Source: Nation
Engineering students in public universities will have to repeat some subjects the industry regulator is dissatisfied with before they can graduate.
This is among the “mitigation measures”
the Engineering Board of Kenya (EBK) and the universities are discussing
to ensure the gaps in training as identified by the regulator are
addressed.
The board had declined to approve some
courses due to what it termed as universities’ lack of capacity to
train, there by putting careers of thousands of engineering students,
some of them awaiting graduation, in jeopardy.
This
effectively means that the students will take longer to complete their
degrees programmes, which in turn translates to additional costs.
An engineering degree course takes up to five years.
On
Monday, both Education Cabinet Secretary Jacob Kaimenyi and EBK
registrar Nicholas Mulinge said talks were on to determine how the
quality of training of the engineers will be improved.
“We’ve
looked at the areas that need improvement and the universities have
given a timeline when they can meet the demands,” Mr Mulinge said.
“Students
will have to resit certain units before we can accredit those degree
programmes to ensure they are fully prepared for the industry.”
He
emphasised: “Public safety must be prioritised in training and the
re-evaluation is not to hurt the students. It is not our intention to
keep the students in the universities longer than they expected but it
is important that we remain firm to ensure our graduates are properly
trained.”
PROTESTS
Several
universities, among them Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and
Technology (JKUAT), Technical University of Mombasa, Dedan Kimathi,
Kenyatta and Masinde Muliro had all been closed following student
protests after EBK declined to approve some engineering courses.
Prof
Kaimenyi said his ministry was working with the engineers’ board to
ensure students affected by the closures graduate once the matter is
resolved.
He said Higher Education Principal Secretary
Colleta Suda was chairing a technical committee of public universities
vice-chancellors to find more ways on how the issues raised will be
addressed.
The Engineers Act (2011) mandates EBK to
approve and accredit all programmes offered by public and private
universities and other tertiary level institutions.
Only four public universities — Nairobi, Moi, JKUAT and Egerton — have been cleared to offer some courses in engineering.
At
the UoN, only five courses — Civil, Agriculture, Mechanical, Electrical
and Electronics and Electrical engineering — will be offered.
Moi
will offer 13 of engineering courses, among them Electrical and
Communication, Civil and Structural, Textile, Chemical and Process and
Production Engineering.
KU will offer five courses
namely Civil, Electrical and Electronics, Energy, Mechanical and
Manufacturing and Computing and Information Technology.
HIRED LECTURERS
At
JKUAT Marine Engineering and Mining and Mineral Processing Engineering
are yet to be accredited although the principal of the College of
Engineering and Technology, Prof Bernard Ikua, said they had hired
senior lecturers from the Netherlands, Korea and China to meet the
quality demands.
Currently, the university offers
Civil, Mechanical, Electrical and Electronics, Mechatronics, Agriculture
and Bio Systems Engineering.
Egerton will offer only one course; Agricultural Engineering.
The
principal at the College of Architecture and Engineering at the
university, Prof Bernard Njoroge, said universities should stay ahead of
the demands of the board by ensuring training was beyond reproach.
“Engineering
courses have a huge implication on the lives of citizens, hence, the
need to treat these courses with such seriousness,” Prof Njoroge said.
“There’s a need for regulation and all institutions must be accredited.”
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