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Deputy Minister in charge of Tertiary Education, Samuel Okudzeto
Ablakwa, has said the first phase of the conversion of polytechnics into
technical universities, will take place in September this year, with
six polytechnics.
President John Mahama is expected to
name the six polytechnics that have satisfied the requirements to be
upgraded, at his state of the Nation Address to be delivered to
Parliament on Thursday, February 25.
Government has reiterated its commitment to convert polytechnics to technical universities.
The
Technical Committee set up to advice government on the conversion,
advised government the exercise must be done progressively to satisfy
the requirements of becoming a technical university.
Speaking before the Public Accounts
Committee of Parliament on Wednesday, the Deputy Minister of Education
in charge of tertiary, Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, confirmed to the
committee that in September, the polytechnics will be fully converted
into universities.
Mr. Ablakwa also defended the need for the gradual implementation of the phases.
According to him, Government could not
just upgrade polytechnics without assessing the varying levels of
infrastructure and capacity, hence the need for the implementation of
the conversion in phases.It will also be recalled that at a
stakeholders’ forum on January 6, 2015, participants unanimously agreed
that the conversion should not be done for all polytechnics at a
go, but in phases, based on an assessment of each polytechnic.
“…So the experts advised us against a
wholesale conversion, and they recommended that we should set up an
independent expert panel that will go round and assess all the 10
polytechnics and recommend to the national council for tertiary
education which of the polytechnics should qualify for the first phase
and those who have to be assisted to also come up to an appreciable
level to be converted in the next phase,” Mr Ablakwa explained.
He further assured that Government would
be working to support the remaining four polytechnics to meet the
conversion criteria to prevent them from being left behind.
“There is an inherent threat in this
conversion that if you don’t do it well and support others to come up,
the traffic will head in the direction of those who have been converted
and if you are not careful, you run the risk of killing other
polytechnics who don’t make it in the first phase of the conversion.”
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