Audio By Carbonatix
Management at the Akenten-Appiah Menka University of Skills Training and Entrepreneurial Development is calling for more support from the government to undertake its ongoing projects to accommodate students.
The school, mandated to produce trained TVET teachers, has recorded an astronomical increase in student population.
Speaking at the First National Alumni meeting of AAMUSTED, Vice Chancellor, Professor Frederick Sarfo noted that there has been increasing interest in TVET programmes which has contributed to the recent impressive enrollment.

In the 2021/2022 academic year, the school enrolled about 6,800 students, increasing the present student population to 27,804.
According to Prof. Sarfo, the increasing student population has established the need for more expansion works.
He revealed that ongoing infrastructural projects are financed by internal funds.
“The University is already undertaking various projects, including what might turn out to be one of the best-known Entrepreneurship Incubation Centers in Ghana, the extension of the Opoku Ware II Hall of Residence, construction of a slaughter house, several classroom buildings, and others are still on the drawing board. These projects are being financed with internally-generated funds.
The University requires extra efforts to improve or build enough lecture halls and theatres, halls of residence, well-resourced workshops, laboratories, and all other vital installations and facilities to befit a modern-day TVET and Entrepreneurship university,” he said.

The Alumni meeting brought together some notable past students of the school to deliberate on ways to improve the status of the school.
Prof Sarfo indicated that the school is determined to ward off the pre-conceived notion that a TVET career is for the unintelligent.
“The University has been given the following mandates to provide higher education in technical, vocational and entrepreneurial training to develop skilled manpower for job creation and economic development.
“To train and provide teachers with the relevant competence for teaching in technical and vocational education and training institutions.
“These mandates are challenging, considering the fact that the minds of Ghanaians are not cleared of the wrong perception that TVET is an area for the unintelligent. However, we have taken the mandate head-on, determined to excel and improve the unemployment situation in our country,” he said.
Latest Stories
-
Akatsi South records gains in health, education, revenue mobilisation – MCE
3 minutes -
NDPC Chair calls for harmony in national development planning
4 minutes -
Be agents of change, not just title holders – NYA CEO Osman Ayariga urges youth
5 minutes -
Agyemang-Prempeh supports Tepa Hospital with equipment, pledges to tackle challenges
7 minutes -
Recent stability in exchange rate creating a healthy business environment – GUTA
7 minutes -
Ghana has moved from managing crisis to managing recovery—Prof. Gyeke-Dako
12 minutes -
Health tutors demand better conditions of service, legal backing at national AGM
14 minutes -
Current economic stability healthy for businesses – GUTA
17 minutes -
Reading the World Bank Cocoa Forecast Correctly: The floor is already here
24 minutes -
Job creation remains weakest link in economic recovery, says Joe Jackson
28 minutes -
Macro turnaround clear, but market reality still tough — Finance Ministry
33 minutes -
CAF endorses Gianni Infantino for third presidential term at FIFA
43 minutes -
Clifford Braimah eyes Savannah NPP chairmanship, launches grassroots tour
45 minutes -
Vincent Ekow Assafuah slams gov’t over ‘u-turn’ on Ghana School of Law entrance exams
51 minutes -
John Jinapor showing strong leadership on power outages, deserves support – Prof Beyuo
1 hour