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ENGINEERING CURRICULA FOR ENHANCEMENT OF HUMAN CAPACITY DEVELOPMENT

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Title: ENGINEERING CURRICULA FOR ENHANCEMENT OF HUMAN CAPACITY DEVELOPMENT


1
ENGINEERING CURRICULA FOR ENHANCEMENT OF HUMAN
CAPACITY DEVELOPMENT
  • FUNSO FALADE, PhD
  • DEPT. OF CIVIL ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING
  • UNIVERSITY OF LAGOS
  • AKOKA, LAGOS, NIGERIA
  • ffalade_at_hotmail.com

2
  • The training and preparation of engineers are
    carried out in the Universities.
  • The prospective candidates are generally expected
    to have requisite qualifications

3
Fig 1 Knowledge Acquisition Processes in Science
and Technology
4
  • The main features of the existing curricula are
  • Common foundation years at 100 and 200 levels
  • for all engineering disciplines
  • Workshop practice, laboratory work and tutorials
  • Design project with bias towards local
    applications
  • Broad-based engineering and interaction between
    students and professionals
  • Special skills and in-depth study in a particular
    area of the programme through optional courses or
    electives and
  • Knowledge in the area of engineering management,
    economics and law.
  • Final year project in which the students work
    alone under supervision

5
  • Industrial attachment is considered very crucial
    in all engineering programmes
  • The aims of the attachment are
  • to provide the students with the needed on-
    the-job experience by applying the theories
    learnt in the classrooms to practical problems
  • to motivate students and improve their academic
    performance by demonstrating the relevance of
    course content in industrial practice
  • to promote the personal development of students
    by increasing their maturity through interacting
    with colleagues and mentors in industry and
    acceptance of professional responsibilities.

6
  • An Industrial Training Fund (ITF) was established
    in 1971 with the aim of promoting acquisition of
    skills in industry and with a view to generating
    a pool of indigenous skilled manpower sufficient
    to meet the needs of the Nigerian economy.
  • Each University has its own Industrial Liaison
    Unit which ensures that
  • students are appropriately placed for the
    industrial attachment and
  • students are supervised by their lecturers

7
  • The maximum stipulated duration of Industrial
    attachment is 40 weeks comprising the following
    modules
  • students work experience programme scheme I- 8
    weeks (long vacation at the end of 200 level),
  • students industrial work experience - 8 weeks
    (long vacation after 300 level) and
  • students industrial work experience scheme II
    24 weeks (2nd semester of 400 level plus long
    vacation).

8
  • The curriculum of a subject with practical
    content is generally organized into an average
  • of 67 for the theoretical classes and 33 for
    laboratory. Students also use the laboratory to
    develop case examples on their own time.
  • The problems associated with the current
  • curricula are
  • they are based on a foreign model which has
    evolved under ideal conditions (staff, equipment,
    infrastructure, training opportunities, etc) that
    are not easily duplicated in developing
    countries

9
  • there is usually a shortage of highly competent
    indigenous teaching and support staff with
    sufficiently wide practical experience of
    engineering
  • most of the available textbooks are often
    illustrated with examples from outside the local
    environment and which are irrelevant to the
    particular country
  • the curricula are adjoined to be too academic and
    overloaded with intellectual content in pure
    science and mathematics at the expense of basic
    engineering and technology and

10
  • inadequate provision for humanities, social
    sciences, business management concepts and
    entrepreneurship skills development. Because of
    the inadequate preparation of the students for
    the industry, some employers retrain the graduate
    to make them employable in their organizations.

11
CONSTRAINTS
  • Some of the constraints that could hinder
    capacity building in engineering are
  • Funding
  • Inadequate Facility
  • Lack of Capacity Building Programme
  • Weak University-Industry Partnership
  • Lack of political will by the government
  • Accreditation Processes
  • NUC
  • COREN

12
PROSPECTS FOR CAPACITY DEVELOPMENT
  • Despite all the constraints listed above, there
    are indications that the low human capacity
    development will be improves considering the
    following positive steps being taken by the
    stakeholders
  • Curriculum Reform
  • - The NUC has commenced its major reform which is
    contained in a document tagged Academic Minimum
    Benchmark for all courses in the universities
    including engineering.

13
  • Funding
  • - Inadequate funding is the major problem in
    engineering education as the other shortcomings
    are direct manifestation of poor funding.

