The Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFund) has inaugurated three ad hoc committees with the task of upscaling skills development in the country as well as strengthening the Fund’s intervention activities.
The Committee included: Committee on operationalisation of equipment upgrade in workshops and laboratories for universities, polytechnics and colleges of education (technical).
The other committees are: Committee on assessment/review of TETFund centres of excellence and Committee on operationalisation of skills development special intervention.
Speaking at the inauguration of the committee members, the Executive Secretary of TETFund, Sonny Echono, charged the committees to ensure that the various skills facilities were put to use for effective operations.
Echono noted that the promotion of skills development was one of the priority areas of government to address the prevailing challenges of youth unemployment and prevalence of poverty in our society.
He commended the National Board for Technical Education (NBTE) for making deliberate efforts to improve skill development in Nigerian polytechnics by formalising the informal apprenticeship training through The National Skills Qualification framework (NSOF).
He added that in consonance with the Fund’s commitment to the promotion of skills development, provision was made for skills development programmes in Polytechnics under the Fund’s Special Interventions.
In line with the Fund’s commitment to deepen its content-based interventions and facilitate the institutionalisation of research and development, concerted efforts are being made to identify more innovative ways to enhance research capacities of our beneficiary institutions and promote skills development for our teeming youths.
“Modern economic development process continues to depend on increased productivity arising from purposeful and problem-solving research. It has been acknowledged that no society can succeed without adequate research infrastructure facilities to support innovative research for solving societal problems.
“The National Survey funded by the fund in 2022 to assess the availability, functionality and compatibility of all existing research facilities across the beneficiary institutions to contemporary requirements and global best practices, reveals that most of the equipment in the laboratories and workshops of our beneficiary institutions are obsolete, inadequate or underutilised.
“Notably, improving and expanding Nigeria’s R&D infrastructure and facilities are essential if we are to raise the level of productivity and move the country to a knowledge-based economy,” he said.
Echono explained that the Fund made provision under the 2024 intervention for the upgrade of the equipment in Workshops and Laboratories for Universities, Polytechnics and Colleges of Education (Technical).
According to him, to ensure effective implementation of the intervention, the Fund constituted an Advisory Committee chaired by Prof. Hayward Babale to advise on the operationalisation of the upgrade of equipment in Workshop and Laboratories of the institutions.
He said the committee was tasked with the reference of assessing the state of workshops and Laboratories in target institutions including equipment and other facilities in use.
On the Committee on assessment/review of TETFund centres of excellence, Echono said the Fund under the 2024 Intervention made provision for the upgrade of the most performing Centres.
“Consequently, the Fund considered it expedient to constitute an Ad hoc Committee chaired by Prof. Oyewale Tomori to assess and review the performance and progress of the Centres in the Universities in line with their specific mandate.
“The Terms of Reference for the Committee include assessing performance of the existing TETFund Centres of Excellence hosted in universities based on their given mandates and areas of specialisation, among others.
The TETFund boss also said that the Fund was committed to the promotion of skills development, hence provision was made for skills development programmes in Polytechnics under the Fund’s Special Interventions.
He said consequent upon this, the Fund constituted an advisory Committee chaired by Prof. Idris Bugaje, the Executive Secretary of NBTE to advise on the modalities for the operationalisation of the Skills Development Special Intervention.
He charged the Committee to assess the present state of Skills Development Programmes in Polytechnics based on the entrepreneurship and skills development policy of the government.
He also urged the committee to harvest and determine skills development priorities gathering of complementary resources, expertise needed for technical development and industrial growth.
Echono, however, commended President Bola Tinubu for approving the 2024 Intervention budget of the Fund in which these activities were encapsulated.
He, therefore, tasked the committee to submit their reports within six weeks from the day they were constituted for upward development of the country.
Responding, the Chairman, Committee on operationalisation of skills development special intervention, Prof. Idris Bugaje commended the fund for investing in skills development saying that this lies in the future of the youths.
“The three committees are very important because skills cut across all of them. In the past, polytechnics behaved like ivory towers doing what universities are doing. This is not right, we are complimentary to universities.
“We have specific roles to play and the role is the provision of skills. We must train our own and use them.
“Dangote invests in skills from India, Trans Sahara pipeline import skills and a whole others. We must not allow this, our equipment is not working so we must ensure we upgrade them, train our own and use them,” he said.
Intervention In Kwara Tertiary Institutions
The Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFund) has pledged to increase its intervention to tertiary institutions in the State.
Executive Secretary of TETFund, Arch. Sonny Echono made the promise when he received the Kwara State Governor, Abdulrahman Abdulrasaq, on a courtesy visit in Abuja yesterday.
He commended Kwara state for leading the north in education right from the Colonial period, which has been reflected even in the number of institutions in the state.
The TETFund executive secretary also pledged to help the state actualize its dream of converting some of the Colleges of Education in the state into Universities.
He said, “Kwara has been very useful to the country in providing institutions that train teachers from the basic level of education.
“On our end, we have introduced a new intervention line last year where we try to upgrade security facilities in our beneficiary institutions.
“We are doing something about it and Kwara will be featured in that equation. So I really want to appreciate His excellency for taking time to come,” he said.
Earlier, the governor said the visit was to seek for more TETfund assistance and also commend the Fund fund for its strides.
“In Kwara now, we are trying to convert all our colleges of education to universities so we need your assistance to do that.
“We have a challenge of security, water sanitation and all that but I think those are challenges we can work together to mitigate.
“Mainly, this visit is to say you are doing a good job and on behalf of the people and government of Kwara state we say thank you for the job you have done and we appreciate you.”
Speaking further on security, the governor commended the security organisation in Nigeria, saying that Kwara state has organised security architecture such that it includes safe school Projects, making sure it fence their schools.
“If you go across Nigeria today you will realize that most of our schools are not fenced. Things are catching up with us so we are doing the safe school project where at local government level we are putting up an early warning system.
“We are constantly checking those who are coming into the communities. Kwara is one of the safest states in Nigeria and if you go to Kwararafa, basically you feel relaxed,” he added.