Tuesday, August 13, 2013

CHINESE QI LIN upgrading Kenyan Polytechnics

. Colleges facelift shifts focus to technical skills//// BY MARGARETTA WA GACHERU Published in Daily Nation: The Springboard March 11, 2013//// In the past few months, President Mwai Kibaki has launched 15 new public universities, all with a view to achieving the goal set in Vision 2030. Yet the fact that all the 15 came into being as a result of upgrading colleges and polytechnics has generated mixed feelings among a number of educationists and education-loving Kenyans. Some have questioned the wisdom of such a rapid shift at the institutional level. They wonder whether there will be sufficient faculty to teach these new burgeoning learning institutions. But numbers are not the only issue being raised. Will the quality of education be diluted, now that the focus seems to be more on quantity than quality? The other question being asked relates not so much to quality as to the learning experience. Do Kenyans need more academic learning, which is what universities normally offer, or does the country need more technically qualified youth equipped with practical skills — the sort that were previously being taught at the polytechnics and colleges that are now part of the university system? Some critics will say that question is a no-brainer since universities tend to turn out prospective white collar workers, while Kenya’s more urgent need is a technically-skilled workforce equipped to start up their own small businesses. Fortunately, the Ministry of Higher Education has not forgotten about vocational training for Kenyans despite the obsession with expansion of the university system. A whole slew of new vocational training institutes are being established through an agreement signed by the governments of Kenya and China to upgrade rural youth polytechnics to the rank of technical training institutes (TTI). From Bungoma, Kakamega, and Kisii to Meru, Machakos, Muranga, and the Rift Valley, the Kenya-China Technical Vocational Education Training programme (TVET) has been equipping rural polytechnics with machines and trainers contracted through the Chinese firm, Avic International — the same engineering company that is constructing the new Terminal Four at Jomo Kenyatta International Airport in Nairobi and supplying fire-fighting equipment to the National Youth Service. “So far, we’ve been helping the ministry to establish 10 new technical training centres all across Kenya,” says Qi Lin, the project manager, who has just completed the first phase of training Kenyan instructors in operating machinery brought in from China. The trainee instructors came from 10 technical training institutes, nine of which were recently upgraded from youth polytechnics. They include Bushangala TTI and Shamberere TTI in Kakamega County, Kisiwa TTI and Matili TTI in Bungoma County, Wote TTI in Machakos, Kirua TTI in Meru, Keroka TTI in Kisii, Murang’a TTI, and Rift Valley Institute of Science and Technology in Nakuru. “Once we have installed all the machines and trained the Kenyan instructors, we’ll move on to Phase Two of the project, where we will conduct similar installation and training in 40 new vocational training institutes,” adds Lin, who has been in Kenya since 2010, overseeing the $20 million (about Sh1.7 billion) project. Having hit the ground running since arrival, Lin has clocked thousands of kilometres travelling by road to vet and select 10 local polytechnics (out of the 20 suggested by the Ministry of Higher Education) and 24 best qualified instructors in the fields of mechanical and electrical engineering to benefit from the project. The instructors are trained both in China and Kenya on how to operate the new machines. It is a major technology transfer project and the 28-year-old aeronautical engineer has overseen the importation and installation of 153 container-loads of three different types of machines meant not only for the training of qualified Kenyan technicians, but also to upgrade Kenya’s manufacturing sector. A portion of the machines have already filled electrical and electronic labs. Others are still being installed in mechanical engineering departments//// A whole slew of new vocational training institutes are being established through an agreement signed by the governments of Kenya and China Colleges facelift shifts focus to technical skills SPECIAL REPORT So far, we’ve been helping the ministry to establish 10 new technical training centres all across Kenya Qi Lin, the project manager of the Kenya- China rural polytechnics upgrade// CONTINUED ON PAGE 2

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