14
Industry
Knowledge Skill and Endogenous Technology
Finance
Staff welfare Facility Development and Maintenance
Internally Generation Revenue
Subvention
Government
University
National Development Innovation and Invention
Finance
Quality Students Performance
Finance
Endowment
Enabling Environment
Fig 2. Interactive Funding Model and Performance
Feedback
15
  • Facilities
  • The poor state of the facilities is a direct
    manifestation of inadequate funding. With
    increase in funding level and other strategies
    e.g endowment and participation of private
    sector, there will be improvement in the
    facilities both quantitatively and qualitatively.
  • Establishment of Technological Entrepreneurship
    and Innovation Centers
  • - It was reported that the Federal Government
    would establish 50 innovation centres across the
    country.

16
  • Promotion of Linkage between Universities,
    Research Institutes and Technology Incubation
    Centers.
  • - Research and development for its own sake is
    not useful unless it results in marketable
    inventions. Good partnership between the
    producers of knowledge and the users of knowledge
    will enable the products of research to be
    accessed by interested investors thus
    facilitating the much needed awareness and
    adoption of research findings by Small and Medium
    Industries (SMI) leading to effective
    commercialization of research results and
    industrial growth.

17
  • Reform in the Industrial Sector
  • The adoption of production method that is based
    on endogenous technology rather than expensive
    foreign technology by the industrial sector will
    reduce the production cost thus increasing the
  • demand for their products
  • improvement in standard of living
  • high turn-over and
  • expansion in the industrial sector.

18
  • There must be a deliberate decision to take
    problems in the industry to the University for
    necessary solutions. Such efforts will provide
  • challenges for the university Lecturers
  • reduce the cost of providing the solutions if
    such problems are taken to foreign countries
  • conserve foreign exchange and
  • result in growth in both sectors. Utilization of
    local raw materials where feasible will further
    reduce production cost.

19
  • Reform in Government Policy
  • Governments determination to create enabling
    environment for both university and industry to
    operate will ensure the flow of knowledge,
    information and resources from universities to
    the industries and vice versa.
  • University/Industry Government Roundtable
  • - In order to encourage industry, university and
    government cooperation for the reform of
    engineering education and promotion of technology
    transfer to industry, there is need to establish
    a voluntary and non-governmental organizations in
    the country.

20
  • Information and Communication Technology
  • The use of Information and Communication
    Technologies (ICT) for networking between the
    stakeholders would assist the transfer of new
    technologies from university to the industry on
    one hand and delivery of problems from industry
    to the university on the other hand.
  • Development of Entrepreneurship Skill
  • - The new curriculum envisioned by the National
    Universities Commission is to have
    entrepreneurship studies as its integral part.
    The new breed engineer or engineer entrepreneur
    will possess an adequate knowledge of core
    engineering and demonstrable technical
    competence.

21
  • Developing a Sustainable University/Industry
    Partnership
  • In order to sustain the relationship between
    university and industry, there is need for a
    consistent flow of knowledge from university to
    industry and the industry should use university
    as a solution ground for industrial related
    problems.
  • Continuing professional development
  • This consists of acquisition of this through
    problem following in the work place and
    continuous upgrading of knowledge through
    attendance at professional courses/seminars/worksh
    ops. It also includes participation in research
    and development efforts.

22
  • CONCLUSIONS
  • From the foregoing the following conclusions
  • are made
  • Reform in engineering curricula is highly
    necessary. The preparation of the curricula
    should be in consultation with the stakeholders,
    namely, Members of academic community, industry
    leaders (Users), Professional bodies (Regulators)
    Employers Association, Major Employers
    associated with specific programme to make the
    effort a worthwhile exercise.

23
  • The restructuring of curriculum can not be
    considered in isolation without considering those
    factors that will ensure positive outcome.
  • Both university and industry have problems that
    hinder their abilities to meet up with challenges
    posed by the requirements for development.

24
  • Reform is required in both sectors (university
    and industry) to make them work together with a
    view to formulating appropriate strategies for
    national development.
  • Effective collaboration between the duo will
    translate to go training of engineering graduates
    that will be better prepared for the future
    challenges.
  • The relationship between university and industry
    could only be sustained if government creates an
    enabling environment.

25
Thank You and God Bless
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