** High Priority **



Address by Minister of Higher Education and Training Dr Blade Nzimande

at COSATU Education and Skills Conference
 
Parktonian Hotel, Braamfontein
2 July 2009
 
COSATU General Secretary, Comrade Zwelinzima Vavi
Comrades and delegates, 
 
It is a profound honour for me to address this milestone conference and
to have the opportunity to engage with you on the crucial issue of
skills development in our country.
 
At the outset, I want to commend our revolutionary trade union
federation, COSATU, on taking the initiative to convene this summit and
elevating the important issue of skills development on its agenda. 
 
It is a welcome development that there will now be over-arching
co-ordination and attention from the federation on the issue of
education, training and skills development, rather than these matters
being dealt with only by the affiliate unions – important as this may
be. It is commendable that COSATU is able to examine its own policies
and strategies in this area with the determination to tackle our skills
crisis head-on.
 
It is also very necessary that we produce a full appraisal of our
current education, training and skills programme and needs, identify
weaknesses and failings, and make recommendations on how these can be
remedied. In short, we need a skills revolution.  
 
As the biggest and most powerful trade union federation in the country,
COSATU is a critical stakeholder in the national dialogue on matters of
the economy and in particular, issues related to the empowerment and
skilling of our workforce. I am therefore confident that this conference
will provide a comprehensive and valuable assessment of the challenges
and responses needed to transform the skills training system.
 
As the line-function representative responsible for government’s skills
development and training programme, it is especially significant and
helpful for me to have my comrades in COSATU in partnership to overcome
the immense challenges we face as a nation on these issues. 
 
Comrades, as you are aware, the Department of Education was split into
two following our momentous election victory in April. The rationale
behind this bold move to create dedicated ministries of Basic Education
and Higher Education and Training was to ensure that these two critical
segments of our education system receive greater attention and dedicated
focus from government.
 
It was also in recognition of the developmental challenges of our
country that the Department of Higher Education and Training was
conceptualised to focus on the provision of diverse and relevant
post-school educational and training opportunities for youth and adults,
and cater for the social, cultural and economic needs of South Africa.
 
Our strategic objective in the department is to accelerate the
transformation of the higher education and training landscape in line
with our overall developmental agenda. The setting up of such an
education and training system was envisaged in 1994 when the ANC
government first took power, but had never been taken to this level. 
 
The agenda we have now set out includes:
 
·         Improving access and success in higher education, with a
particular focus on black, women and poor students
·         A co-coordinated skills development strategy, informed by an
overarching industrial strategy, based on clear sectoral industrial
strategies, placing particular emphasis on scarce skills. This will
require re-focusing and possibly restructuring of the SETAs to be guided
by this overarching objective, rather than the other way round
·         Improving quality and capacity of the FET Colleges (rename
Vocational and Career Colleges), with a particular focus on artisans and
other scarce skills, and as primary delivery centres for Adult Education
and Training
·         Rebuilding a vibrant, expanded and quality college sector to
improve post-schooling options and access to skills for youth. A
complicated questi
on here relates to the resolution of re-opening
teacher training colleges? What does this mean? Does it mean colleges
separate from universities, or expanding delivery sites of university
schools of education in the form of dedicated teacher colleges?
Comrades, anumber of cross-cutting issues and perspectives that need
must be factored into the above, include the following:
·         At the heart of all this is also the implementation of the
ANC Manifesto, which essentially means that no deserving poor student
must be excluded from access to higher education
·         Rural higher education and skills for rural development
·         The nature of a developmental state that seeks to address the
class, national and gender contradictions in their interrelationship
·         How do we integrate the key streams of the Department of
Higher Education and Training without collapsing the particular
contribution of each into the others?
·         How do we creatively use funds in our hands for example the
National Skills Fund to advance these objectives, and what additional
resources are needed in line with the prioritization of education in
government’s policies?
·         Clearly the success of implementing our mandate in higher
education and training rests in improving the quality and outputs from
the school system. But at the same time we cannot wait for this and what
can be done with what we have now to improve access and success in
higher education and training
Earlier this week during the Education Budget vote in parliament, I
explained some of the findings of aministerial report on Post-compulsory
and Post-school Provision, which reflects a grim picture of our society.
According to the report, 2.8million of the 6.8million 18 to 24 year olds
in South Africa are neither in employment, education institutions or
workplace training. This figure of 41% of all our youth is attributable
to, amongst other things, very limited access into post-school education
and training opportunities, poor resources, the lack of financing and
the restricted availability of jobs.   
 
As the leading voice of the organised working class, COSATU has a
first-hand and deep understanding of our profound challenges regarding
unemployment and the difficulties facing unskilled workers. Millions of
our people experience daily hardships, bearing the brunt of the tough
economic climate. 
 
We therefore require a fundamental rethink of our skills development
strategyas well as the respective roles of, and relationships between,
Further Education and Training (FET) Colleges, Universities of
Technology, other universities, the National Skills Fund and the Sector
Education and Training Authorities.
 
This fundamental rethink requires that we have to think out of our
boxes if we are to development an overarching, highly integrated and
articulated system of higher education and training, but without at the
same time mechanically collapsing into each other the distinctive roles,
features, and contribution of each of the components of such a system
(colleges/universities of technology/other universities/SETAs). 
 
