameroon, and Madagascar, governments supervise many aspects of universities’ operations. In Benin and Tanzania, the government appoints senior university managers. In Cameroon, the Minister of Education retains supervisory authority over universities. The Ministry of Education in Madagascar appoints all faculty members, sets salaries, and determines working conditions, which results in close links between faculty members and the political system.

Furthermore, the poor quality of education in most African country is generating poverty and inequality and undermining the opportunity we have to build as a continent. There is a wide gap between the rich who can afford quality education at a high cost to the poor children who have to struggle to attend and gain from the public educational institutions that are of questionable standard.  Education in most developing African nations still falls short of standard quality compared to that of developed nations. Tertiary educations in most African nations are for those who can afford them. Eventually if the student is able to graduate, he is faced with the problem of getting a job in an already congested labour market. Recently in Nigeria, over 200,000 youth completed the mandatory Nation Youth Service and are thrown into the labour market where there certificate holds no value.

To improve education in Africa, I believe that policy makers should embark on educational paradigm shift that will equip the youth with entrepreneurial skills and critical thinking to be self-reliant. More so, Education policies that will favour the general mass should be created and implemented, and ensure that every child/youth has opportunity to get a formal education. Needed and suitable Infrastructures should be put in place and made available to students.

As various African leaders, intellectuals and youth gather at the 2012 Mo Ibrahim Forum in Dakar to discuss on African Youth- Fulfilling the potential, I hope that our policy makers will take decisions that will be of great benefit to the youth and Africa as a continent.

In Conclusion, “The doors we open and close each day decide the lives we live”.  ~Flora Whittemore




Thursday, October 18, 2012

UNESCO report highlights need for youth skills development


The 10th edition of UNESCO Education For All Global Monitoring Report launched yesterday states the urgent need for action in support of skills development for young people .

The Report titled "Youth, Skills and the World of Work" was launched by the UNESCO Commission in partnership with ILO, UNDP and UN. It was held yesterday at the Youth Affairs and Skills Development Ministry with Youth Affairs and Skills Development Minister Dullas Alahapperuma as Chief Guest. The report shows how vital it is to ensure that all young people have the skills they need to prosper. However, across the world there is a lost generation of 200 million young people who are leaving school without the skills they need. Many are living in urban poverty or in remote rural communities and young women in particular are unemployed or working for low pay. They need to be given a second chance to achieve their potential.

The report monitors education for all goals across more than 200 countries and territories and it shows that progress is stalling just when increased urgency should be fueling a final push towards the 2015 deadline.
The report identifies the ten most important steps that should be taken to develop youth skills. According to the report, it is necessary to provide second -chance education for those with or no foundation skills, tackle the barriers that limit access to lower secondary school, make upper secondary education more accessible to the disadvantaged and improve its relevance to work, give poor urban youth access to skills training for better jobs, aim policies and programmes at youth in deprived rural areas, link skills training with social protection for the poorest youth, prioritize the training needs of disadvantaged young women, harness the potential of technology to enhance opportunities for young people, improve planning by restrengthening data collection and coordination of skills programmes and mobilize additional funding from diverse sources dedicated to the training needs of disadvantaged youth.

WORLD POPULATION DAY: “FAMILY PLANNING IS A HUMAN RIGHT”

WORLD ASSEMBLY OF YOUTH PRESS RELEASE WORLD POPULATION DAY: “FAMILY PLANNING IS A HUMAN RIGHT” Globally, the population has doubled sinc...