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Learning To Compete: Education, Training & Enterprise in Ghana, Kenya & South Africa. Education Research Paper.

Authors :
Department for International Development, London (England).
Afenyadu, Dela
King, Kenneth
McGrath, Simon
Oketch, Henry
Rogerson, Christian
Visser, Kobus
Publication Year :
2001

Abstract

A multinational, multidisciplinary team examined the impact of globalization on education, training, and small and medium sized enterprise development in Ghana, Kenya, and South Africa. The study focused on the following issues: developing a learner-led competitiveness approach; building learning enterprises; education for microenterprises and macroeconomic growth; and training for self-employment and competitiveness. The study documented the importance of learning-led competitiveness and identified obstacles to development of learning enterprises in all three countries. The following are among the 12 recommendations offered to national governments and international agencies with development concerns: (1) insert learning-led competitiveness into development debates; (2) understand the implications of globalization better; (3) address the range of barriers to development of learning enterprises; (4) consider interenterprise linkages and the role of learning therein; (5) place learning-led competitiveness at the heart of small enterprise development policy; (6) broaden the universal primary education vision; (7) construct a curriculum for competitiveness; (8) improve public training's ability to support competitive self-employment; (9) empower training providers to be more market responsive; and (10) emphasize skills transfer from large to small firms. (The bibliography lists 139 references. Brief profiles and addresses of the research team members and a list of project papers are appended.) (MN)

Details

Language :
English
ISBN :
978-1-86192-314-1
ISBNs :
978-1-86192-314-1
Database :
ERIC
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
ED458418
Document Type :
Reports - Research