But it is clear that these pillars of our higher education and training
system can also not operate as silos. In this regard I am especially
concerned about the continuing “ivory tower” attitude of many
universities, reluctant to develop appropriate systems of articulation
with FETs and other schooling qualifications, for example the National
Vocational Certificate. 
 
Articulation can also not be left to individual choices of
universities, to cherry-pick on college programmes. It is clear to me
that an articulated system and standards needs to be centrally driven. 
 
I know that in raising this matter an accusation of wanting to lower
standards may be raised. Therefore we need to look at accreditation and
articulation in an all-rounded fashion, including matric exit standards,
FET/College standards as well as university requirement. In all this, we
need to be guided by the nee
d to create a high quality higher education
and training system that is responsive to our skills development needs.

Comrades, as I mentioned earlier, a refocusing and restructuring of the
SETA landscape is on the cards ahead of the proposed re-establishment in
April next year. In the meantime, the SETAs and all associated
institutions and legislation will relocate from the Department of Labour
to the Department of Higher Education and Training. 
 
While it is wrong to paint all the SETAs with one brush, there is
clearly unevenness in their performance. There is definitely a need for
an intensive assessment of the SETAs to ensure greater accountability,
improved employment of resources, better management of funds and
streamlining and alignment of their operations in order that they fulfil
their role as a central cog of our skills training and job creation
machinery. I will shortly be engaging the SETAs to examine these issues
and enhance their capacity to meet the skills needs of South Africa. 
 
There are some important questions we need to examine about the SETAs:
 
1.      Why were they named sector EDUCATION and training authorities,
if their primary focus is biased more towards workplace training to the
total exclusion of formal skills training in for instance the FETs,
universities of technology and other types of universities?
2.      Where does training start and where does it end? Isn’t there a
continuum between formal (academic) skills training to
internships/learnerships to ongoing workplace training to be duly
undertaken by employers in any case?
3.      What is workplace training and what forms of workplace training
take place: internships/learnerships from new graduates from FETs and
universities? Shouldn’t the SETAs also facilitate the placement and
effective training of these graduates?
4.      Do SETAs and the NSF not have a role to play in relation to
formal skills training in FETs/colleges/universities? This seems to be
happening but outside of a strategic and programmatic framework. What
should be the appropriate balance between NSF and SETA funds earmarked
for formal skills training in colleges and universities on the one hand,
and workplace training on the other? Would this balance not be
determined by the needs in each sector? Is it not possible that in one
sector there might be a need for more funding and support to formal
training in colleges and universities as a result of lack of throughput
of those basic qualifications from the formal education system; whilst
in other instances the need maybe greater in terms of creating
opportunities for placement of interns/learners; and yet in others a
more focused opportunities for (further and ongoing) workplace
training?
 
In April next year, National Skills Strategy Number Two is coming to an
end, coinciding with the renewal of the mandate of the SETAs. We hope
that this conference would help to guide us towards NSDF Three and the
kinds of transformation needed in the renewal of the mandate of the
SETAs. 
 
In light of these questions and challenges, there seems to be a need
for deeper engagement to assess our overall skills needs in the economy,
as well as in each economic sector, and the appropriate funding model
for our skills training system. The process of developing a national
skills development strategy needs to be informed by an overarching
industrial strategy. 
 
It is also however important that the existence of the SETAs should not
be a substitute to ongoing workplace training. We are concerned that
some employers simply regard their contribution to the SETAs as the
fulfilment of their obligations for ongoing workplace training. The
SETAs should be seen as just one of the tools for ongoing workplace
training.
 
It is also important for the federation to oversee effective deployment
of worker representatives onto the boards of the SETAs so that such that
this does not become co-option and access to benefits that go with being
members of the boards.  
 
This conference 
is therefore an important facet in kick-starting this
engagement. I am committed to continuing dialogue between government and
stakeholders, particularly the labour movement.
 
Comrades, it is clear that creating an integrated higher education and
training system is no easy feat. However through my department, I will
strive to have within the first half of our term in government, to have
the fundamentals in place to begin to deal with our vast skills backlog,
and education training challenges. By the end of the term of this
government we should have built a very strong foundation for such, and
also be able to realize some possible short term deliverables for the
sake of our youth, our workers, the unemployed and the poor of our
country.
 
I thank you.
 


 
 
Thembinkosi Josopu
Student Admissions & Advocacy Services
Department of Student Affairs
University of Cape Town
Level 3, Kramer Law building
Middle Campus
Rondebosch,7700
Tel :021-650-2429
Fax:021-650-4014
Cell:071-933-2177
 

There is nothing more noble than the people, more dignified, and more
intelligent than the people-President Sekou Toure


--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You are subscribed. This footer can help you.
Please POST your comments to [email protected] or reply to this 
message.
You can visit the group WEB SITE at 
http://groups.google.com/group/yclsa-eom-forum for different delivery options, 
pages, files and membership.
To UNSUBSCRIBE, please email [email protected] . You 
don't have to put anything in the "Subject:" field. You don't have to put 
anything in the message part. All you have to do is to send an e-mail to this 
address (repeat): [email protected] .
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to