…conducts benchmarking exercise in varsities

From Fred Ezeh, Abuja

Tertiary Education Trust Fund (TETFund) has commenced moves to ascertain the employability abilities of graduates of Nigerian universities.

To this end, the Fund announced, on Monday, that it has commenced the conduct of a national employability benchmarking exercise in Nigerian universities in collaboration with the International Finance Corporation (IFC) and other local partners.

Executive Secretary of TETFund, Sonny Echono, who disclosed the development in Abuja, said the move was part of efforts to improve employability in the country and help steer higher education institutions towards better alignment with market needs.

Echono said the IFC is utilizing its vitae employability tool to provide a diagnostic macro snapshot of how well tertiary institutions in Nigeria are implementing employability best-practices.

He added: “They will also measure how tertiary institutions are establishing a baseline for employability, and potentially supporting the development of a strategic approach to sector intervention.

“IFC vitae is a global first-of-a-kind, survey-based, diagnostic instrument which assesses, processes, structures and supports employability outcomes for higher education institutions.

“The programme provides system and institutional-level insights that helps identify key intervention areas that will enhance the employability ecosystem and improve graduate employability outcomes.”

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The TETFund boss further noted that, “one of the key roles of TETFund is to develop an enabling system for young graduates to be part of the active labour market soon after graduation.

“This diagnostic led by the IFC is the first phase of designing an intervention to improve graduate employability outcomes. It will help improve where higher education institutions in the country are presently, in relation to global best practices.”

“The first stage of the programme was to develop a snapshot of current employability practices, specifically to understand how the current regulatory policy framework may act as an enabler or barrier to success. The focus was to collect, validate and analyse the data of participating universities in Nigeria. This stage was coordinated by Cognity Advisory, a local development consultancy working on behalf of TETFund with IFC global employability experts.”

He also confirmed that IFC vitae has been deployed in different countries in Africa, Asia, the Middle East, Latin America and the Caribbeans, to hundreds of higher education institutions, helping them in developing a pathway for improving graduate outcomes and implementing institutional goals for graduate employability.

He lamented that Nigeria being a developing country is beset with the challenge of unemployment, particularly youth employment which is at its highest level.

Echono made reference to figure from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) which indicated that Nigeria has 33.3 per cent unemployment rate, while youth unemployment rate was at 42.5 per cent and youth under-employment rate was at 21.0 per cent.

He added: “Besides, the 2022 Multidimensional Poverty Index recently released by NBS revealed that 133 million people in Nigeria are poor, living below the poverty line, which implies that 63 per cent of persons living within Nigeria are multidimensionally poor.”

The TETFund Executive Secretary added that aligning its intervention activities to meet changing needs, and strengthening the country’s education delivery towards fostering an entrepreneurship culture are the best ways for unleashing the enormous youth potential, addressing unemployment as well as other societal problems, and growing the economy.