By Christian Gaya: Business Times Friday January 4-10, 2013
The
development and promotion of young entrepreneurship should be the main
strategic objectives of both the East Africa community and Member State
policies for now and in future, and it should grow in importance over time,
with the East Africa Commission and individual Member States should also adopt
a range of measures.
Key
amongst these should be the building of a stronger culture of entrepreneurship
and 'young entrepreneurial mindsets' of East Africa citizens, particularly
young people.
Young
entrepreneurship education and training should be taken as the key drivers in
this process. All kindergarten children, primary school pupils including
secondary schools and high learning students should have an access to young
entrepreneurship education, which should be offered in all types and at all
levels of education.
There is
need to carry out a deliberate pilot action that should bring together senior
officials from the ministries of education and enterprise of East Africa Member
States along with representatives from stakeholder groups such as business
organisations and teachers' trades unions.
The aims
should be for reviewing what has been achieved so far in young entrepreneurship
education in each participating country, and to discuss the means and ways to
develop more systematic approaches to the development and delivery of policy
and practice in young entrepreneurship education, as well as to raise the
profile of and build momentum behind young entrepreneurship education in
national and regional policy.
The
mechanism for doing this should be through conducting several workshops, or
high level reflection panels, each of which should be attended by ministry
officials from clusters of several East African countries, along with
representatives from stakeholder bodies.
Important
findings issues from the panels should come out with the current state of play
in young entrepreneurship education, especially in relation to the development
of entrepreneurship education strategies and their implementation.
The high
level reflection panels should find a broad consensus between Member States on
the aims and objectives of young entrepreneurship education: it should develop
both general competences, e.g. self-confidence, adaptability, risk-assessment,
creativity, and specific business skills and knowledge. It should no longer be
just an extra-curricular activity, but instead be embedded in the curriculum
across all educational levels/types.
However,
the level of progress that is expected to be made in national strategy
development and implementation is required to be highly variable. Perhaps only
a minority of countries have well developed strategies.
They
should provide typical broad frameworks for action, with the setting of
specific targets and indicators being rather under-developed. In general, there
is a significant need for Member States to embed and deepen implementation of
young entrepreneurship education.
Much
young entrepreneurship education practice tends to be ad hoc to some extent,
varies vastly in quantity and quality, is not treated systematically in the
curriculum, and has relied heavily on the enthusiasm and commitment of
individual teachers and schools. Some activity is structured and ambitious;
much is not; majority of schools have no young entrepreneurship education at
all. There are pockets of excellence, and a number of advanced countries.
Teachers
and schools have a critical role, supported by private businesses and
non-profit organisations, which may provide resources, and real, practical
hands-on experiences. The role of regional and local authorities is highly
variable but they can play key roles as promoters and facilitators.
To move
young entrepreneurship education from being an extra-curricular 'add-on' to an
integral part of the curriculum should involve changes in teaching methods:
greater use of experiential learning and a new coach/moderator role for
teachers which helps students to become more independent and to take the initiative
in their education.
Moreover
should also involve changes in the education context, which takes students out
of the classroom into the local community and real businesses, and which
establishes less hierarchical relationships within schools; and lastly but not
least; should involve a key role for governments: only they can bring about the
required step change in the spread and quality of young entrepreneurship
education.
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