Douglas I believe it is not just Uganda, it is the whole world when it
comes to issues of ICT. We in ICT industry have created this vast confusion
for ourselves because we do not have standard definitions for our vast
specialities within our vast industry. ICT is just as vast as Health or
Engineering or Law. These edge old industry have got well defined
professions within themselves. For example when we have a toothache we all
seek a dentist not a gynaecologist. This is something we all know so well
but when it comes to ICT; Man!! the people just through staff at you. They
wont care what course you did or what you call yourself; as long as it has
got anything to do with computers then you are the guy! This will continue
as long as we have no defined boundary. We go to university and learn a bit
of everything. Think about it; in Computer Science and Information
technology we would learn about 70-80% the same staff. This shows how
inadequately the two courses are not well differentiated (read defined). So
the employer will no care which course you did but what service you
provide. Now this is something you wont find in the health industry.

My take is that we need to properly define the different spheres that
comprise ICT. These should be replicated and reflected in our education
system and also our ICT POLICY

Kind regards
_______________________________________________
The Uganda Linux User Group: http://linux.or.ug

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